| subscribe | magstore.nz/boatingnewzealand Boating New Zealand 105
he Friendly Bay Boating Society’s
headquarters are right where you
might expect them to be. In Oamaru’s
historic district, past the Steam
Punk headquarters where an ancient
locomotive snorts steam into the air. Past
patisseries and galleries and nearby Adventure Books, where
you can walk around the flm replica of Ernest Shackleton’s
James Caird, and access shelves full of almost every sailing
book ever published.
On the corner of Tyne Street, the door of a weathered
whitestone former warehouse has a hand lettered sign that says
- Friendly Bay Boating Society. And in more forid font – Tyne
Street Boatshed. Te building exudes friendly and, as the door
slides open, a collection of boating projects is fooded in light.
“Tat’s Duet – she was [legendary boatbuilder] Lionel
Jefcoate’s frst build.” Mike Harris pulls dusty covers of a
nuggety little hard-chine planked hull. “She’s a bit neglected
right now – I’ve just bought a Hartley Fijian that I’m reftting
at Port Chalmers.”
Beside Duet is a shapely double-ended plank hull, partly
decked, with a vintage Kelvin diesel sitting amidships.
Highland Lass is chiselled into a name board which rests across
the foredeck. “She was built in 1910 by Miller Brothers at Port
Chalmers,” says her owner, Peter Torn. “Ten they sunk the
boat for a year to pickle her in salt water.”
T
In Oamaru, amidst the country’s capital of quirky, a group of
passionate boating folk are hard at work on their maritime labours of love.
feature
Oamaru
mariners
WORDS AND PHOTOGRAPHY BY
LINDSAY WRIGHT
ECLECTIC,
ECCENTRIC
MAVERICKS