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Thread: Experiences at sea

  1. #41
    leratty's Avatar
    leratty Guest

    Default Experiences at sea.

    Coastal trip Napier Star, light ship, very heavy weather standing lookout on forecastle around 11.15pm , ship rising & falling amazingly, scary, solid green water coming over washing me all over the place you just could not keep your feet so after about 1/2 an hour decided this is too dangerous, I could go over so rang the bridge. Officer of watch said, "no must stay." 5mins or so later much, much worse now very dangerous, worse I am useless as lookout then ph goes I struggle to get to it & answer, officer of watch says "come to wing of bridge". When I got there stood balance of the watch there. Capt. came up to bridge, he came out on the wing the old Richard Cranium & told me I was a coward! Well did I have my say, he was so taken aback that someone would speak to him this way took off into the wheel house. Arrived Liverpool next day, paid off was waiting for the .... to say something but he didn't we just locked eyes. He was not an old timer either, just an arrogant twat. There were some great Capt.'s & some rectal passages, this was one of the latter.

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    Default Sandy Mcnabs

    Talking of mobile dandruff, we had a sure fire cure, one that worked a treat without the shaving off. Believe it or not it was cockrach pouder out of the galley!

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    Best wishes Richard, hope it all goes well for you.
    .
    Mr Christian of Norfolk Island has or had a Hotel there a few years ago.
    lovely place.
    A lot of the decendents of the Mutineers were transported there from Pitcairns.
    My friend Manuraii on Tahiti is a direct decendent of Mr Midshipman Young one of the mutineers.
    Love the South Pacific,
    The only place left to go to.
    Cheers
    Brian.
    Last edited by Captain Kong; 3rd July 2013 at 08:27 AM.

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    Default A First Trip Snapshot

    Brian

    I share your feelings about the South Seas and with your connections I therefore share with you and those who may be interested what I have written as part of my memoirs. Richard.
    *****************************
    "We set out across the Pacific Ocean; within days I was so seasick I thought I would die. Then, worse still, I thought that I wouldn’t. I had a bucket for scrubbing the pantry deck and another just in case there was anything left in my stomach. Whatever nature threw at the ‘Lowlander’ or any other ship or boat I later sailed on, I never ever got seasick again.

    Early into the voyage those who joined just prior to sailing from Newcastle were vaccinated and inoculated for yellow fever, cholera and smallpox by the ships doctor. As the doctor did his work on my left arm, next to me on the sick bay bunk was a pile of clothes that were removed from the body of the ship’s baker who had dropped dead in the sweltering galley a couple of days earlier. Chippy, the ship’s carpenter had sewn the body into a canvas sheet along with some iron bars. The weight of these bars meant it would sink rather than float about after the captain had conducted the burial service and ‘committed his body to the deep’. All the available crew were assembled. The bosun (boatswain) and his deck crew had had the body placed on a plank resting on the ship’s rail and as the last words were delivered they gently raised the inner end of the plank and the body slipped into the sea and sank immediately.

    We headed in a generally East by North direction into the tropics. A couple of weeks into the voyage and we were gliding through water that shimmered like iridescent blue silk. Ahead of us in the distance, rising from the shimmering blue water were the jagged peaks of a tropical island framed by an azure sky. It was Tahiti, the main island of the Society Islands group of French Polynesia. Rising on our port bow was that magical island, Moreea.

    Within a couple of hours we came alongside the wharf at Pape’ete and the tropic air was filled the scent of frangipani blossoms. Those austere little French cars; Citroen’s Deux Chevaux, scampered around the narrow streets and there was great interest in our arrival. It was, of course, just after the Second World War and the tourist droves were yet to descend on and change this Eden forever.

    After washing a great pile of dishes and cleaning up the pantry I went ashore with some shipmates. There was a rather obese man of mixed race in a flowery shirt sitting outside the waterfront Quinn’s Bar offering to let me take his photograph - for a price. He was Emile Marae a Tai, born in Tahiti in 1899 and the son of the artist Paul Gauguin and his Tahitian mistress Pau’ura. That was one photograph I should have taken. That night we went to a French bar on the beach at Lafayette, just out of Pape’ete and danced on the beach sand floor with some of the local girls. One was singing “symphonie, symphonie d’amour” into my ear-hole and I could well imagine why the crew of the “Bounty” mutinied. We didn’t, but co-incidentally our next stop was Pitcairn Island, where the “Bounty” was scuttled by Fletcher Christian and his fellow mutineers.

    Pitcairn Island is the only inhabited island of a group of four and was chosen by Fletcher Christian for its isolation, being a huge rock in the vast Pacific Ocean. The other three islands of the group are Henderson, Dulcie and Oeno Islands each being remote from each other over several hundred miles of ocean.

    As there is no harbour, Pitcairn Islanders ‘parked’ their whale boats on racks perched by the cliff-side. These open boats were rowed out to visiting ships to collect provisions and mail and to take the opportunity to sell their sought after postage stamps and ‘cottage’ handicraft. The open whale boats were used to visit the other distant islands from where depleted supplies of timber on Pitcairn were augmented. The quaint language, a mixture of “Olde English” and Tahitian was carried over to Norfolk Island, north of New Zealand, to where some of them emigrated in the 19th Century. For example, their greeting “What the way?”, short for “what the way are you?” and “Oi gwen nawee in the hot sun” “I’m going swimming…”.

    Leaving Pitcairn there was a “Crossing the Line” ceremony as we crossed the Equator into the Northern Hemisphere. Our young women passengers were enthusiastically encouraged to take part as “King Neptune” arrived on the scene in fancy dress with a Trident. Lathering a face as if to shave and dunking in a large wooden framed canvas bath on the deck brought great guffaws from the spectators........
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    Last edited by Richard Quartermaine; 4th July 2013 at 12:06 PM.
    Our Ship was our Home
    Our Shipmates our Family

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    Quote Originally Posted by leratty View Post
    ................There were some great Capt.'s & some rectal passages, this was one of the latter.
    I sailed with a few of those "rectal passages"! Nice turn of phrase that, must remember that when describing MP's in future!
    It is better to keep one's mouth firmly shut and be thought a fool than to open it and prove it beyond all doubt!

    The only thing necessary for evil to flourish is for good men to do nothing!

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    Exclamation

    Quote Originally Posted by Jim Brady View Post
    As a bellboy delivering a telegram to a cabin with four young women ............
    Had a similar experience myself Jim, but before I went to sea. When I was an apprentice I worked for a time in the Electricians department and some of my tasks would be to replace fluorescent tubes and the elements in the sanitary towel incinerators in the ladies toilets. Barely 17 and only just lost my 'cherry' but not yet a man of the world, and being in those toilets just before dinner with loads of horny women pinching my then tight buns and making the most obscene remarks was quite embarrassing. Now 3 or 4 years later I may have been up to the task and may have been able to give as good as I got!
    It is better to keep one's mouth firmly shut and be thought a fool than to open it and prove it beyond all doubt!

    The only thing necessary for evil to flourish is for good men to do nothing!

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    i still have my souveniers from Pitcairn Island, two Flying Fish, one Shark, one Tortoise, and pride of place is a Pitcairn Whaleboat over two feet long.
    Tony Wilding

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    Hi Tony,

    Mention of your Pitcairn souvenirs reminded me of my own visit there on the 'Port Huon' in 1958. Sadly, my purchases were in poor contrast to your own fine collection, but, alas, the wages of a J.O.S. in those days didn't allow for over-extravagance. When the islanders came out and clambered aboard to trade, I looked at the carved objects longingly, but my purchasing-power was restricted to a plain post-card with a Pitcairn stamp affixed thereon and a shell necklace (which in my puerile teenage imagination I saw hanging around the neck of my dear Mother). Many months later, when I arrived home in Rayleigh (you know where that is, Tony) and proudly presented the necklace, the gentle smile on my Mother's face seemed strangely incongruous with the bemusement (read barely suppressed horror) her raised eyebrows revealed. In truth, anyone foolish enough to wear the necklace of sharp-edged little shells risked the prospect of a slow agonizing death.....self-decapitation !!! Wisely, Mum hid the lethal ornament away in a little box, rarely ever to see the light of day. However, she did have the good grace to keep it for many years, a lasting memory of her young son's well meaning stupidity.

    As Richard (Q) mentioned in his excellent post, the islanders spoke English in a fashion Nelson would have found familiar. To my ears it seemed to have a West Country burr and interspersed with native terminology it was indeed a strange dialect. In appearance they varied markedly. Some had pale skin but the facial features of a Polynesian, whilst others, although dark-skinned, had the appearance of a European. One man I particularly remember. Over six feet in height, he was about 40 years old, dark skinned, his European features were topped by a thick mop of white hair that swept back from his temple and at the sides. Few would deny he was a handsome fellow. He wore a white singlet and a pair of calf-length faded blue jeans which, like his singlet, were spotlessly clean. Muscular and straight backed, my impression of him as a fine looking man seemed cruelly marred by an apparent birth defect that had left him with a disfigured foot and ankle. It was, I suppose, a product of an interbreeding difficult to avoid in such a small, confined community.

    Like you and so many of our shipmates on this site, Tony, I cherish the experience of my nine years at sea, the many great memories (and the few that were not so great). As with many of the things I saw and did during that time, that stop off Pitcairn Island was all too brief. It was only a two or three hour interlude in my life, yet for me it remains an experience I shall always treasure.

    ........best regards, Roger

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    Quote Originally Posted by Roger DYER View Post
    Hi Tony,


    Like you and so many of our shipmates on this site, Tony, I cherish the experience of my nine years at sea, the many great memories (and the few that were not so great). As with many of the things I saw and did during that time, that stop off Pitcairn Island was all too brief. It was only a two or three hour interlude in my life, yet for me it remains an experience I shall always treasure.

    ........best regards, Roger
    Seems anyone who had the fortune to stop off at Pitcairn always remembers it, and you couldn't even go ashore! was it our romantic ideals of reading 'Mutiny on the Bounty' that gave us a notion that we already knew it intimately

    Remember my first visit.1st January 1956, we were on charter to Sore, Swivel and Bunion owners of 'Gothic' also due that same day late afternoon, we received orders to let 'Gothic' to arrive first for the New Year but our Capt Litherland was having none of it and we arrived during 0000-0400 watch and departed as the tall masts of a liner were spotted on the horizon that afternoon.

    Did you know that the Pitcairn Islands were named after a young midshipman who spotted them when there was not supposed to be any land in the vicinity, as previous navigators had missed them altogether

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    Due to recently revised site procedures I find I'm no longer able to edit my post #48. I am, therefore, committed to this rather cumbersome way of making a correction to what I had previously posted (this is not meant as a criticism of the administrators, but merely an explanation).

    When, at the end of the second paragraph, I typed........'It was, I suppose, a product of an interbreeding difficult to avoid in such a small, confined community.'...... I did, of course, mean 'inbreeding' rather than interbreeding. Interbreeding is what started it all off in the first place, when the randy mutineers were smitten by dusky Polynesian maidens. It seems, that with the absence of television, there was little else that Fletcher and his mates could do to entertain themselves.


    ..............Roger,

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