Just a plain old coastal working   girl, colourful boats, and fun `sindickit(ing)’ for that cup! 
              
                
                    
                    
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              A hazy, early Summer’s day in New Zealand, lake water   still asleep and a small eel visible just below the surface near the side   oblivious to the only movement on the surface, the old flat-bottomed sailing   barge.  In an age where speed and sleekness of style and finely cut sails   are sought by model shipwrights, a period where nimble racing sloops and   fine-looking ketches are the preferred choices for many, where few reflect for   long, maybe ten seconds, on New Zealand’s once upon a time,  dependence on   scows for trade the sight of an old barge tied alongside the walking path   perhaps draws little interest. 
              Further on, another one, lengthy and wide on the beam,   busy looking on her decks, a bit `weathered’  and showing age and signs of   having had much use in a busy working life. There’s hardly any sign of life on   board other than the mongrel. Well it is early and there’s remnants of a mist   still rising off the water, and it is not until the click of my camera shutter   draws interest of two crew  that the dog barks. Her aft hatch is open for   final loading, delivery of  kumara, beer, non-perishable vegetables, some   ten or twelve bags of sugar, two dozen chickens and a few bits of machinery   loaded…all for Doubtless Bay on   New Zealand’s northland coast. 
              It might well be the 1920’s but it’s not, it is 1998 and Ruby is of sufficient interest to   one such as I, determined to catch the very essence and olde world charm of a   model working barge under sail so I continue to click away on the camera as a   motor slowly draws her away from the side. 
              Except for a few models of Thames sailing barges –   mostly owned by Englishmen still with fond memories of their motherland and just   a few  New Zealand scow models, Roy Lake of Auckland’s coastal barge Ruby is a refreshing example   of  a cargo carrying sailing barge from around the 1920’s. She is not built   for speed but has a fair amount of sail so gets along quite nicely, most   important she looks good and makes pond onlookers halt in their tracks and   say…”OH LOOK AT THAT!” 
              
                
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                  A brilliant photograph by Richard Plinston  of a   certain writer’s Fiji Magic sharpie schooner, Fijipsy Jack in a hurry at the second   Auckland Ancient Mariners  annual schooner regatta. 
                   
                  
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              Without a doubt, International yacht racing attracts   sponsors who often pay huge sums of money in order to sponsor events or sponsor   individual yachts, and purely from observation, comparatively few in my opinion   appear to take their involvement to the extent of making the boat they are   sponsoring, both colourful  and distinctive in appearance, I guess the   trouble being that that often there are several other sponsors of the same boat   each seeking their identity pound of flesh. Look above and here is the boat (a   Farr Open 60) sponsored by the Barcelona brewery producers of  Estrella Damm beer that has done it so well What an exciting visual impact I am   sure many will agree, and a lesson to be learned perhaps, by other International   racing yacht sponsors. Turning to the sailing model scene, here is a colourful   little Footy with it’s chequered flag material jib and mainsail. Called Tuty Futy it was built and is owned and   sailed by Ken Horton of the fun sailing group in Sheffield, England. Then we   come to the writer’s Fun Fellow, Island   Spice mainsail used when winds are stronger in Auckland, New   Zealand. 
              They all make sail statements and are to a degree   examples of `art on the water’. 
                
              There have been many boats called Sea Witch, I know that much but the   original Sea Witch, launched at   Blackwell in 1848 for the China tea trade was rigged as a barque and she lasted   until 1883. The model of this Sea   Witch shown  above is 52” long and was   started by someone who never finished her, then completed by my friend Tony   Lench and then sold to and sailed by Barry McCready of Kent in the UK. Not a   good photograph I’m afraid and where is the model now I wonder?  If she is   around still she would be some fifty to sixty years old.  Built plank on   frame and fitted with two channel radio, according to Barry who was a great fan   of this type of boat, the model sailed beautifully particularly in a stiff   breeze. 
              I heard from Milton, a chap in New Jersey, USA about a   car bumper sticker he’s seen that reads `Life’s too short to own an ugly boat’.  (I wouldn’t know for all my boats are  pretty – in my eyes anyway! – Ed) 
                
              BREAKING NEWS -  The Thames Barge GASTON  VA4  (formerly the Serenie  went down off the East   Yorkshire coast of Britain in forty metres  of water recently   and was declared lost. It was reported that  she was apparently sailing   without her forward hatch securely closed while carrying a consignment of fifty   thousand hard-boiled, unshelled eggs for a Convention of  egg lovers aiming   to set some sort of  world record .  It has been reported that a fork   lift machine also on board may have rolled on the egg boxes as the waters above   revealed a quantity of floating eggshell.  The two man crew escaped before   the barge rolled and one Robert `Bacon’  Bamford who was in charge was said   to have egg on his face when picked up and rescued by helicopter from which this   photograph was taken. All `bull this story and a bit `eggy’ some might say    but we must exercise the imagination engine topside, loosen up a bit.!  I   am telling a bit of a `porkie’ here – the sinking of Poole, Dorset model   yachtsman, Tony Searle’s model barge Serenie did happen! 
                
              The SV DENIS   SULLIVAN  is a  3 masted, 137’ recreation of a   19th Century Great Lakes schooner. Owned and operated out of   Milwaukee by Pier   Wisconsin 
              The vessel is used for both science education and   nautical training and is extensively cruised even as far as the Caribbean. Named   in memory of Captain Denis Sullivan, an Irishman born in 1849 who commanded the   schooner Moonlight for eleven   years, he died in 1918.  The RC model shown was built by Dan   Sullivan seen in the second photograph, both images approved for   use here by Jeffrey W Churill of the Great   Lakes Modeling Association. Jeff is webmaster of the association and   maintains the excellent website well worth visiting     www.greatlakesmodeling.com 
              The model is built to 1/32 scale, has an electric motor,   the hull was fibreglassed in two halves, all sails are operated from one servo   and it took Dan 700 man hours and one years work. 
              
                
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              Abel the windling bear has suddenly got serious and   announced he is mounting a challenge for `that’ cup. A `sindickit’ (as he refers   to it) is being considered and he has got the cap and practice boat but now   needs `greenbacks’, and plenty of them!  No strange-to-Abel’s-eyes foreign   notes or coinage, nor Monopoly money, heavy Ivory Coast Zangabaloney `hunkas’,   Aussie crocodile teeth, near to invisible solid gold fleas or `priceless’   hand-polished  Spanish bull ticks, and definitely no Malawi kwachas or   Ungaboozi jungle beads picked off the Koonka tree!  This is `seryus stuff’   and both Bertarelli and that Larry fella better watch out.  Hey Abel aint   stoopid you know, that’s not his `cup’ boat!  (All this is of course   dependent on the two large rich players eventual agreement on fixing  fair   rules. What a schemozzle!  Ed)   
              
                
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              Windling ranks   with one of the very few simple pleasures left in life and therefore, perhaps it   is timely to remember Oscar Wilde’s  statement. Carried out on ones own or in the company of   others who are like-minded, and accepting of the vagaries of the wind that calls   on practitioners of the art to be both peaceful and patient, few will fail to find it a   relaxing and refreshing experience. 
              
              
              In the Netherlands, three Optimist dinghy models keep   company, the photograph I believe taken by Hans Staal, below that left, a    Robbe model of the schooner Valdivia with builder/owner, Robin Harker and over on the right, a Thunder   Tiger Victoria called Fear Knot,   owned and sailed by Dave Klingman of the Clearpoint Model Yacht Club in the USA,   it’s name as enterprising as its somewhat stunning  paint   job. 
              
                
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              I know that the name Ron Rule appears often in this   column as I share photos of the new boats of this man who `lives to build them   and then sail them’, and keeps producing examples that nobody else would think   of. About a month ago the writer (in total jest) took down to the pond a curved   piece of  much weathered bark that had fallen off the palm tree in the   front of his home in Auckland, New Zealand then  gave it to the man in   question. End result just a few weeks later, the Rule-built Palmir  (Palmir get it?)    emerged out of Ron Rule’s car at the Onepoto pond. With its hull made of the   same bark (and how I wish I had taken a photograph of the original!) and with   two channel radio, the little schooner was launched on Thursday 15th   May much to the consternation of fellow Ancient Mariners accompanied by a barrage   of instant plaudits. Model sailing boat groups need the likes of such a   builder who shows what can be   done  and constantly surprises. 
              A fitting item to close off this September   column.               
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