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May 2002 EDITOR'S NOTES The
club's sailing members have been busy this month in the yard. Last weekend
with very high tides a bevy of boats went into the water. Some boats have
gone to moorings in Wales. One unfortunate occurrence was when Nirvana
came off her moorings and went ashore. By great good fortune she missed
all obstacles as she sailed up river and came to rest on sand. It took
two days, two tractors and some hard work to get her back unscathed. Last
weekend several boats were boarded in the yard and one was broken into
and electrical equipment was stolen. In addition the lock was cut off
a dinghy and the dinghy was taken down to the water where it was abandoned.
It seems that the absence of a bung prevented it from being used. Please
take care to lock all equipment securely and to put your bung in your
pocket. It would not be practical to report every word uttered during the General Committee meetings but here is a brief resume of the most salient points of the May meeting. THE GENERAL COMMITTEE MEETING. The meeting got off to a prompt start and the Commodore was in the chair. Apologies for absence were from Trevor Roberts. Bill Woods and David Rowles. The Commodore told
the committee that he had attended several events . There was a Regatta
Conference and he has been in touch with some one about the Mersey River
Festival. Peter and Doreen also attended a service in the Anglican Cathedral
to commemorate the Battle of the Atlantic. This was followed by a Cocktail
Party, which was held on Eaglet. The host was Cedric Loughran. The Vice Commodore
gave a report from the sailing committee. The sailing committee has noted
the comments about the new slip and the effects it has on dinghies. These
will be considered after a few weeks as more people use it and a decision
will then be taken. Alan Roe held a small working party to bridge the
gap between the old and the new. This works successfully.
All boat owners who are planning to visit the Albert Dock please note that you MUST have completed the necessary form before you arrive or you will NOT be admitted. Forms and other information are available from me. A. Roe. *************
The sailing committee
are keen to promote cruising especially for those who would prefer to
sail in company until their confidence in pilotage, chartwork etc has
been established. **************
THE HON SECRETARY
Mark told the meeting that Shelagh Warren had agreed to decorate a window
in St Stephen's Church on behalf of B.S.C. This is for Hightown Flower
Show. Mark also has received notice of live firing on the Rifle Range
and a notice from Tranmere. You will find all his notices on the board
as usual. THE HON MEMBERSHIP SECRETARY Stan has some spare diaries this year. They will be on sale behind the bar at a cost of £1.00 each if anybody wants one. THE CLUB DEVELOPMENT
OFFICER Carl had attended a talk at the Royal Mersey Yacht Club about
the proposed wind-farm development. It seems to have been the same talk,
which was presented at Blundellsands, which Carl missed and there seemed
to be nothing new. Carl however had reservations about how the club members
would be affected. And described the development as being between a rock
and a hard place x thirty. THE SOCIAL COMMITTEE
Doreen sent her report in which she said that the small number of people
who turned up for the last social event had a good evening. Both the food
and the music were good and a small profit was made. Doreen suggested
that in the coming year social events should be held at times to avoid
the sailing season. The next meeting will be 11th June.
CLWYD was the other
'Rivers' class boat. She was owned then by Ken Colley. He was a partner
in a business on the banks of the Leeds and Liverpool Canal near its entry
to the dock system. She spent the war years hauled out in a field at Hall
Road but was eventually moved to Ken's works in Bootle, repaired and fitted
with a small cabin top. Another boat I remember
was JEAN, owned by Jack Hyde. She was originally a ship's lifeboat. Jack
was a really skilled craftsman. He bought the hull which had come off
a Norwegian ship and so was a better shape than usual and made an excellent
job of the conversion. (Ed. Yes we still present the Abbott Cup and we also have a Colley Cup) WHITE SQUALL, then owned by Jim Wyse has been mentioned previously in my recollections. It was aboard her that I made my first ever coastal passage, from Bangor to the Alt back in 1946. She was a canoe-sterned yawl of about 5 tons TM, built by Crossfields of Arnside in 1903. Pre-war she had based at West Kirby and have been told that to this day a half model of her is still displayed in the Mersey Canoe Club on Hilbre Island. There was FRIVOL, a real period piece. Designed by M.T.Reade,a member of the original Blundellsands Sailing Club, she had been built by A Latta of Hoylake in 1896. Although her centre plate had been removed she still retained the original low cabin top with an elliptical curve to the fo'rad end. She was maybe 21 ft on the waterline and with a straight stem about the same on deck. Her owner, one Eric Behn, fitted a new cabin top of conventional shape. While this provided much needed headroom below it did rather spoil her appearance. Eric Behn retired to the Isle of Man and took Frivol with him. She was sold and I believe her new owner lost her on a rocky shore near Laxey. CHEERFUL was another interesting boat. Clinker planked with very bluff bows and a short counter stern. "Cods head and Mackerel stern" is the old time description of her shape. I do not know anything of her origins. Possibly John Tiere, who owned her then may have some idea. Rigged as a gaff cutter with quite a long bowsprit she sailed much better than her shape suggested. MAUREEN, later renamed
ALTANA, was different from other boats on the Alt in those days in that
she was neither an out-classed racer, an old fishing boat or a converted
lifeboat but was built as a yacht. She appeared from somewhere on the
Ribble, possibly Hesketh Bank and was owned by a gentleman from Southport. LADY IDA was another
conversion, not of a ship's lifeboat or an old nobby but of an open motor
launch. A previous owner decked her in, added a cabin top and rigged her
as a gaff cutter. There was little of her under the water so her performance
under sail to windward was not inspiring. Bill Parr, who did some of the
early extension to the clubhouse, owned her. My own boat was the
ISLANDER, an 18ft sharpie. She had been built in 1930 by a club member,
Bert Parry. Later someone installed a Stuart Turner engine and based her
at Rock Ferry. Brian Pearson who was Commodore of the B S C in the early
1950's brought her back to the Alt and I bought her when he acquired THE
SCOT. (see part 1) At the start of this account I mentioned a total of ten cabin boats but seem to have remembered a dozen. There may have been one or two which I have forgotten but I hope that the details above give an idea of the B S C cabin boat fleet of fifty years ago. All built of wood. With hardly a reliable engine between them they regularly entered and left the Alt under sail. Some even did it at night!! Mark Miller. 2/02
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