  
              The  older each of us gets, our lives tend to pivot on memories as we do less, and  we fall back on remembering rather than enjoying new experiences. But hey, I am  not grumbling for I have lived a really great life and I am  as I like to put it… still undead! 
                
                  
                There  they were, nineteen boats and their skippers lined up on the sand               
              
                
                                       
                  Sailing to the    start!  | 
                   
                  We are off and    racing! 
  | 
                 
               
              When  we forget great experiences in our lives we are 
                (not  always) but invariably in what I call `OUT! OUT’-mode, memories first and `who  we are’ next. So while I can still remember, I draw from my memory bank and  tell new readers in particular about a couple of absolutely happy and `fun’  based regattas I attended some years ago that were sailed in the ocean waters  encircling a `pocket handkerchief’-sized island, one of many in the Fiji  Islands group. 
                
              “I tell you what  Dave - I could kill for one of those fruit punches!” 
              
                
                   
                    A bit of music    helps the boats go faster!  | 
                   
                  A couple of beers!    We need a break! 
  | 
                 
                
                   
Walk in the ocean    round the Island Race  | 
                   
Walk close enough    to be able to talk to the crew on board! | 
                 
               
                
                Won the  bucket, mussed my hair up, got my medal! 
              It  was at Toberua (pronounced `Toam-beh-roo-ah) and where the island is located is  unimportant because I am no longer promoting places in Fiji for  vacation-minded people, and anyway, today you’d hardly find even one of the  little Des Townson designed and produced RC one-design `Electron’ yachts out there.  The regattas are no more, new owners of the island are more interested I am  sure, in welcoming New Zealand and Australian sun seekers for a rest and  relaxation type of holiday, rather than getting them to bring their model  yachts – it is more about making money now which is also fair enough. 
              What  absolute WOW’S of little regattas they both were, two days of racing and the  remaining four where laid back relaxation and `do nothingness’ were the order  of the day, except of course enjoying copious bottles of Fiji-brewed beer that  we called `Fiji Babies’. Time for another?   (well it is thirsty work!) you just propped the bar and said “Dua tale  Sam ”  and one would appear!  It was that easy. 
              It  was a case of `Take your model yacht on a holiday with you’ and if you tired of  that, with the backs of crabs for `holes’ at low tide you simply played beach  golf on the flat sand or went by small boat to `fairly near over there somewhere' Dromuna island and met the villagers. 
                
                Practicing  for the Coconut Cup Race at Dromuna Island 
              Out  there (by arrangement) several Fijian kids of the 
                Dromuna Yacht Club’ greeted me with their boats made of coconut husks with  leaves for sails. They were `magic’ kids, all of them, polite, friendly and  welcoming and a credit to their parents who gave them guidance in their  `brought-upsy’.               
              And  then there was the end of regatta round the island race where the entire fleet  competed in an anti-clockwise `rounding, and sailors took to the water  themselves for about half of the course in order to win the event, perhaps get  their name engraved on a galvanized bucket for posterity sake. To my mind it  was the greatest little model yacht ocean race of them all, one always followed  by another race, the one to the island bar! 
                
                Another  green `Island Goddess’ cocktail from Sam! 
                              Model  yachting is a wonderful and most varied activity, best suited to those of us  who are in our `senior’ years and enjoying quality time. I am happy that I can  still remember and I think I will recall now, having a beer or two and a fruity  rum-based cocktail or three …just for the bloody hell of it, you understand?  
               
                
                
              Rex Cotterell  prepares his R Tucker Thompson for a sail  
The man above, after illness, sadly departed some years  ago for a place more grand, but Rex Cotterell of both Auckland New Zealand’s Ancient Mariners and Scale Marine Modellers is well  remembered as the builder of the 2m long model schooner, R Tucker Thompson. 
              The original boat still plys  the waters of the Bay of Islands region in Northland, New Zealand, and Rex – a  ship-loving model yacht fanatic set about in 1988 to build a larger than usual  model that he could sail in the same estuary where the original boat was  launched three years earlier. 
                
              "Now  bloody keep standing Captain!  
              Have you been drinking?  
              You’re  embarrassing me!"               
              
                
                   
                    The big schooner’s    sails catch the wind.  | 
                   
                  Coming back to the    wharf 
  | 
                 
               
              The hull of the model was fibreglassed  over ply frames and bulwarks made of seven strips of teak glue with a capping  of two layers 1/8th ply. She turned out to be a right `big un’  indeed and with the amount of sail that she carried was more than a handful to  control when the winds were strong. Strongly build she took about an hour to  rig and launch and my photos don’t really show how impressive she was on the  go. I remember seeing a photograph of the model blasting along on the Manawhai  estuary, her nylon cloth sails filled and her bow cutting the water. 
Where  is the boat now? The last I heard was that the Trust now operating the real  boat were contemplating buying the model but I am not sure what happened  eventually.  That’s often the problem  when folk die isn’t it – what to do with their possessions, in the case of  model yachtsmen, often beautifully made, large sailing models? 
  
 
  
  
  Keith Barton’s new  schooner Tomahawk 
              Above sails Aucklander, Keith  _(will advise surname) new schooner Tomahawk, built this year  by the owner simply because he `always liked  schooners!’. A member of the Scale  Marine Modellers, he has already built and regularly sails a Starlet with  the Ancient Mariners at Onepoto lake  on Auckland, 
                New   Zealand’s North Shore. 
                
                Pleasing lines, Tomahawk, another look 
              Borrowing the mould of Murray  White’s sloop Scout, Keith once the  hull was ready fitted frames and a 1/16 ply deck and then took measurements of  its cabins and hatch of Dennis Lake’s small Argus schooner, added coamings,  fitted RC gear and ended up with the schooner he named Tomahawk . When  photographed  it appeared to sail very well.               
               
                
                
              
                
                   
                    `Admiral of Vice’    Murray’s trendy attire  | 
                  (above) Ron Rule in self-festooned hat swore that a would-be axe killer among the group had tried to cut his skull in half! 
                     
                  and the hat to    match! 
  | 
                 
               
                
              Lending  an air of class to the Footy fleet,  
              Dennis Lake’s pretty Argus that romped  home               
                
                The RC crocodile Brutus that confronted the boats 
              On 29th  November 2005, nine Ancient Mariners with eight Footy boats and one small scale schooner assembled beside a small  stream in Auckland where several `events’ were held in both directions sailing  into the wind for the upward legs to a turn-around point then a downwind  screamer to the finish. It mattered not who won and nobody grumbled at either  `lift outs’ or  `run up the bank `plonk  back in’s’, nor that Dennis Lake’s pretty Argus schooner with its greater hull  length and sail area invariably won. 
                
                "All    this noise and HOO-HA! 
 It’s totally disgusting!!!" 
              During one event several  boats were suddenly confronted by a most realistic RC-controlled crocodile  appearing out of the reeds on the opposite bank made by the now departed Bob  Walters, and a Footy-sized foot-shaped boat took to the water amid laughter  towing a giant `big toe’ (looking very much like one of mine!)  made by Ron Rule. 
                
                Ron’s foot-like Footy 
               In another event after a  sumptious sandwich and cake lunch while sprawled on the grass beside the  stream  under the trees, the `big prick’  event where yellow balloons were eliminated by boat bowsprits with pins, took  place, a red haired creature, Dora  Dingbat made a brief appearance while taking care not to be photographed,  and I should have mentioned that funny hats and colourful shirts and socks were  the order of the day. 
              We must learn to laugh at each  other more, cast-off our inhibitions, forget our ages, do something crazy once  in a while, relax and reduce our stress levels while still messing about with  our model yachts. It is one of our Ancient Mariners'  beliefs  that is 'optionally mandatory'! 
                
            -30-  |