Classic Boat – July 2019

(lu) #1
A yacht that reaches the age of 121 without need of a rebuild is
something we hardly ever see; Witch, built in 1898 as Belem, is
one of a select few. She was built for James William Scarlett,
Baron Abinger, Laird of Gigha, to ferry passengers and goods
between the Isle of Gigha and the mainland. Dickies of Tarbert
would have built her as an open boat for that purpose. Records
show that the ferryman at the time, John Wotherspoon, charged
two shillings for a passenger, four for a horse, two for a cow or
pig and just three pence for a sheep. Two decades of service
later, she was sold and converted to a 38ft 8in (11.8m) gaff
cutter-rigged yacht. She was bought in 2006 by her current
owner, Alistair Randall, now OGA president.

Eric Tabarly’s yachts Pen Duick and Pen Duick II will both be
taking part in this year’s Classic Channel Regatta which starts
on 29 June in Dartmouth, Devon.
The original Pen Duick, a 1898 gaff cutter designed by William
Fife III, is the Tabarly family boat that Eric learned to sail in – and
from which he tragically fell overboard and drowned in the Irish
Sea in 1998. She has just undergone an extensive refit, and the
Classic Channel Regatta will be one of the first post-refit events.
Pen Duick II is the 44ft (13.4m) ketch in which Eric Tabarly won
the 1964 OSTAR Observer Single-handed Transatlantic Race.

Never rebuilt in 121 years


CLASSIC CHANNEL REGATTA
Pen Duicks confirmed

The Brixham-built replica of the Pilgrims' Mayflower II is nearing the end of her extensive
Mystic Seaport museum refit. The historic vessel was lifted out of the water in 2014 for the
refit to begin, and Mayflower II has been a fascinating work in progress for visitors to Mystic in
the intervening years. Skilled shipwrights from the Plimoth Plantation museum and Mystic have
been working to systematically replace timbers, planking, structural frames, knees and beams
that, despite the attention of Plimoth Plantation maritime staff, had succumbed to the elements.
The works are scheduled to finish in time for the quadricentennial celebrations of the Pilgrim
Fathers’ 1620 Massachusetts landing next year, when Mayflower II (pictured above sailing
in 2007) will return to her home berth at Plimoth Plantation, and be the focus of a series of
events scheduled to celebrate the founding of modern America.

MYSTIC SEAPORT


Mayflower II refit update


Witch
1898

Mayflower II at Upham Shipyard in
Brixham, where she was built in 1957
and given to the people of the USA in
gratitude for their sacrifices in WWII

TELL TALES


EM

ILY

HA

RR

IS

JA

NE

PE

RR

IN

PICTURES: PLIMOTH PLANTATION
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