THE RNVR YACHT CLUB
Transcription
THE RNVR YACHT CLUB
THE RNVR YACHT CLUB News Update Winter 2015 Christmas Lights Drams in the Cockpit to celebrate sailing around Britain. RNVRYC member Stan Jacobs has worked hard to create Ramsgate Christmas Illuminations on the boats in the town quay and marina. You may have heard his interview on local BBC TV. His photographs provide our seasonal image and remind us of our summer cruise and dinner at the Royal Temple Yacht Club. How does your logbook appear and illustrate the highlights of your cruise? Thanks to Hugh Stewart for his contribution. This is an expressive illustration of sailing around Britain.—More in future? Contents: Annual Dinner, HQS Wellington Five Castles Cruise The Baltic Revisited Club Cruising Around The World Some Reflections on Previous Volunteer Yachts. A notice from The Naval Club Queen's Harbour Master Portsmouth Committee:During the latter part of the season a Rules Sub-committee studied the present rules and have submitted their recommendations which are being discussed by the main committee. There has been continuing consideration for recruitment of new members from our main base of RNR. A decision has been taken to make all CO’s of RNR units as Honarary members and improve their knowledge of the activities of the Club . Secretary 1 Annual Dinner, HQS Wellington, 20 November Boatswain’s Bell (for the most interesting article in the newsletter) – Melvyn Newell After a long absence, Club members returned to dine afloat in the former HMS Wellington, built in Devonport Dockyard in 1934. Some 93 diners enjoyed bubbly before an excellent meal in the double height wood panelled former engine room. Our Guest of Honour Vice Admiral Sir David Steel (who was Second Sea Lord until March) regaled us with a very wide ranging speech, including a jovial explanation as to how a supply officer could become Second Sea Lord. Formalities were drawn to a close with the presentation of trophies and engraved goblets, as follows: Commodore’s Cup (for leading the Club’s entry to the Fastnet Campaign) – Joseph Macdonald Additional photos of the occasion by Marcus Ware can be viewed on the Club website at www.rnvryc.org/past -events-and-photos-2015 Peter Culver Joseph Macdonald could not resist seizing the opportunity to give us an illuminating insight into the team’s preparation for and execution of the race and the benefits of the yacht, Volunteer; and he thanked Club members for making it all possible. Morton Smart Sextant (for outstanding service to the Club) - David Whitby. Elizabeth Cup (for first Club Member in The Round the Island Race) – Stuart Greenfield Volunteer Cup (for the most enterprising voyage) – Patrick Marshall 2 Five Castles Cruise 22-31 August 2015 James Hanratty had worked his magic and a most enjoyable buffet lunch and followed by a tour of the Castle. Five Castles, four dinners, three damp pontoon parties, two casualties and one fine luncheon not to mention some challenging sailing were some of the ingredients that went into our third “Five” cruise. A breezy and at times wet Yarmouth was our first port of call but after a damp welcome pontoon party, the bracing ferry ride and fascinating visit to our first castle Hurst on Sunday followed by a splendid dinner at the Royal Solent Yacht Club rounded off the first week-end in style. Monday morning dawned wet with a very brisk easterly wind which tested out our rafting arrangements in the very full harbour prior to some hurried departures for East Cowes. After wet passages, all our boats were berthed close to one another to make life easier for the pontoon party and Rotating Dinner that followed in the evening. Again the rain came down on the party which caused the dinner to start somewhat earlier but it did not dampen the party spirit and Martin Alexander’s skilful organisation ensured the rotating dinner was a great success. Yet another damp start to Tuesday was offset by club members smartening up for what turned out to be one of the cruise highlights, a splendid buffet lunch followed by a tour of the hallowed ground of Cowes Castle aka The Squadron. Past Commodore The man who bathed from the Squadron Steps 3 All were very content except for past Commodore David Whitby who had to make an unplanned visit to Newport Hospital for a medical emergency. A further wet start on Wednesday heralded the second casualty when Rick Atkinson took a severe tumble into the saloon on Volunteer. After first aid rendered by Eileen Morgan, Rick eventually had to be carted away in an ambulance his bruised loin strapped up with a frozen pack of ham for pain relief. The ham, now well defrosted, was eventually consumed as planned in Alouette! The afternoon easterly tide saw most of the fleet passing Southsea Castle and heading into Gosport where in the evening, a relaxed informal din- ner was enjoyed in Hornet. Volunteer in the meantime, sailed back to Port Solent with her reduced crew. Thankfully by the Thursday morning, the weather gods started being kinder as most of the fleet headed eastwards for Chichester Harbour whilst Alchemilla and Phantom Lady returned to Hythe and Lonk Avel remained in Hornet. Safely berthed in Chichester Marina with its first class facilities, informal dinner that night was taken in the ever welcoming Chichester Yacht Club. Friday was designated a “Quiet Day” with no planned activities so Kiano , Suvi and Flying Swan stayed in the marina whilst Alouette slipped out just before HW to explore some of the creeks of Chichester Harbour before anchoring in the Thorney Channel in delightfully calm conditions. They were joined later in the day by Blue Rider and both enjoyed a very peaceful night in a delightful setting. Spirit of Avalon, Bouzy and Alana 3 in the meantime returned to Gosport and the Hamble respectively. Nobody ventured out to seek No.4, Chichester castle- they would not have found much anyway as it is barely a perceptible mound of earth! rounded off the cruise on a positive note before the Monday morning rain stepped in to speed four boats back to the Solent and Magic to Eastbourne. Thus ended the Five Castles Cruise which had attracted 14 boats and 48 members and guests. The two casualties were back in circulation before too long and all boats returned to their home ports safely with no reports of groundings or collisions!. There are more photos on http:// rnvryc.org/past-events-and-photos2015 Tidal considerations meant an early start for those boats heading for Littlehampton and by midday Alouette, Blue Rider, Blue Shadow, Enigma and Magic were safely berthed on the visitor pontoon nestling under the gaze of Littlehampton’s Harbour Master’s Office. That evening another damp pontoon party preceded a run ashore by many to the aptly named Mussel Row bistro close by. Port Officer Bob Helsby laid on a fine day for us to explore Arundel and its castle on the Sunday. Arundel was in festival mode and the Bank Holiday crowds thronged the streets making for an enjoyable day despite the vagaries of the local bus service. Fortunately we all made it back in time to enjoy our final dinner at the Arun Yacht Club with the club kindly arranging for their boat to ferry us to and from the club over the other side of the river. We were joined too by several shore parties some of whom had left their boats in Chichester or returned to home ports because of the rather iffy weather forecast. This 4 The Baltic Revisited— 31st July to 10th August 2015 A sample of the views. See the RNVRYC website for more. 5 Club Cruising Around The World I have been posted to work in China and am based in Beijing, from where I serve as a Club Committee member on a virtual basis. I have taken leave on two occasions for family reunions since my arrival last December, the first in Hong Kong for the Chinese New Year and later this year, in June, in the United States in New York followed by Newport, Rhode Island. This has given me the opportunity to visit world-renowned yacht clubs, the Royal Hong Kong Yacht Club and the New York Yacht Club. This article describes our visits to both clubs and to the cities in which they are located. My thanks go to James Hanratty, an overseas member of the Royal Hong Kong Yacht Club, for kindly sponsoring the family's visit to the RHKYC. Having enjoyed watching the colourful New Year's Day parade in Kowloon, the next day, we made our way to the RHKYC clubhouse on Kellett Island. On arrival, James and Marcus explored the Clubhouse to find out what it had to offer. They re-joined us some time later with broad grins on their faces - to their delight they had discovered that the Club has a 10 -pin bowling alley. Could anyone im- high quality and lasted all of 23 minutes. After the fireworks, we admired the spectacular night-time lighting of Hong Kong's dramatic skyscraper skyline. We rounded off a memorable evening with an excellent buffet dinner, and an inevitable bowling match. We enjoyed our first visit to Hong Kong immensely. After two months in Beijing, I welcomed the fact that almost all the locals speak English and there still seems a strong sense of Britishness in the region. It was good to be reunited again not only with the family but with things connected with Britain - at one unguarded moment, I found delight in the sight of double yellow parking lines! Four months later, the family was reunited in New York, to attend the wedding of the daughter of our long -standing friend and Club member Rob Trefny, with a superb reception in the Boathouse, Central Park. After agine a yacht club in the UK with a bowling alley? We then watched the fascinating traditional Chinese lion dancing laid on by the Club, followed by a fantastic New Year firework display in Victoria Harbour. The view of the fireworks from the Yacht Club is unequalled and the display was of exceptionally the United States Navy over many years. From 1952 to 1973 it was the home of the Cruiser/Destroyer Force of the U.S. Atlantic Fleet before it moved to Norfolk, Virginia. With this move and the closure of a nearby naval air station the local economy collapsed but, with subsequent revitalisation of the downtown area, tourism has now become the primary source of income and the city and its environs are sought after for summer vacations. The US Naval War College is still located there and Newport also serves as the centre for Surface Warfare Officer training and as the home for a large division of the Naval Undersea Warfare Centre. In terms of 4 days together enjoying the Big Apple, Jill and I took an Amtrak train to Newport, Rhode Island for three additional days of R and R. Newport is an impressive small city. It has had strong connections with 6 size, Newport is roughly the size of our Dartmouth and Cowes when put together, with an ambience similar to both. The city itself has no marina and provides little berthing alongside its jetties and wharves for pleasure craft, but there are abundant moorings. We noticed that the vast majority of boats in and around Newport are yachts rather than power boats. Whilst wandering around the harbour front Jill and I came across the International Yacht Restoration School, which, as a world-class institution, provides professional training programmes for 115 international students at a time on wooden boatbuilding and restoration, composites materials technology, computer aided design and manufacturing, and marine systems. The School claims to have an impressive 90 per cent job placement rate into industries such as aerospace, manufacturing, construction, automotive, energy production and, of course, marine. Several IYRS graduates were engaged on building the Oracle AC catamaran, which won the last America’s Cup challenge thanks to our Sir Ben Ainslie. We had a fascinating tour of the School’s boatsheds, which provide the students with state of the art facilities. In a shed nearby we came across Coronet (pictured), the world’s only remaining, late nineteenth century, luxury schooner yacht. With a LOA of 192 feet, she was built in 1885 for a New York Yacht Club member. Following our IYRS visit, Jill and I enjoyed a cracking 90 minutes sail around Newport harbour and into Narragansett Bay in a modern 72 foot schooner, Madeleine, which proved herself in a Force 6 with all sails up apart from a modest reef in the main. She was handled easily by the skipper and just two crew. Jill and I had intended to make the most of the long sandy beach by our hotel but we spent a disproportionate amount of time instead visiting the mansions built in Newport's Gild- ed Age. In the late 19th/early 20th centuries, Newport became the US equivalent of what Monaco has become to the rich set in Europe today, and was sought after by American multi-millionaires like the Vanderbilts, the Astors and the Dukes as their summer resort. Jill and I are confident that we have found several possible locations for a future Club Autumn Meet and Dinner/Dance with a difference (including as to cost)! Unfortunately, we did not gain access to the New York Yacht Club premises in New York, but our evening in their clubhouse at Harbour Court (as pictured), Newport was special, and a fitting venue to celebrate my imminent birthday, which was to occur shortly after my return to Beijing. The building, the summer home of a former NYYC member, commands a magnificent view across the harbour rivalling that of the Royal Yacht Squadron in Cowes. It contains a fine library of books on sailing and other nautical subjects and some first-class pictures and scale-models of yachts, including that of Corsair, the 302 foot motor yacht of a former NYYC Commodore, J Pierpont Morgan, in the early twentieth century. We thoroughly enjoyed our two trips, but they were made even more special and memorable by our visits to the Royal Hong Kong Yacht Club and the New York Yacht Club and the splendid dinners we enjoyed in both. Tim Ware Some Reflections on Previous Volunteer Yachts. Volunteer in June 1965:- do you remember? Does this tweak the memories? Do you have copies of Newsletters? Peter & Ann Bernard set off on a ‘typical’ Cross-Channel trip from Folkestone to St Peter Port and beyond in Volunteer. Their crew included Reg Briggs and Alan Howland. They missed L’aber-Wrach but they made Lesadrieux. We have details of dinghy and dayboat activity. The cruisers had small accommodation but still stretched themselves over distance and weather. Bits of contemporary Newsletter There seem to be limited record of older yachts and their activity. A Sample shows John C Dunn the son of his father of same name and erstwhile Commodore, with reference to Rambmowe in 1949. In addition he was referred to as a monotonous winner of the Interservices Gold Cup. A significant recollection to confirm the RNVRSC as a Services Sailing Club of the time. We have record of Marabu entering the Fastnet Race under Hornet in 1953 & ‘57 with the RNVRSC as a service sailing club in 1955, winning the Inter-Services Cup that year skippered by the Commodore, Rupert Thorpe. About this time this most distinguished of the Windfall yachts was in the ownership of the Royal Navy and allocated to Hornet. John Illingworth made recommendations of a larger jib and coach roof so that she would be sailed to N America and back. throughout this heavy sailing load she then was the first Naval entry to the Tall Ships Race in 1956. Abut this time her sweet competitive lines fell to the more modern post war designs Rambmowe - c.1949 Rambmowe There is a further note of a yacht with a long career with RNVR prior to going to BRNC. The implied name is Capella, previously Borkum? Does anyone have a record to support this story? We do not as yet have any record of Rambmowe or Tachia, both owned by RNVRSC. 7 Marabu W Storm 33—A point of sail. The photo is not as ‘bright’ as I would like but it was taken on the Storm’s last channel crossing. The Storm was one of the best ‘sea’ boats at that time (my logged mileage aboard was 1074). Joe Wright Tom Cunningham was in my crew and on the helm when we were experiencing a 45 knot wind mid Channel (not forecast or we would have remained in Cherbourg). Marabu A point to note is that many manufacturers, at that time, were increasing the boat length by a foot part way through the few years of production. The Club boat was 33 feet long. Earlier I had sailed a Storm 32 feet long. In 1997 the Storm was sailed to attend the Club’s 50th Anniversary Dinner at Dartmouth Naval College. I took over as skipper, as the only one aboard with an ensign warrant, with Tom C and Don Riggs aboard. Tachia Due to weather conditions we ended up at Brixham. My wife had driven down, bringing Tom’s wife, so transport was available and we were staying overnight at an hotel. Another crew taking over Volunteer for the return passage. “The Club took delivery of its new yacht, a Jeanneau Sun Odyssey 36.2, on 10 April 1999. Following preparation of the yacht for Club use, the first “acquaint” weekend for potential skippers took place on 24 & 25 April. A “Fitting-out & Commissioning Party” was held at the RAF Yacht Club on 2 May, when a naming ceremony was graciously performed by Past Commodore Robert Paice’s wife Rosemary. The photograph of Volunteer was taken on 30 May during its passage to the Hornet Sailing Club for the yacht’s first Club event afloat, namely the “Family Meet”. On board were the skipper Commodore Mike Elton and wife Carole, Past Commodore Sid Ward and wife Harriet together with member Tim Williams with his wife Jacquelin. “ “The replacement of the previous Volunteer, a Westerly Storm 33, which was made possible by raising £16,465 from members in response to a “New Boat Appeal”, resulted in an immediate increase in annual charter income of 35% to £12,953 in 1999. In the following years that income dropped steadily, which led to its ultimate sale in 2004 and the decision on economic grounds to not replace it with another.” W Fulmar W Storm Jeaneau 36.2 - 1999 to 2004 This detail gratefully received from the Club’s Sailing and Charter Secretary from 1996, Mike Elton. W Storm 8 We have not unearthed any material on the acquisition or sailing and photos of the S & S 34. these are library shots. I am hoping we may do better from the photos of members shortly. S & S 34 These race cards separated by 10 years demonstrate the active competitive sailing that members maintained in association with other historic yachts and the other Services. S & S 34 Impian - Owned, Jeremy Donne By Ed: the following has come to notice for Solent sailors:- A notice from The Naval Club:Rnvryc members have been offered reduced rates for the first 3 months of 2016. This means that the Naval Club is a very competitive rate at the centre of Town. The accommodation rates will be the same as for full members. http://www.navalclub.co.uk/docs/default-source/prices/ room-rates.pdf?sfvrsn=10 Queen's Harbour Master Portsmouth LNTM No 107/15 Portsmouth Capital Dredge NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN by the Queen’s Harbour Master Portsmouth that the Portsmouth Capital Dredge programme has commenced and will continue until Summer 2016. The first phase of operations to remove seabed obstructions has been underway for some time from the spudleg barge “STREKKER”, with a further barge moored to it. Operations will continue around the clock, and will also include diving operation. From approximately 16 December, dredging operations will commence in earnest, with the arrival of the Trailing Suction Hopper Dredger “SHOALWAY”. chart showing approach channel dredging areas - darker colours represent the major work areas. 9