Into battle on HMS Belleisle, a pickle and snowflake,  
              rebirth of an old duckling, a skipjack  
              stunner, 
                     
                and a Rozinante worth gawking at! 
 
               WTWB/MAY  2010 
                
                
                HMS Belleisle puts to sea! 
              “Why  don’t we build a working replica of one of Nelson’s line of battle ships for  the Bursledon regatta re-enactment?” someone suggested (as if the task was  akin to simply baking and icing a cake), so unable to figure out `why not’ and  with HMS  Belleisle decided upon, a gentleman called Ben searched through the Exeter  University Library, found a set of books that described in fine detail    a French 74 Gun ship of the time and upon a  fifty year old, fairly rotten GP 14 dinghy bought on E-bay, it came to pass  that 20 men, give or take a few, settled down to creating a a 1/13 scale ship  in just two weeks! 
              T’is  said that dogged determination mixed with a bit of craziness can often conquer  lack of time and and extreme odds, and again it came to pass that the night  before the  regatta, a spanking new `sail  aboard’ ship of the line was being rigged in a warehouse in Hamble, England. 
              Sounds  like a tale from `The wizard of Oz’ or a bit of pure `fantasy thoughts’ by a  group of nutty people high on something, but again it came to pass that `upon a  once old and  rotten dinghy hull  a crew of men and women made` a ship of the  line’ on time and put to sea (again on time) for the re-enactment of a famous  battle a long way back in history, 
                
              Testing her first! 
              
                
                    
                    Upon a rotten old dinghy... | 
                    
                  Give them heaps! | 
                 
               
              
                
                    
                  Stern showing the Admiral's cabin. | 
                    
                  Water Battle in progress. | 
                 
               
                
              While  foraging on the internet some months back, my `mouse’, Oskar de Cervantes’ discovered  this wonderful story, upon which I contacted the `Admiral’, (Phillip Meakins)  who gave me permission to use photos in a planned condensed tale of this happening.  Marvelous people, these Brits, all up to the  task of taking part in a modern day sea adventure that many who were involved in what developed into the  mother and father of all water fights will probably forever remember.  (Contrary to occasional instances where I have  been known to spin a few `porkies’, this story is totally true and you can  visit the website which is indeed worth browsing.) 
                
               
                
              In  order to meet conditions for joining the Single European Currency, all citizens  of the United Kingdom  must be made aware that the phrase “spending a penny’ is no longer to be used.  The correct terminology is now `Euronating!’ 
               
                
              Kenneth  Impey is a delightful Cornishman for years a personal friend of my wife and I,  and those readers who have followed my column on Duckworks from the inception  may remember a few previous occasions where he has been mentioned, and some of  his boats shown. 
              Ken  is a talented model maker and a few months ago he sent me a few photographs of  his HMS Pickle, thetwo fore and aft shots taken in the  bath, the other of the model coming downwind (not in the bath silly!).  They are worth including. 
                
                Pickle in the bath. 
              
                
                    
                  Pickle stern | 
                    
                  Pickle downwind | 
                 
               
                
              The restored Snowflake 
               
              Then  there is Snowflake in the photograph  just above, which a Steve Woods brought  to Ken for restoration sadly as a display model. With a hull in lines  resembling a fast clipper she had once been rigged as a two-masted fore and aft  schooner which a young Steve Woods in the late 1930’s when a youngster was  allowed by his Uncle who had built it to sail at the local pond.  Ken restored the schooner over a period of  nine months and related how he experienced such strong emotional feelings that  almost possessed him as he worked on the model in his garden workshed. The  ideas just flowed and he had the feeling that he had with him a crowd of  invisible advisors.  From the photo it is  obvious that he made a great job of restoring the schooner called Snowflake.  (I think it might have been those Cornish pixies Ken!  Remember how they raised the light bulb in my  motel room in Falmouth,  made me overreach to change it and put my back out?)  Mischievous little chaps they can be indeed! 
              Due  to eyesight problems, Ken’s ship modelling   has slowed as has his windling of boats built by him in Falmouth,  Cornwall. 
               
                
                
              Little boy with a little boat. 
              
                
                    
                                        stern | 
                    
                  restored boat side-on | 
                 
               
                
              Wil Hansen (6) and Hart Hansen (3) with the restored yacht               
               Via a  somewhat circuitous route, Penny, a lady in Auckland having written to Alex Roach  of the Vintage Model yacht group in Britain whom I know, then made contact with  me at his suggestion on the matter of advice as to whom she might be able to  get to repair an un-named little sailing boat, a bit of an ugly duckling but a  boat of great sentimental value. 
              I knew of one man (my friend Ron Rule of our Ancient Mariners sailing group) whose  kindness and ability to handle the task at hand was worth contacting. A couple  of weeks later, the existing `remains’ seen by him and delivered to Ron emerged  transformed after sixty hours of sanding, filling, treating damage inflicted by  borer worms, sanding several times more and painting, as well as making new  sails and a new mast, spars and a bowsprit the little sailboat was again  presentable and joyfully welcomed back by Penny who collected it at our sailing  venue. What’s more (since every boat should have a name and not have to be referred  to as `it’) the little boat (as Achilles) now refitted is set to please the  hearts of other little ones in the family  in the future. 
              I was then to learn the reasons for the attached  sentimentality. The little lad, Wilfrid Hansen holding the bowsprit of the  yacht in the photograph taken  in 1981 had sadly died in an  accident at age 18 in 1995.  May the  little sailboat bring back many fond memories. 
             
                  
               
                
              I never  thought I’d be writing about a humble   pain killer - that was until someone sent me an e-mail extolling it’s  virtues.  Well, true  it is white which means that I can see it better (and with my eyesight am still able  to read what it is!), and the even bigger plus is that it WORKS!  Now don’t risk telling me that is a racist  statement, please!  There are some still  guilt-tripping around the world!  (Ooops! Be careful fella!! Watch your step! It is a bit slippery on that circle!) 
               
                
                  
                Mary Allyssa the skipjack. 
              The  American Skipjacks are a type of sailboat designed on the Chesapeake   Bay for oyster dredging. In the late 1800- early 1900’s they were  a familiar sight there. Today there are still quite a few around and it is  noted that there are many for sale and others being restored and used for  people to experience a cruise aboard. In the Maryland area there is considerable interest  in sailing models of skipjacks and this is most noticeable at Solomons Island Model Boat Club where  several are built and where they are raced at regattas 
              Bob  Seiden of Kings Point Model Yacht Club (see  last month’s column) keeps perhaps the most beautiful of RC sailing scale  skipjacks in his home in New Jersey, USA where, fully rigged it holds pride of  place on the top of the( large and strong) piano and gets sailing outings at  skipjack events at Solomons Island  MBC  and at one or two other regattas. The model is 67.5 inches long and weighs 27.5  lbs 
              He  built the boat from plans bought in 1996 from the model shop at the Calvert  Museum and took photos of a full size skipjack Rosie Parks owned by the Chesapeake  Bay Maritime Museum in Maryland, taking his time before launching the model  in June 2001. Named Mary Alyssa after  both wife and daughter, he had someone carve nameboards,  trailboards and the impressive eagle head  below the bowsprit for him, finishing them of and painting them himself. 
              
               
                
                
                Builder, Murray Barber with Rozinante  model 
              Murray  Barber in Vancouver, Canada has been a model yacht builder of radio control  boats, half models and purely display model yachts for over 25 years, In  addition he is a creator of free-standing or self-contained sculptural lighting  units called `Arcs’ and added to those he produces jewellery, carvings and  objects of art. 
              
                
                    
                  Sweet boat on the water | 
                    
                  Side on hull view | 
                 
               
              
                
                    
                  A lovely sail    | 
                     
                  Nice work aboard  | 
                 
               
              It is  however his model yachts I’d like to tell you about, and in particular his  model of the L Francis Herreshoff designed canoe yawl Rozinante, seen above, a 76” long model with a hull beautifully  made of Red Cedar. 
                It is  an absolutely stunning model shown in the first photograph above with it’s  builder, Murray Barber. 
              Sold  eventually to a client in Hong Kong, it is  fitted with fully functioning RC, the sails made by Canadian molde yachting  guru, 
                Bob  Sterne. 
              
                
                    
                  jewellery | 
                    
                    Dragon sculpture | 
                 
               
              Murray’s trading name company is Dragonworks which leads me to add that  he has also created wonderful dragons for people from time to time. 
               Murray  has restored pond yachts for  people and built several other model sailing boats over the years. I found his  website www.murraybarber.com)  an interesting one 
               
                
                
                A schooner called SKY 
              I  absolutely adore this photograph of Boston   MA builder and sailor, John  Storrow’s  light blue-hulled schooner Sky with her tidy lines,  well set sails and the boat absolutely barreling  along. I like it so much that I have used it before. As a boy he had a book, Model Sailing Boats by E.W Hobbs and in  it was a small line drawing.  The end  result was that John built this 40” on deck much later on in his life . It is a  lovely image that evokes the thoughts of summer sailing, don’t you think?  It is also  a pretty nice one with which to end this  months column. 
                
              -30- 
                
         |