Rewa (the hulk) + launches

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Rewa (the hulk) + launches

Rewa the hulk

photo ex Dave Jackson

The above photo is of the Rewa hulk and as you can see the masts are still standing. Dave thinks it’s before the WW2.

Harold commented that it looks like a Navy Liberty boat, cutter alongside Rewa.

Comments from Russell Ward on Rewa:
Rewa was bought for a fiver by Charlie Hansen who lived a hermit’s life at Moturekareka . Rewa was a beautiful ship with a lot of life left in her but alas, there was no need for that sort of ship any more.
She was towed to the exposed bay intended as a wave break. She sank in the wrong place but still continues to meet her intended purpose.
Parts of her rigging went into Johnny Wray’s boat Ngataki in exchange for provisions (read South Sea Vagabonds –a ripping yarn).
She was slowly leveled off over the years. Farnsworths tore a lot of steel out of her in the ’60s.
And there she lies, making the ultimate sacrifice. I shudder to think of the prospect of getting a resource consent to do this these days!

Upcoming Collings & Bell Book

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Upcoming Collings & Bell Book

Collings & Bell Book

Ron Wattam is currently compiling a book on the boats of Colling & Bell & is seeking any info and photos.
Contact details below.

Ron Wattam
32 Carroll Place.
Rotorua. 3010
New Zealand
Ph. + 07 345 3553
Email: olivine@xtra.co.nz

Contemporary waitemata woodys

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Contemporary waitemata woodys

Contemporary waitemata woodys

I have always had a soft spot for the Mason Clippers – they have a facebook page – link below. Some cool odd photos there. Thanks to Adrienne for the link.

https://www.facebook.com/pages/Mason-Marine-Clippers/160543284101217

Sierra – ‘Horse Float’

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Sierra - 'Horse Float'

Sierra – ‘Horse Float’

photo ex Dave Jackson

The above photo of “Sierra” was taken in the Hokianga – no date sorry.
Now when I showed the photo to Harold Kidd, he was good, he correctly ID’ed the location as Hokianga & the Omapere Wharf and the launch most likely ex Fell’s Boatyard, established in 1905 at Kohukohu by Joseph Fell. But Harolds not that good, he did not know the names of the horses 🙂

Sierra is now in the CYA fleet, colour photo below. Any details on her past would be appreciated.

Scan 131820005

08-01-2016 photo at Kawau Island ex Tom Kane

Sierra Kawau Jan2016

13-01-2016 Input from John Mortimer

In the late 1950’s l lived on a remote and marginal sheep and cattle farm on the Waima River in the Hokianga.
In a direct line, Rawene was only 3 miles away,by river it was 5 miles and by road 30.
The river was the obvious highway and the Sierra, owned and skippered by Fred Young was our main means of communication.
Several contracts relied on the Sierra. The school contract took children to and from Moehau school morning and afternoon. Most farmers  on the river had poor or no road communication and the cream output from farms carrying anything from 20 to 120 cows went  down to Rawene in the Sierra to Rawene for transshipment by pontoon to the dairy factory at Motukaraka. Empty cans from the previous day we loaded on board and delivered to farm jetties on the up river journey next day.
The mail was delivered three times week and the  Herald on the afternoon return trip. If there was no one on the jetty , Fred would send the rolled newspaper to the deck with a dexterous flick of the wrist.
The launch also carried morning passengers to Rawene to do their shopping. They returned when she went back to Moehau in the afternoon at 1.30.
A conversation overheard in the open cockpit in the stern on a sunny afternoon:
First Lady – I read  the Truth for the recipes.
Second lady – I read it for the horoscopes
Third lady – I read it for the scandal

A burst of laughter from all three.

When the dairy factory closed and the Moehau school roll fell her days in the Hokianga were numbered. I understand that she spent her last summer at Opononi  taking visitors around the harbour and then sailed out over the bar, round the turbulent seas at North Cape and down to the Waitemata where she was used as work boat during the construction of the Auckland Harbour Bridge.
Her name was always mentioned in conjunction with the name of her builders, Fells of Motukaraka. I understand that there were three sister ships, the Sierra, the Nevada and the Santa Fe.
Sounds more like an old song to me.
She approaches her hundredth year with dignity and grace of an old timer who may well live for ever.

 

Carrie-Fin

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Carrie-Fin

CARRIE-FIN

story & photo ex Harold Kidd

Built by Collings & Bell for the wealthy American sportsman Eastham Guild who lived in Tahiti.
She was commissioned as a direct result of Zane Grey commissioning FRANGIPANI from Collings & Bell and which motored up to Tahiti in March 1933.
CARRIE-FIN was named after Guild’s wife whose pen-name in gamefishing magazines was Carrie-Fin.
She was launched in January 1932 and was shipped to Tahiti on the MAKURA after a spot of gamefishing off Cape Brett.
She was 36’x8’4” and had twin 40-50hp Redwings.
Collings built lovely hulls, but that cabintop………………………….

What would you save?

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What would you save?

Some only save the important things 🙂

The above photo was taken immediately after a yachting accident on Sydney Harbour, you have to have a chuckle at the chap on the left who managed to ‘save’ a bottle of ‘something’.

Now a little quiz , why are the men positioned in the water the way they are?

Sorry for the non NZ photo but I’m having hard-drive issues so had to grab an image off my laptop.

Harold Kidd’s answer in the REPLYS section was right – they are hiding from the SHARKS

Comment from Robin Elliott

Saying it is all due to sharks is a bit extravagant and the Aussie skiffies still love to put the willies up any visitors with wild-eyed warnings of a possible chomping amputation during a capsize.

It really has less to do with sharks and more about sensible weight distribution while awaiting a tow. Those boats had NO buoyancy whatsoever other than the wooden hull and spars, and having 9-10 heavy crew all sitting on the capsized hull would just push it (and the sitting crew) further down under the water – making crew drowning a more likely possibility than shark attack. The spars were solid timber and also gave support to a crewman.
In that photo, the crewman in the very centre is out on the bowsprit while the others are spaced out on the mast and gaff, no doubt sitting on the sails as indicated. Sharks were (and still are) a consideration but there many more reported instances of shark attacks on swimmers on the ocean beaches (e.g Manly) than on capsized yachtsmen on the inner harbour.

While I tripped across the odd report of a curious shark, mooching about a nervous crew waiting for a tow, in actuality they were really quite rare (and I ploughed through over 100+ years of 18-footer racing reports, club minutes, records etc in NSW and QLD). The most alarming (but funny) occurrence was in February 1932 when Paddy Griffith’s Shamrock reported that a 3-foot grey nurse shark leaped aboard during the race. The forward hand beat it to a pulp with the spinnaker pole.

Can you imagine the adrenalin rush? Pity it wasn’t filmed.

A mystery launch – Centauri ?

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A mystery launch

All I know is the location is Auckland. Any ideas on the ID of this rather pretty launch?

Harold Kidd Info

It’s not CARRIE-FINN. She was a much later game fishing boat for Tahiti and quite different in configuration. This is a passenger vessel for the Upper Harbour and probably one of Hunter’s boats, most of which were built by James Reid. This could be CENTAUR.

11/09/13

CENTAURI was built for Tom Hunter by Jas. Reid in October 1911 and originally had twin Regal 16hp engines, replaced in 1928 with twin 30hp Kelvins after Hunter sold his fleet to J.C. Spedding in 1927. She was a 45 footer, quite a bit larger than Hunter’s other launches including CENTAUR, WHAREPAPA, REGAL, REGAL II and NIMROD, all except WHAREPAPA (Forrester, Whakapirau) built by Jas. Reid  and off the moulds of SEABIRD. Hunter had extensive orchards in Greenhithe and subdivided a lot of the land in the 1920s, naming the streets after his children, Oscar and Roland. Pauline and I had one of the houses he built in Roland Road, all the joinery being marked “Hunter via CENTAURI” which seemed strange at first sight.

PS I think this is CENTAURI because she’s big enough to be 45ft and could have twin engines. I fancy I see the starboard shaft log in the image, without prop, although what I see could also be the deadwood aft without rudder on a single-screw vessel. Often these early twin installations had a single central rudder still.

Naomi III

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Naomi III

NAOMI III

According to the caption, this her being launched on 2 Sept, 1907 at the yard of Mr. C Bailey Jnr.

photo ex classicgameboatnz

Harold Kidd Update

NAOMI III was the third NAOMI owned by M.A. Jenny of Nelson, Auckland and Wanganui. She was 39’x10’x2’6″ and had a 20hp Gardner 2 cylinder petrol engine. Jenny was a most controversial figure during the years leading up to WW1. Nominally he was Swiss but there were suspicions he was an Austrian and a spy! He was quite a dashing wealthy figure and briefly was Commodore of the North Shore Yacht Club until he resigned in February 1903. He took this launch to Nelson but sold her in 1911 to Downes brothers of Wellington. From there she did the rounds, spending a lot of time in Tauranga game-fishing in the 1930s. I last heard of her she was in Lyttelton owned by John Sole in 2007. Chas. Bailey Jr also built NAOMI I (March 1902) and NAOMI II (November 1902) for Jenny. The latter was until recently to be seen on the hard at Panmure Yacht Club. 

PS Interesting cabin top. Bailey retained the dee-front separate cabin top but put his toe in the water with a raised foredeck as well. Truly a “transitional” style.