For sale: pilot cutter Breeze, and cutter Medusa Bay

Pilot cutter Breeze

I’ve learned that two great but very different boats are for sale.

The 39ft pilot cutter Breeze is up for auction on eBay. She was built in 1887 by Coopers of Pill near Bristol for the pilot Albert Cope.

She started her working life working from Cardiff in 1887 and continued to work primarily in the same family ownership until around 1912. She’s believed to be the second oldest Bristol Channel pilot cutter still around, and the only remaining example of a Coopers of Pill-built cutter.

Also the Conyer-built 37ft cutter Medusa Bay is for sale priced at €90,000 in Belgium. She’s said to be in near perfect condition, and I know she has a number of admirers in North Kent, so if anyone is interested, contact me at gmatkin@gmail.com and I’ll put you in touch with the current owner.

  

 

Falmouth quay punt Teal restoration makes progress in Eire

 

Adrian Nowotynski and his partner Ken are making real progress on their Falmouth quay punt, Teal, and deserve a cheer or encouragement.

Read all about it on their weblogs, which can be found here.

Here’s what Adrian had to say at the end of last week:

‘I just thought I’d send you an update on our progress with Teal as we passed one of our major milestones today when the ballast was refitted.

‘To date we have replaced her entire center-line structure, including her keel, aft deadwood, stern knee, stern post, transom, stem, apron, bow knee, mast step, all the lower futtocks of the sawn frames and all but one of the transverse iron floors.

‘We will be moving on to planking very shortly but hope to save a lot of it, as apart from damage most of her original pitch pine is in very good order. It’s a bit too soon to tell but we will get a clear picture once the paint comes off in the coming weeks.

‘She will be getting a new deck, new cockpit, new interior, a new main mast and a small
inboard engine in the very near future so stay tuned – I try and keep the blog bang up to date for anyone who takes an interest in such masochism!

‘Best regards

‘Adrian’

Teal was launched in the summer of 1914, and was built by WE Thomas of Falmouth for a young author named Percy Woodcock. She’s had various names and owners since that time, including a two-season engineless trip to the Baltic in the hands of Andy Rankin following a lightning two-month refit job – an account of this period appeared in the magazine Classic Boat some years ago.

Adrian and Ken, who believe they are her 19th owners, are undertaking  an extensive restoration at Hegarty’s Boatyard near Cork – the yard is also where the project to restore the AK Ilen is based.

I must say the job sounds arduous to say the least.

Adrian’s weblog reveals that her bronze nails were all brittle and loose in her frames and that only her copper fastenings have held her together. All her lower futtocks were either brittle or rotten, and her steamed timbers aft are doubled and even tripled, and had to be removed.

The plan is to replace the interior following the original layout but in Iroko and red deal rather than the original teak, pitch pine and kauri, and with oil lamps and a parafin stove rather than modern equivalents, and a bucket instead of a sea toilet.

The deck will be replaced with a new pine one covered in canvas and the coachroof will be kept but fitted with a new skylight.

The cockpit will have folding seats, if her new engine allows – Teal was originally built with an engine but the plan now is to fit a very compact diesel with a folding prop to one side of the stern post, as the original stern knee and post where never really heavy enough to take the stern tube.

By the end, we’re promised that she will look more original when we’re finished than she has for a very long time, and that probably still have 50 per cent of her original timber.

 

Teal afloat

 

Campaign to save the Danube paddle steamer Szöke Tiszát

Now derelict what I understand is a corner of the Danube, the Szöke Tiszát makes a spectacular ruin – but she’d be even better brought back to life.

See more photographs on a Facebook page created by the campaign to save her.

The Hungarian Monuments weblog reports on her condition and the various interests working to have her either broken up or saved – however, it’s written in Hungarian, so most English-speakers will need to use on of the World-Wide Web’s mechanical translators, and a certain amount of careful interpretation to make sense of what’s going on…