  
              JULY 2012               
                
                
                Russian Tall Ship Mir, 
consistent  winner of Tall Ship races  
              Thinking about `tall ships’  in early January, I remembered the German vessel Padua thanks to my late friend, Clifford Hawkins who in his lifetime had  told me a great deal about the 'Flying P' German Shipping Company owned by Riederei  F Laeisz of Hamburg and about the Padua. 
Right through the early  1900’s, the Laeisz ships were engaged in the nitrate trade between Chile and Germany,  out and home by way of Cape Horn, among them being Passat, Pamir, Priwall, Peking, Pisagua and the Padua. 
                
              Falkland Islands 1P Postage Stamp of the Padua  
I wondered what had become of  the Padua which had been built as a  cargo vessel, finally assuming that she had been scrapped. Then a magnificent  calendar arrived in the mail from dear friends Ken & Marjorie Impey in  Cornwall, UK and there on the front was a photograph of the 4 masted barque Kruzenshtern (ex Padua) now owned by  Russia. So that’s where she was and is (unless of course she is at sea). 
                
                The refreshed Kruzenshtern 
              Under Russian ownership at sunset               
  
Surrendered by Germany to Russia  in 1945 after the war, as a sort of war trophy, the Padua was (it is said) restored and several  generations of Russian sailors have since trained aboard her, in the process  gaining substantial experience. At 114.5 metres long and traditionally rigged,  she is the second largest sailing ship in the world behind the Sedov (also an ex German now Russian  tall ship) and carries a crew of 220.   She is now based in Kaliningrad, the only  Russian Baltic seaport once part of Prussia  and then of Germany.               
                
              The Sedov named after a famous Explorer 
The Sedov was formerly the Magdalene  Vinnen II and was originally built as a German cargo vessel. Now a Russian  sail training vessel she is 122.3m long and was built in 1914 and this 4 masted  barque was named after a famous explorer, Georgij Sedov who died during an  expedition in 1914. Home port is Murmansk, St Petersburg and she  regularly participates in the Tall Ship races. 
              It is nice to see two tall ships  built in the 1920’s operational and maintained and fit enough to sail the seas  and to provide the opportunity to young sailors of gaining experience aboard  square-rigged vessels of this size no longer built today. 
               
  
  
  Flavio Faloci's Footy Presto 
Flavio Faloci is a well known  Italian model sailboat friend whom I have written about several times in the  past. He lives in Genoa  and has a gift for producing wonderful Footy (and smaller size sailboat models  (shhh – can’t tell you about that yet!) all good sailers and each one usually absolutely  beautifully produced and presented. 
              Those who read Wooden Boat magazine may have noticed in  their Shop catalogue enclosed within some issues a Footy-sized boat in kit form  called the Presto. 
                
                Plenty of sheet for the downwind(ers)
                 
              Note sail attachment to bowsprit 
              
                
                   
                  Presto (foreground) distances another Footy | 
                   
                  Sheets in, fast forward!  | 
                 
               
  
  The cover of the Wooden Boat book 
  Available separately or with the Presto kit   
               
  
  Presto tackling a big swell 
              It is a gaff-rigged sloop  with a solid wood hull out of balsa,                The kit box advertised at the  Wooden Boat Store for US$95.                A how to build the boat book  can be purchased separately for $19 and a set of plans for $25. 
              Flavio has spent considerable  time perfecting the design to ensure good performance and the test Presto boats he has raced have performed creditably.  The boat has really attractive lines and appears in a scale format that will  please those who go for both speed and scale appearance.               
                
                Presto  fits! 
              By the way, if like the  writer you noted that this Footy was half an inch in length over the 12”  allowed, it appears that once it can fit in the box diagonally with either the  bow or stern down, then all is well. 
               
                
              Well hot shots n’ Kingpins  the game is almost over, since it is now end August, the weathering challenge  with just a month left to complete your models and forward jpeg images and  entries by email to weathering2012@comcast.com  means you are cutting things a bit fine. 
              You have had monthly  reminders in this column and if you have tended to delay and adopt an attitude  of “Oh maybe I’ll start it tomorrow” well there are only two months of  tomorrows left. 
              Maybe some might feel that prizes  of a years subscription to Marine  Modelling International are not sufficiently fancifull (I think it is a  pretty attractive prize  myself!)  However, time is almost up – unless you are a  `speed builder’ and equally speedy `musser-upper’,  if you have only just yawned and stretched and  haven’t even put the brain in gear and are still mulling over what to build,  I’d say `time moveth on.’ 
              The rules were published, the  maximum size of model was 18” and there are two classes, one for sail, the  other for powered models, and another for the best youngest modeller eighteen  and under had the opportunity to win a subscription also.               
               
                
                
              
                
                  Master Modeler and Friend 
                      
                      Royston (Roy) Lake 
                      10 Sept/1926 - 6 July/2012
                     
                    Roy exited the world suddenly and without warning
                  on  6th July, 2012, and an item on him with photos of some of his models will be included later this year in  the December Where the wind blows column.  This is just to announce his passing.  | 
                 
               
                
                
                My very own Thermopylae               
              A late old friend of mine I `acquired’  one day at the Round Pond in Kensington, London,  George Philpott whose great uncle had been a crewman on the famous Thermopylae                told me that `every modeller  should make or should have a model of that famous boat in their lifetime’. (He  gave me a yarn about such people having long life with good health and fair  weather.) 
              When I trained in advertising  in London we used to meet up on arrangement at the famous pond on most Sunday  mornings where we would walk together while he sailed a freesail model he had  made and which he called Thermopylae –  not a square rigger it looked nothing like the boat in question, and I would  act as `runner’ to stop the model slamming into the wall on the other side of  the pond. 
              When I was going back to Guyana old George gifted me with `my very own  model of Thermopylae which he had made …and fitted into a  electric light bulb!  I have it to this  day and I still remember an old friend. 
                
                
              In reality it is how to have  fun while sometimes throwing away no more than a couple of dollars some weeks,  in `pretend’ it is believing you own a  small stable of grey racehorses that compete on New Zealand tracks and  occasionally contribute to the ultra-wealthy lifestyle that unfortunately you  don’t live as the `last of the big spenders.’ 
              When the game gelding Bruce Almighty (or any of the other  chosen five) wins there are living room whoops of joy and often choked emotions  and Mitty’s day is made. Hang the actual  winnings, it is really the love of the greys and the pleasure the involvement  has provided, and the on-screen sight of a horse (his horse!) running ahead to  the winning post. 
                
                
                Potts little vintage  schooner               
              My friend in London, Russell  Potts is the absolute `King’ of the UK Vintage model yacht movement and this  absolute gem of a little pre-1914 Paxton schooner, a toy boat he restored (and  converted to sail proper-like) has been seen on the British television  programme Antiques Road Show. 
              I remember visiting their  house in Sherard Road many moons back and climbing a ladder to peer into the  loft where model yachts were absolutely everywhere, many restored, many still  awaiting restoration then enjoying a lunch with Russell and Gill his wife.  Memories are made of occasions like that!   
                
                
                USN Somers damaged in storm 
              Phillip Artweger’s lovely USN Somers was damaged in a storm and  awaits repairs to her fore tops’l yard and fore tope masts as well. I could  spin a yarn that the square-rigger was caught in a storm off the coasts of  Waggarwanka in Somalia  while chasing pirates, but nothing so romantic. She fell off the top of a  cupboard during a storm at her builder’s home in the Czech Republic                so the storm bit is no bull. 
                
                
              Urs Streit's 1869 Mackerel Driver               
              Stefan Streit of Bern in Switzerland  is a key member of 
                Swiss Minisail.  His dad, Urs, like his son is also a keen and capable  model shipbuilder and sailor who  turned  his attention to Cornwall, England and  built a model of Ebenezer, a St Ives Mackerel Driver of 1869 shown above and below  in photos taken by Hans Staal of the Netherlands. 
              The length of the lug sail  model is 124cm on deck, the model is entirely scratchbuilt and the photo above was  taken at a Classic model sail meet at Bornerbroek in the Netherlands.  Nice! 
                
                
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