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 September 2013
               GADZOOKS! Well what a `near  washout’ evident by the apparent  disinterest by readers in the offer of one of  Andrew Fagan’s freesail boats as a prize in the June issue contest, only one  single reader taking the time and minimum effort to enter. That person was Bob Guess of Mass, Va, USA Some of us quietly bemoan the  fact that `kids are `just not interested in the model boating scene’ while  others add that it’s all because of computers, video games, the worldwide texting  `tsunami’ and the presence of  I pads,`I  this , that and the other’. To a degree the latter may have an element of truth,  but I say many dads and grandpas are totally disinterested. The prize offered required  little effort to enter and was a grand `starter opportunity’ with the promise  of a rather fine Christmas present from Grandad and Nan. 
 
 Anyway well done to Bob Guess   seen above with his Davilon Morocat   by Andrew Fagan which reached him in seven days from New Zealand, and he  certainly looks `over the moon’ with the model, the photo taken by his wife  Patti. Bob and wife Patti have three grandchildren seven years  and under and live near Chick’s Beach a block from Chesapeake   Bay and not far from the bridge-tunnel which crosses the bay. He  is also part of a group known as the Lunatic  Fringe of Boatdom and on Summer weekends his garage is often filled with  people who like (you guessed it) boats and  beer. He quite often writes in `Messing about in Boats’ publication.  Bob rows while keeping an eye on youngster Joe, grandson of friends  Ed & Michelle Cobb and the Davilon Morocat sails away in a light breeze.
 
 
  Peter Spencer doing what he enjoyed
 Sad news to start with in  that another dear friend, the Reverend Peter Spencer of West Bergholt in Essex, Great    Britain whose fine model RC sailing ships I had  featured several times in Windling World, passed away the day before his 81st birthday. Peter and Wendy  his wife were in Florida  visiting her sister and he was whisked into hospital. Of the `old school’ Peter  never used email and we sadly had lost touch after                my magazine  ceased publication. He was a highly skilled and  meticulous ship modeller and I had come upon two of his articles in recent  months when browsing through borrowed copies of Model Boats which prompted a letter to him.  Peter’s model of the Lottie S Haskins
 I had shown Peter’s model of  the 1880 model schooner in Windling World,  the model extensively shown  later the  March 2009 issue of Model Boats. Peter  had gone to considerable lengths to find a little stream in which to float it  for a photograph (shown above). The original schooner had been built in Massachusetts in the USA and Peter had carefully  researched  the vessel in Howard I  Chapelle’s book The American Fishing Schooners  1825-1935.  His model of the Lowestoft Sailing
 trawler Master  Hand
 A magnificent sailing model,  this was later presented to the National  Maritime Museum  in Greenwich, London and is a fitting place to display it.  who now have full ownership. I am sure that it will prove to be a popular  exhibit in the museum’s collection of authentic models. 
  Ian Crooks in later unwell days
 Another of our Ancient Mariners in Auckland, Ian Crooks drew his last breath on  21st June and fell victim to cancer at age 73. He was a good guy and  a regular careful and capable skipper on the pond with a couple of boats that  he built and highly likeable among his fellow colleagues. A keen snow skier, Ian  also did a fair quantity of sailing in earlier days and built his own sailing  models and also sailed on Sundays with the  SEAWIND fleet. Always with a smile and the offer of a handshake when I arrived  at the pond, Ian also spent time in approaches to the City Council towards  cleaning up the Onepoto pond and many there like his Ancient Mariner sailing buddies shall remember him but for  different reasons. He was also a keen skier and loved such areas.. Ian leaves a  gorgeous daughter, Sarah who looked after her father right through until his  untimely passing. Fair winds Ian, we still miss you and thanks for the memories  mate. 
 
  The fleet moored before  assembling
 for the start of a Jester Challenge
 Not  that the writer has any personal aspirations of going to 
                sea  in a pea-green small sailing boat no larger  than thirty feet I am                but  a non- ocean-sailing journalist who can only dream of such  adventures  while enjoying sailing small model boats  weekly on a
              pond  in New Zealand  in the antipodies. (Perhaps it is the little boy still in me trying to get out ! – it is said that many such exist!) But  what exactly is the Jester Challenge? Well there are oodles of                websites  on the internet that one can plod through but perhaps              I  was lucky as I chanced upon and went straight to one of it’s co-founders and  originators, Ewen Southby-Tailyour who could not have been more helpful. The  Jester Challenge is not a race so there is no finishing order, instead it is a  single-handed  ocean cruise held every  four years from a point in Britain  to another relatively easily reached by those who enter.  It is for sailing boat of the size mentioned  and engines aboard are permitted but may only be used to charge batteries for  mobile telephones and steering and navigation system or in the case of an  emergency. A  fine summation of the Jester I found to be a short history of the challenge by  Mike Richey for he tells of the yacht Jester that became one of the most recognisable sailing yachts in the world with her  junk-rig set on an unstayed mast conceived by Blondie Hasler for short-handed sailing  who finished second to Francis Chichester in Gypsy Moth II in a race from Plymouth, England to New York in 1960.  Blondie Hasler
 
 
                
                  |  Mike Richey
 |  Ewen Southby Tailyour
 |  This  motivated the idea that led to the  originators organizing what was to be known as the Jester Challenge by Southby-Tailyour and  Trevor Leek who was to later own Jester.  Hasler died in 1987 and Richey in 2009 at  age 92, the latter not before scattering the former’s ashes at sea aboard the  boat Hasler had made famous. Blondie Hasler, Mike Richey, Ewen Southby-Tailyour  and Trevor Leek’s names are therefore the key  links in the origins of today’s  Jester  Challenge. This  years Jester Challenge is from UK  to Baltimore in SW Ireland and according to Ewen  is intended to bring on the new and inexperienced sailors prior to the 2014  Jester to Newport, Rhode Island. 
 
  The Sea Empress gathering speed
  Rick Mayes on the  sunshine coast of Australia  is renowned for his beautiful scale RC schooners and his new one, the Sea Empress certainly steals the show  and is a stunning looker. She is called Sea  Empress and the design is loosely influenced by the classic schooner EOS, the largest private sailing yacht  in the world built for movie and media billionaire, Barry Diller the husband of  fashion designer Diane von Furstenberg. Rick’s model commenced as a model of the Maltese Falcon was later put aside after  sailing trials of the hull and a couple of years later re-used for the new  ship. Photos of EOS were obtained and  the hull constructed plank on frame to a scale of 1:55 providing a sparred length  of 170cm with a 26cm beam.               schooner photos by Brian Gwillam
                The figurehead
 Unlike the reported story of the figurehead on EOS being of Diller’s wife, Rick’s Sea Empress carried a nude gold-pained  female figurehead (not of Rick’s wife   only because the owner didn’t want to pay her the modest modelling  fee…and like many of us his memory is not as good as it used to be!) A few details: The draft including attached keel is 35c, it  is fitted with two Hitec H5765HB sail arm winches that work in tandem to  control the staysail/mizzen together and the foresail/mainsail together, and of  course a standard servo for the rudder control.
                There are roaches and battens on the fore, main and mizzen  sails. 
 
  Scott  Baldwin sketching on a foreshore
 Scott Baldwin is a professional illustrator and marine  artist of 30 years standing who works for a variety of clients in the  publishing and graphic design fields who lives in Connecticut  near the river and Long Island sound. He produces  drawings and notecards for people, works from observation and photos and does  commissioned paintings of boats. His website is www.baldwinstudio.us               
 There are two great riddles in the world: How was  I born, I don’t remember, how shall I die, I don’t know!Alexander  Solzhenetsyn
 
 
 Keith  Muscott, an avid dinghy sailor edits and produces a high class little magazine  called Dinghy Cruising in Britain and his  readership comes from many parts of the world. Keith gets  out on the water as often as he can aboard his 14’7” long cat-ketch called Seren (A Welsh word for `Star’), a boat  designed by Ian Howlett, the image (above)  by Keith at Scapa Flow in the Orkney islands .  If you are into dinghies you’ll find DC  an interesting read with great photographs and  you should email Keith and request a copy by email. keithmuscott@aol.com He is also a  keen musician seen in the photo inset knocking out some blues for clients at  the Royal Hotel in Longhope , a coastal settlement in Orkney, Scotland. 
 
 Sit  back now and enjoy a You Tube video of American author, graduate of Harvard,  wingsuit flyer and successful base jumper, Chris ‘Douggs’ McDougall’s daring  Wingsuit flight `Black Dragon make storm’. What people do for enjoyment.  I am not in his class and am only at the  stage of  jumping off the 15 and a half  inch high pouffe onto the carpet believe me that’s frightening enough at 79! 
 
  Snoopy Sloop
 
                
                  |  Robin Lovelock
 |  A launching for Snoopy Sloop
 |  It  was a gallant and seemingly well thought out attempt by Englishman Robin  Lovelock to develop a model yacht with solar panels aboard to recharge the  electrics as well as GPS Computer to pilot the model and therefore keep the RC  going. Launched in British waters with hopes to be the first to sail the model  across the Atlantic to America  it attracted quite considerable attention and was part of the `Microtransat  Challenge’ which began in 2010 by French academics. With  an effigy of Charles Schultz’s Snoopy mounted  on the bow foredeck and after fairly considerable pre-publicity Robin Lovelock  launched his 1.2m Snoopy Sloop from  Barton On Sea beach in Hampshire and the journey was on. Sadly it was not to be  for a mere six hours of sailing later, the model self-destructed when it failed  to clear `the Needles’ at the tip of the Isle of Wight in Britain, slamming into  the chalk cliff face to curtail the dream. Knowing  the tenacity of the English, Robin Lovelock and his Team Joker will not have  given up. He could have been a hero but maybe next time and model yachts and  what they stand for sure needs a hero.               
 
 
                
                  |  |  "They say you’re too small
 For the Jester Challenge!"
 | Model Scow by Harry Duncan photograph by Mark Steele |  
 
  Sanctuary found, Egret  in a Hugusmungas  Island
 stream for  rudder repairs.
 Enroute  to Auckland New Zealand, the little ex Monroe replica built by Cecil Tiller and headed from the US under sail after  hitting really bad weather when she was almost swamped, was a on June 8th  in an evening collision with a large humpback whale. Her  delivery skipper who is sailing her reported that the boat was turned on her  side and almost flipped completely over but was towed forty miles off course to  Bungalew Point part of Hugusmungas Island by a freighter where her rudder could  be straightened after which she was going to leave and proceed onwards in end  August headed for New Zealand via the Panama  Canal. And therein, readers should ponder as to whether this
is no more than a `tall tale! 
 
 
 
 
 Bob  Hicks, Publisher and Editor of the monthly publication Messing about in Boats and I have been great friends-never-met for  several years, largely because of our parallel interests of publishing and our  interests in motorcycles. Our association goes back to when I was publishing Windling World, his going even further back  in both our cases to when he published motorcycle journals and when unbeknown  to both of us we rode and raced motorcycles at opposite ends of the world. Here  is a young Bob on his 1947 Indian  Chief `Roadmaster’ off to a 1950 camping trip in New Hampshire. Strewth!  That bike sure is  a collosal and mean-looking bastard!   And at the other end of the scale, a beautiful miniature chopper made  from watch parts (but not by Bob)  seen on the internet and so realistic one feels that one could actually ride  it.  (Inset) 
 
 Geoff Mackley film – Geoff is a freelance photographer and International filmmaker with a worldwide reputation and is also an extreme adventurer. This is just one of his videos featured on YouTube. 
 
  A ship well  weathered!
 Photograph by the writer in Wellington, New Zealandmany years ago. Any idea how long it took me to
 `weather’ this one?
 
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