Fundraising evening in Porthleven - 20 September, 7.30pm

Please see the advert below for our fund raising evening which is being hosted by the Porthleven Archive folk at Out of the Blue Freehouse, Porthleven at 7:30 PM on 20th September '18.

You can open the PDF file just click on the link below and follow the instructions on your PC.

There will also be a raffle, so suitable raffle prizes are welcome, please donate your raffle prize to Skipper John before the 20th September.  

Click here for details

 

RYA VHF DSC Course

Please note that Penzance SC are organising a VHF Radio course, please see details below from PZSC.  

If interested please book direct with PzSC Sam Kent, details below, not with MBLA as we do not know the numbers and places available.


For those of you who want to gain Coastal Skipper or Yacht Master this course is mandatory, for those who want to be Day Skipper or act as MBLA mate it would be advisable. 


RYA VHF DSC Course

Teaching: Saturday, 13 October
Assessment: Sunday, 14 October
 
 Training Course: Saturday 09:00 until 18:00 (with hour for lunch)
Assessment: Sunday approximately 2 hours during the day (individual times to be arranged).  
 
There is a requirement for 3 hours of private study to prepare yourself for the course.
 The course is open to members of local boating clubs and associations.
 This is a one-day course designed to teach the procedures for operation of a VHF radio followed by an assessment the following day.  
 For more details of the course content please see www.pzsc.org.uk/radio  
 Cost PzSC members: £110 including RYA’s £70 fees. Non-members: £120 including RYA’s £70 fees.
 
Expressions of interest and any questions should be directed to:
 
Sam Kent 07812340828 radio@pzsc.org.uk
 

Sea Salts & Sail -- Mousehole 2018

Sea Salts & Sail  --  Mousehole 2018
 

I had never been to a boat festival before, and didn’t know what to expect.
It turned out to be a very colourful collection of boats, people, entertainment, and local history.

Sea Salts and Sail is a thoroughly-Cornish biennial event at Mousehole, which celebrates the town’s history and maritime heritage by inviting classic boats and holding sailing and shore-based events. It alternates with the Looe Lugger Festival, and we like to take Happy Return to both. This year was the 12th festival, which ran from July 13th to 15th.

The official Programme gave details of all the events and facilities, and the “life histories” and pictures of many of the boats. Impossible to summarise here, these included gigs, punts, dingies, skiffs, cutters, sloops, crabbers, replicas, restorations, and a “gentleman’s yacht”.

Between them, they had crossed the Atlantic, and been around Europe, the Mediterranean, the Baltic, Brazil, Cape Town, the West Indies, and the Caribbean. At least two had circumnavigated.

Some would be going on to the Douarnenez Boat Festival in Brittany – another event that we hope to go to in future.  

Eight of us set out from Penzance at 3pm on Friday for a sail in the Bay before getting to Mousehole at about 6pm. John Tellam was skipper, and Mike Halse mate. The conditions were perfect, and Happy Return bustled along nicely in a northerly Force 4, with new members taking turns to helm. Unusually, we practiced tacking, knowing we would need to do this in the Parades of Sail (technically not races). Normally we “go the long way round” and gybe, which gives us more time to dip the lug and recover. Tacking has to be quicker, to avoid losing way, so is physically harder. As usual, tea and biscuits aided our recovery. 

Approaching Mousehole, we were greeted by many large and colourful banners, with Cornish and Breton flags at the harbour entrance, known to locals as the Gaps. People were swimming in the harbour, and jumping off the quay. We rafted up alongside “Barnabas” (a similar St Ives lugger) on the South Quay, and immediately upset some local residents. That part of the harbour is the oldest, and is made of massive lumps of granite. The pigeons that live in the crevices grumbled at us all weekend because we had taken their spot. 

Live music was already well under way on stage, and John T went off to get his Skippers Instructions from the organisers – this was a very comprehensive guide to the Festival. He also came back with a goody-bag of local produce, which was appreciated by all. (Don’t keep chocolate above a hot engine!). All visiting crews were given tickets for two evening meals.
The festival was formally opened by Jonny Nance of St Ives, who specialises in building “Jumbos” – small, open luggers. Naturally, there was an extensive bar, and music and drink flowed freely until 10.30 . . . . . . . . and beyond . . . . . . .  

An incoming flock of seagulls (and the bilge pump) decided to celebrate their maritime heritage at 5 am. Happy Return creaked and groaned as she lifted on the incoming tide and rubbed shoulders with her neighbours. I creaked and groaned as I lifted in my bunk. 

It was Saturday, and the heat wave continued. A tanker of sun cream would have been useful, but probably couldn’t have got through the High Street. There was no wind, and the larger boats that had anchored outside the harbour nestled in the mist by St Clement’s Isle.

Given the wide range of boats attending, considerable care and cooperation had been needed to get them rafted up in the harbour in decent order. This now had to be reversed to get everyone out for sailing before Low Water. This meant extracting Happy Return and getting her out and anchored off by 7am. Mike Halse (A Mousehole “Boy”) knew a good spot where the anchor would hold, so we fixed that up and took the water taxi back to shore for breakfast.
Our other crew members turned up later, and we were all back on board by 10 am.


The organisers had previously set out various courses with marker-buoys, and had to choose which to use for the day’s conditions, giving various points-of-sail. It was announced to all by radio that we would be doing “two laps of Course D”. John T and Peter May (helming for the
day) unravelled this requirement from the Skippers’ Instructions, and got us into a good position for the 10.30 start. The mist had burnt off, the wind had picked up, and we got away decently. 

It was magnificent to be out there with other boats in such a superb spot under great conditions. However, sailing to a prescribed course is not something we usually do, so extra care and attention was needed to abide by the “highway code” and set ourselves up to round the marks. Happy Return can’t get closer than 60’ to the wind, so this has to be factored in when turning to aim for the next mark. The two black lines drawn on top of our navigation-display housing are aligned to correspond to this situation, and sighting along the correct one to the next mark gives us the right turning-point. Combined with Peter’s experience, we made good use of this. However, we all know that Happy Return isn’t Admiral’s Cup material. “Rose of Argyll” swept past us (and several others), handled superbly by her young French crew who swarmed over her like gibbons, earning great respect throughout the festival. She has no engine, and carries out all port manoeuvres by rowing and sculling. (They also won the small-scale sculling race in the harbour).


Other boats were using different strategies and tacking-patterns; it wasn’t straightforward keeping track of everyone, but it was great fun. This went on until about midday, when the water-taxis were due to get crews ashore again for lunch. This didn’t “go zackly”, and we had a very slippery time wading the last bit through the Gaps. There is a forest of kelp here. The ancient Orcadians deliberately used this as a lubricant when moving stone blocks – perhaps something to bear in mind if Happy Return is ever stranded?

With a slightly-amended crew we were back on board by 3pm for the second Parade of Sail around a different course. Again, we made decent progress, but the physicality was beginning to tell, so we decided to leave out the last lap. (Agile, fit, strong, young members  - we need you!). The plan then was to be first back against the quay, leaving others outside us, to avoid another early-morning shuffle. This worked, and we upset the pigeons again.

The colour-coded tapes on our berthing-lines and cleats are set up to give us the correct lengths on our Penzance ladder when the tide is out. Longer lines were needed at Mousehole, so we needed a way of measuring how far down the wall HR sat with no water. 
The perfect “ruler” was to hand – 13 rungs of the ladder showing above the top of the bulwarks. Not even a pigeon could argue with that!


Another problem arose here – the base of the old quay wall has a slightly-stepped cross-section, so we had to make sure that the leg didn’t settle onto a ledge. We added some extra fenders as well, to keep her off the vertical quay baulks. 

On-stage entertainment was well under way again, and the organisers had brought in a good range of mostly-local musicians for the weekend. Folk, jazz, contemporary, soul, skiffle, blues, and various tribute-styles, some going way back to the 1940s. The Mousehole Male Voice choir was in action – they had formed in 1909 after learning Christmas Carols in an old net loft. The Cadgwith Singers had briefly migrated from the Lizard – their regular Friday-night shanty sessions (dedicated to the washed-up-long-ago Saint Inebriatus) appear on our Sailing Programme. “Cadgwith for Singing” indicates a pilgrimage in that direction. 

Cookery demonstrations (fish of course!) and children’s activities all had local flavour.
In the 1930s depression, local children made their own toys with what they could find on the beach. They were skilled at making miniature sailing boats with cork, seagull feathers, and slate fragments for keels. These were called “corkers”, and this tradition was re-enacted. 
Other Kids’ Stuff included, story-telling, poetry, art, flag-making and piñata-making (and bashing!).

A lot of local history was presented. Traditional crab-pot making was demonstrated on the quay – every fishing community managed willow coppices for withies, and the remnants of some can still be seen. In the Chapel Sunday School, the Mousehole Historic Research and Archive Society exhibited historical maps, documents, family trees, and old photographs. Dolly Pentreath, the last native speaker of Cornish, was featured; she died in 1777, and is buried in Paul churchyard nearby.

Also on display was a model boat made by one of our own skippers – Mike Halse. This is a 1/26th- scale representation of the 50ft 1930-built local fishing boat “Lyonesse – PZ81”. The original was built in Porthleven for the Pender family of Mousehole, and was famous locally for being very well looked after and for her unusual grey-green colour. From memory, Mike made up the same colour for his model. He remembers one famous occasion when “Lyonesse” became a concert-platform in Mousehole Harbour. The Mousehole Male-Voice-Choir sang on her deck for locals and holiday-makers. A hollow wooden boat makes a magnificent sounding-board! Getting the piano on and off must have been interesting.


Mike comes from a long-standing Mousehole family. His model-making career was launched when a Newlyn shipwright gave him a half-model of a lugger. Wooden half-models were used as templates by boat-builders, who sliced them up and then scaled-up the cross-sections to establish the shape of the full-sized boat. It took Mike eight months to make “Lyonesse”, and he has made 6 other models. His next will be “Pellew” – a Falmouth Pilot-Cutter. A full-sized “Pellew” is being built from scratch at Truro by Luke Powell, who gave the MBLA a talk on his work last winter. Luke was at Sea Salts & Sail with his Scillies Pilot-Cutter “Agnes”.  

We decided not to sail on Sunday, but to advertise the MBLA and welcome people aboard Happy Return. Extra members and friends turned up during the day, we gave out membership applications, and have hopefully brought in some new people. The heat wave, jumping off the quay, and music continued. 

For quite a few people, it was only the harbour that dried out completely during the weekend.
The fact that 10 wheelie-bins were put out For Bottles Only gave a good indication of how things were going. 

Sunday evening brought the Awards Ceremony and Prize-Giving. We didn’t win anything, but many of the crews know each other, and there was much applause, banter, and joshing.
A specially-commissioned painting by Tim Hall, “The Rose of Argyll departing the Gaps” was auctioned for £2,000, with the money going to local community causes.

It was good to see old friends and make new ones. It was a privilege to meet Conrad Humphreys, who had been the Sailing Master of “Bounty’s End” – the 23ft open boat that had recreated Captain Bligh’s 4,000-mile passage to safety after the Mutiny. That boat was there, and the National Maritime Museum at Falmouth have built an additional replica.

I picked up a story about Mousehole men being the first to wear sailing gloves. This was to avoid the old Press Gangs. They looked for experienced sailors whose hands had been worn by handling gear and ropes – routinely wearing gloves made them look less useful. 

Monday was a quiet day. Stallholders were packing up, and the pigeons were beginning to relax. We squared up Happy Return, and took down the pennant to stop it getting caught in the masthead equipment. A final crew of 12 mustered to get us back to Penzance for 9pm, after a couple of hours sailing in the Bay. A very sociable concluding passage.

The organisers wrote afterwards to thank everyone who had been involved. It had been a record-breaking festival, with about 50 boats attending, and 4,000 visitors. 

Only one thing seemed to be missing – there wasn’t a black-and-white cat in sight!

John Diston.

    

  

Sea Salts and Sail Mousehole July 2018 Heading for the starting line.JPG

TALK - Saturday 24 March - 7.30pm Penzance Sailing Club

We have a talk by Luke Powell this Saturday evening at 7:30pm at the Penzance sailing club.

Luke Powell is a highly skilled wooden boat builder who is going to give us a presentation on the boat he has build and his life in the industry. This promises to be a very interesting talk, I hope you will all come along and support the association.

Don't forget that membership renewal is now due for 2018.

Committee Members Required

A message from our Chairman

This is to remind you all that the AGM  is on the 14th March.

This year unlike most years we have three long serving members of the committee standing down, this is due in part to age and the need for new ideas, but also to create the opportunity for the next generation to take the association forward in these ever changing times.

So it is to you that I am appealing for volunteers to step forward and become committee members.

Please don't take fright thinking, "What do I know about the Happy Return and what possible help could I be?" The committee is made up of eight members and as such we have the need for people with various talents and abilities.

The remit of the committee is much more than just looking after the Happy Return, far from  just the maintenance  and sailing of the boat, the committee has to actively consider such issues as recruiting new members, public relations, marketing, social media presence, fund raising and taking the MBLA forward into the future.

If you think that this would be of interest to you, or that you would just like to help as a non committee member then please contact me by replying to this email.

Looking forward to hearing from you.

Best regards


Mark  
 

Happy New Year - Saturday Work Parties

Happy new year to you all

With the 2018 sailing season just around the corner it is time to start looking at getting Happy Return ready to go.

Mike Halse was on board yesterday, (Wednesday, 4 January) and reports that  the deck is water tight and all is well below decks. 

As of this Saturday (6 January) we will commence working to get HR ready. If you are of a mind to help, muster is about 10:30 and work will be concluded by mid afternoon.  The forecast for this weekend is cold so dress for the conditions.

All are welcome even if time is short and you only want to pop in and see how things are going. If you are unsure give Skipper Mark a call or text.

Looking forward to seeing you soon.

All the Best for 2018

Mark.
 
 

Winter Newsletter

Winter

Happy Return is now back at her berth in the Wet Dock in Penzance having spent some weeks in the Gweek boatyard having her deck properly sealed by Andrew Massey together with ancillary works.  The final bits and pieces of work preparing her for her winter layup are now being completed.  The annual maintenance preparing her for the new season will commence the end of January early February 2018 we will give plenty of warning closer to the commencement time.   The good news is, we will all be in dry berths next season whatever the sea and weather can throw at her.    


Dare I remind you Christmas is not far away if you are looking for a present don’t forget that we carry a stock of tee’s and polo shirts of various sizes, sweat shirts to order all with our logo embroidered on them. In addition if you are looking for a Christmas tree present we have in stock, leather bookmarks with Happy Return embossed,  key rings with a picture of Happy Return and un - framed prints of a painting of Happy Return done by a well-known local artist.

 All of these items can be purchased from our Treasurer John Tellam

The first event of our Winter Programme was held on Saturday 11 November with a talk given by Andy Watts on Search & Rescue followed by a curry supper. The Talk was very interesting and informative and the curry was enjoyed by all.

Our next event is our Annual Dinner to be held on Friday 19 January 2018 at the Senara Restaurant at Penwith College.  Last year’s dinner was held there and everyone who attended thoroughly enjoyed the meal and the evening. So if you don’t want to be disappointed doesn’t delay, book now with John Van der Hoff email: john@vanderhoff.org time is running out to book.  You should have received the email from John with the menu, just to remind you, you must make your selection of food and pay with your booking.

This is the remainder of our Winter Programme  of events:


Saturday 10 February - 19.30 -      Talk by Jan Pentreath on Cornish Harbours    

Venue - Penzance Sailing Club With Bar   -  Booking Not required


Wednesday 14 March - 19.30 for 20.00    

AGM & Talk by John Van der Hoff On a recent sail to the Galapagos Islands    

Penzance Sailing Club With Bar    Booking Not required


Saturday 24 March - 19.30 -      Talk by Luke Powell.  Builder  of Traditional Pilot Cutters  

 Penzance Sailing Club With Bar    Booking Not required
 

AGM


Our AGM as you will see is on Wednesday 14 March 2018.  Would you like to nominate a member or be nominated to serve on our committee? We are always looking for new committee members to help run our Association to bring fresh ideas on raising the funds to maintain and keep Happy Return afloat, sailed and enjoyed in future years.  She is an important part of the history of the Cornish fishing industry and registered as a Historic Ship.  If you would like to nominate yourself or a fellow member to join the committee please let Neil Mills know by Wednesday 28 February 2018.