I always remember Graham, she was the first ship i ever sailed on with air conditioning, and it never worked on her for the whole of the 6 months i was on her, just the homemade plastic wind scoop. bloody hot ship on that run
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I always remember Graham, she was the first ship i ever sailed on with air conditioning, and it never worked on her for the whole of the 6 months i was on her, just the homemade plastic wind scoop. bloody hot ship on that run
Never saw a plastic wind scoop. The type I vividly remember though, was the 5 gallon drum with one end sawn off and half of the side section removed. A length of wood was used to keep the mouth open. Sometimes a canvas bag full of water was secured directly in front of it for cooling. Sounds like I was living in medieval times.
That's the one, those drums just fitted the porthole exactly, don't know who thought of it, but they were use on pretty much all the ships i was on late 50s.
Thanks for the Cairns update JS, it still amazes me that such a dump could become a city in a such relatively short time, thankfully we weren't there too long and the pub was the
furthest I got from the ship. There is another name that comes to mind, "Rockhampton" I know I've been there but can't recall anything about it, a bit of a mystery really as I've not
got a bad memory, there is one possibility though and that was a place we went to for a couple of days, it was just a wharf and sheds the same as Cairns but didn't see any wildlife at all,
just a long concrete road with a cafe at the end of it, a high wire fence with double gates, can only think this small port served an inland town, possibly "Rockhampton" :confused: , any
ideas where this may be?. Cheers
The ports in FNQ that I partially remember were the sugar ports of Cairns, Mackay, and Townsville.Cairns as you say was a small port where loading of sugar was by splitting the bags and emptying them by hand down the hold , took 3 weeks sometimes in the wet season when had to cover the holds for rain. Today you would just about load 10,000 tons in 3 hours by a mechanical loader , just as fast as loading iron ore in Sept Isles in Canada .in a previous post I had described the pubs along the dock road as the Barbary Coast ( in Cairns) which all closed at 1800 hrs on the dot and of course closed on a Sunday. There was a legal brothel in Mackay don’t know if it’s still there , I never visited it but walked past it many times . Cheers JS.
Don’t believe Cappy he will say I lie like a pig in its own manure . JS
Time heals most wounds . In 1953 Cairns as a you say was a one horse town. However the inhabitants were extremely hostile to the Japanese . Today the streets are named in Japanese and English to oblige the high amounts of Japanese tourists that they get. Cairns is a holiday destination many both Australian and foreign tourists make for. JS
Hi John.
Rockhampton has gone the way of all those small ports we visited in Queensland, now a big town. I was in Bowen in 1950 same thing tiny place a couple of pubs, now the Bowen basin is one of the biggest coal loading places in the world.
AS for sharks ,the biggest I ever saw was a hammerhead that came out from under the wharf in New Plymouth in NZ just as I was about to dive in. Cold sweats all over.
Des
#10 Maybe she was open and closed shelter deck and some nit head of a reporter just chose the wrong tonnage at different times. JS
#17 Would of been handy to have had Mary with you there Des just to test the water with her wooden leg first. JS
Hi Des, Those big hammerheads have a reputation for their ferociousness so yeah, "Squeaky bum time indeed" , for me seeing the snow capped Mount Egmont for the first time is a
great memory, love NZ and always will. Cairns and Rockhampton were the two smallest ports I saw in Aus, the next I think may have been Lyttleton that was a real one horse town
remember seeing two lads of about 13 walking down the main drag carrying a rifle and a box of cartridges, they were heading for the bush country at the end of the road. Wino's laid
out on the sidewalk, a shop with a pickled Taipan snake in a big jar and the pub, we climbed a hill and found ourselves surrounded by snakes, don't think I've ever run so fast in my life as that day. Cheers.