Corona Christmas Cruise 1938/9 (#4 in series of 4)

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Corona Christmas Cruise 1938/9 (#4 in series of 4)

CORONA CHRISTMAS CRUISE 1938/8

photo collection ex Peter Nunn

GREAT NEWS ON CORONA – I LEARNED YESTERDAY THAT SHE HAS A NEW VERY CLASSIC FRIENDLY OWNER. THAT IS SO GOOD, SHE WILL NOW BE USED AS SHE SHOULD BE .

Does it get better? Tasman

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Does it get better?

Does it get better?

Nice anchorage, late afternoon sun, a good book & I’m sure I saw a wine glass.

The beautiful Tasman, 1927 Col Wild, in Sullivans Bay, Mahurangi last night .

UPDATE 29/01/2014

Now some think I’m a little OTT in terms of the addition of flying bridges to classics, if you compare the photo Ken Ricketts took of Tasman in School House Bay, Kawau, over Christmas 1948 (below) with the above, you will see that the design boys had it right in 1927 & its still right in 2014 – 87 years later 🙂

TASMAN 1948 SCHOOLHOUSE BAY

Wooden Boat Heaven

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Wooden Boat Heaven

I’m Off To Wooden Boat Heaven

Later today, weather permitting, I’m heading off to what must be classic wooden boat heaven – the Mahurangi Regatta. It would have to be the largest collection of classic sail & motor boats, at one time, in NZ. Every year there are ‘new’ boats that have been off the scene, up a creek, in a shed that make you go – ‘how come I’ve never seen her before’.

Obviously I’ll pack the camera & bang off lots of photos for you all but if you are at a loose end this anniversary weekend & you have a passion for classic wood – Mahurangi is the place to be.

If you are boat less, on Saturday (11am >) at Sullivans Bay there there is a traditional kiwi beach picnic – running races, three-legged races, egg & spoon races, egg throwing, sand sculpture competition, rug of war, lolly scramble etc + all the small sail boats are launched from the beach so there is plenty to do & see.

On Saturday night, starting around 6.00pm there is a BBQ (byo food & fizzy drinks) ashore at Scotts Landing. Everyone is welcome but bring a (some) gold coins for the bucket to help pay for the 16piece big dance band that will be playing in the marquee.

Regatta details here

http://www.mahurangi.org.nz/Regatta/2014/General-Format.php

Also Monday is Auckland Anniversary Regatta day so another chance to view our harbour at its finest.

If you are around the Viaduct (Event Centre area) on Monday there is a display of classic work boats that Baden Pascoe (MV John Dory) is arranging post the annual Tug Boat race.

Its Not A Boat – But It Floats

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Its Not A Boat - But It Floats

Its Not A Boat – But It Floats

Over the xmas / ny period we were quietly anchored in Man-O-War bay minding our own business, reading etc (ok I’ll tell the truth, we were waiting for the bar to open at the winery). It was drizzling & where was light sea mist handing around. Next thing I heard this god almighty noise, my first reaction was the Chris Miller (Rorqual) had arrived in the bay but when I rolled up the covers out of the mist appeared a sea-plane taxiing its way thru the anchor boats.
In years gone by I used Fred Ladd’s old amphibians to meet up with cruising friends & the service has been missed, now you can either charter the plane & fly to your chosen bay or book a ticket on one of the many excursions they offer around the outer gulf. Given the number of times we spotted / heard the plane the MOW vineyard lunch trip seemed well frequented over the holiday period.
The rain cleared, the sun came out, the bar opened & the plane left. It does not take much to entertain me 🙂

Auckland needs more services like this & wow things like sea-planes, so if you get a chance either yourself or if you have overseas guests in town – consider a flight

http://www.aucklandseaplanes.com

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Willie Oliver & the African Queen

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Willie Oliver & the African Queen

Willie Oliver & the African Queen – a great read

Last week waitematawoody follower Brian Cassidy sent me a chapter from his auto-biography which he wrote for his grand-children. The chapters tells the story of a wonderful salty character named Willie Oliver & the house boat / launch ‘African Queen’ he built on Waiheke Island in the late 1980’s. The story is riddled with anecdotes that Willie shared with Brian as they worked on the boat. To wet your appetite I have included three below.

Now the African Queen was not wood & not a classic, in fact she looked more like a block of flats 🙂 but this story entertained me more than anything else that has crossed my computer screen in the last 6 months. Make your self a cuppa or something a little stronger if its later in the day – then click the blue link below to the story + photos & I promise you, you will have a smile on your face at the end.

Memories of Willie Oliver – The Tiny, Tenacious Tornado

ps If anyone knows what happened to the African Queen, post a comment here as Brian would love to know.

The Governor General

Game fishing was Willie’s real passion, working out of Mayor Island in the Bay of Plenty.

On one trip Willie had the distinction of having the one time Governor General Sir Willoughby Norrie as his guest.

Instructing his excellence to be sure & not over run the big game reel, luck would have it that a big Striped Marlin was hooked & proceeded to run out the line.

His Excellency panicked & let the clutch off causing the reel to over run the line.

“You stupid bugger! I told you not to over run the line, now we’re in the shit!” bellowed Willie in the excitement of the fight.

The Governor’s Aide de Camp, stepped forward, commanding our nuggety little skipper,” You can’t speak to the Governor General like that!”

“I’m the skipper of this vessel, & will speak to him anyway I bloody well like.” retorted Willie, still struggling to untangle the snarled up line.

The Girlfriend

The man was a terrible womanizer, but I reckon he’d had more wins than losses over his lifetime.

His present live in companion was very much younger than him, & when she perceived that he was flirting a bit too often, stabbed him in the stomach as he lay in bed. The blow just missed a major artery. Willie lived & went on to finish the house boat.

Mako Sharks

By way of entertainment while out in deep water, mullet would be offered by hand to big Mako sharks that could be enticed up to the stern of the boat. The huge jaws full of ferocious teeth, were quite a spectacle, as the intrepid skipper hand feed the fearsome creatures. The trick had been done successfully many times before.

On this one occasion Willies was not quick enough, as the monster raked his teeth over the back of our shark tamers hand, causing blood to pour over the deck.

“It was not too bad; once I’d wrapped it up a bit.” Confided Willie, “But I gave up doing that display from then on.”

Now scroll back up the page & click the blue link to the whole story.

Harold Kidd Update

“Willie O” was a major character all right. He was born in January 1902 as Willoughby Grey Oliver, the son of Willoughby Henry (“W H”) Oliver who served his time with Bailey & Lowe and went on to work for many years for Caesar Roose at Mercer. WH died in Devonport in 1947 after giving huge service to Devonport Yacht Club and Wakatere Boating Club. 

Willie O and Ted Gilpin built those rakish gamefishing launches in Tauranga like LADY KAREN and NOELANI which were much admired and imitated. Ted Gilpin married his daughter.

Willie O died in 1990.

An extraordinary family.

HDK Update #2

PS However, large grains of salt should be applied to these tales; the two stories about Chas Bailey Sr (“Clawhammer Charlie) getting his beard caught and cutting the sixpence are old chestnuts and part of Auckland waterfront lore. The firm “Bailey & Lowe” wasn’t founded by him nor did they have a yard at Beaumont Street. These stories go back to the 1890s before Willie O was born, but I’m sure he was pleased to repeat them to an eager listener, putting himself in the action.

PS again. Apologies, Bailey & Lowe did shift to Beaumont Street after closing their Sulphur Beach Northcote yard in the winter of 1921. Charles Bailey Sr. died in July 1923. His son Walter, the founder of Bailey & Lowe, died in March 1927. Walter was clean-shaven.

Waitangi Day CYA Picnic @ Motuihe Island

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Waitangi Day CYA Picnic @ Motuihe Island

Waitangi Day CYA Classic Picnic @ Motuihe Island

Thursday 6th February – Put this one in your diary!

Motuihe beach picnic, a new Classic Yacht Association social event aimed at the whole family.

Pack a picnic lunch, chuck the kids on board and roll up to Motuihe Island around 11.00a.m. for a lazy day on the beach.

Its a whooper tide – 3.3m @ approx 1.30pm.

All classics and hang-a-bouts are invited.

Refer flyer above for full details

Don’t own a boat but would like to attend? email       drenall@gmail.com

North Island’s Parade of Classic & Wooden Boats – Sat 8th Feb

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North Island's Parade of Classic & Wooden Boats - Sat 8th Feb

North Island’s Parade of Classic & Wooden Boats – Sat 8th Feb

When an invite to a classic boating event is accompanied with the above photo it would be rude to say no.

So waitematawoodys will heading off to Lake Rotoiti for the 2014 Classic and Wooden Boat Parade. Now this is the North Island event so its just a three hour drive from Auckland.
I have ‘followed’ the event on line for the past 5 > 6 years & its a cracker.
This year is the 17th year it has run & the formula is simple: A parade (on-the-water) to showcase the boats then everyone motors / steams off to a sheltered bay on the lake to enjoy old boats and fine company.

For full details check out http://www.woodenboatparade.co.nz

rotoitigathering thesteamers2 jan

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Sunbeam > Sea Breeze

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SUNBEAM (now Sea Breeze)

photo ex classicboatsnz

Other than the name, I know nothing about Sunbeam/Sea Breeze – so any input would be greatly appreciated.

Harold Kidd Update

There are/were many SUNBEAMS and SEABREEZES, all over NZ. I had a look at that website to see if there’s any information on the boat, where the image was taken etc, but couldn’t find my way through it very well. I kept recoiling at some of the stuff in it, though. Thank goodness WW has peer review processes.

The image is very tiny, but if the launch was photographed as-built, she dates from the period 1920-1928, probably early in that period because the dodger is relatively modest in size.

She looks remarkably Bailey & Lowe to me, but could equally be Dick Lang or a dozen other Auckland builders. Sam Ford is a possibility because he inherited Lang’s moulds and plans when he bought Dick’s business and turned out Lang-style boats until he shifted to Ellerslie and went ultra-modern.

Perhaps the most likely candidate is the Taupo hire launch SUNBEAM of the 1920’s onwards about which I know little but the Drakes will.

Oddly enough there was a SEABREEZE built by Jas. Reid in 1909 and a SUNBEAM built by Bailey & Lowe the same year. Both would have had to be heavily modernised to look like this. That SUNBEAM is currently alive and well in Picton.

Nigel Drake Update

This photo was taken by my father or grandfather in the late1930s and is part of the Drake collection. The location is Boat Harbour in the Western Bays on Lake Taupo. She is tied up alongside the old steamer Tongariro which used to run between Taupo and Tokaanu at the southern end of the lake. Tongariro was converted to fisherman’s accommodation on the opening of the road between Taupo and Tokaanu when her services were no longer required.

Sunbeam was built by Sam Ford, date unknown, for Sid Blake and plied for hire on the lake. 36 feet long, 8 foot 6 inch beam and powered by a 4 cylinder Gray Marine petrol engine. She had a galvanized iron lined engine room to be able to ply for hire. Was one of the first boats on the lake to have a two way radio. Sold to Donald Hunt in 1939 and plied for hire out of Tokaanu until 1952. Left the lake possibly in the mid 1950s.

In the 1980s she was moored in Pilot Bay, Mount Maunganui, and had been used as a fishing boat. Her name had been changed to Sea Breeze and cabin had been changed markedly. In the 1990s she was rebuilt by Tauranga boat builder Barwich Harding and now resides in the Tauranga Marina.

Harold Kidd Update #2

Interesting issues arise here. 

SUNBEAM, from the sheer upwards is an almost exact replica of my Bailey & Lowe ROMANCE II (and their 32 footer ROTOMAHANA), same seven clerestory windows, same treatment of the dodger. That’s simply because ROMANCE II was a high-profile fast launch, built to race, and represented the height of style and practicality in 1919. This postwar, post-‘flu epidemic period was a time when few launches had been built since late 1914. People had had a chance to think about what they wanted their post-war launches to look like, to provide in the way of headroom and volume, and how they were to be controlled. The ultra-smart, racy-looking raised-foredeck flushdeckers of 1912-5 were no longer built and most existing ones were easily and speedily modified to get the new look.

The hull of SUNBEAM does appear to have a “knuckle” in the sheer at the bow which is uncharacteristic of Bailey & Lowe.  Ken considers it to be a hallmark of Sam Ford. It is certainly strongly reminiscent of his family’s Sam Ford-built JULIANA (formerly WIDGEON, apparently, but of unknown other history). I don’t totally agree with that and make the point again that Ford churned out Dick Lang launches for some years after he took over Lang’s business in 1923 when Dick went to Sydney (mind you he was back soon afterwards, building at St. Mary’s Bay again, alongside Sam).

So is the “knuckle” Sam Ford or Dick Lang???

It was only shortly after this that the US “express cruiser” and “bridgedecker” forms and styles gained attraction and we got LUANA and LADY UNA, for example.

By 1928, say, this 1919-style in ROMANCE II and SUNBEAM, with clerestory or “tramtop”, a minimal dodger and aft-control was becoming very dated, giving way to “sedans” and bridgedeckers of US inspiration.

Harold Kidd Update #3 (13/01/14)

I see that the Taupo boat history site states that “SUNBEAM was built by Sam Ford in 1936 for Sid Blake”. Two things are wrong with that which muddle the situation;

1. SUNBEAM was clearly a product of the early 1920’s not 1936.

2. According to newspaper reports, SUNBEAM was a hire launch on Lake Taupo from at least December 1926.

In fact I have now zeroed in on her as being built by Sam Ford for Blake in early December 1925 and fitted with a 25-35 Model V ohv Gray. I was fooled because the newspaper reports said that Blake (of Taupo) was going to use her for troutfishing on Lake Rotorua. I wonder if she spent a few months at Rotorua?

Jessica

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Jessica

Jessica

JESSICA

photos ex Baden Pascoe

The name plaque says built by Bailey & Lowe in 1912, I’m sure if this is correct, Harold will be able to shed some light on Jessica. HDK has rather a soft spot for B&L craft. Jessica was photographed at Thames over the xmas/ny period.

Harold Kidd Update

1. “JESSICA” is a re-name. I know she’s been that since at least 2006.
2. Although foliate scrollwork on the bow was a feature of Bailey & Lowe work up until say 1920 (by when it was considered “old hat”), their scrollwork was much more free-form than this symmetrical work. Maybe the first owner wanted a symmetrical job, but I’ve not seen another and therefore have mild doubts about the “Bailey & Lowe” tag.
3. She was obviously built as a raised foredeck flushdecker.
4. It would be nice to know her previous name(s) so that we can establish some real provenance for her.
5. I do wish launch owners didn’t so readily change their boats’ names, seemingly often to butter up the female members of the family who had dark thoughts about hubby buying a boat. My father did exactly that in 1934.

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