Adventuress - Rockport Marine
Transcription
Adventuress - Rockport Marine
Adventuress American beauty After a near-drowning in the wreck of his classic, Victor Janovich needed a new project. He found an 82ft Fife. By Kathy Mansfield; photos by Alison Langley ADVENTURESS KATHY MANSFIELD KATHY MANSFIELD A 8 CLASSIC BOAT NOVEMBER 2012 ALISON LANGLEY PREVIOUS SPREAD ALISON LANGLEY; KATHY MANSFIELD KATHY MANSFIELD Previous spread and above right: Adventuress spreads her wings in a rare Maine breeze Left: Detailing has been kept as authentically Fife as possible n extraordinary boat, an extraordinary owner, an extraordinary group of craftsmen – that sums up the story of Adventuress as she slipped into the water at Rockport, Maine, on 21 July. It’s a story that ties together an 83ft (25.3m) schooner designed by William Fife III in 1924, commandeered as a German patrol boat and scuttled at the harbour entrance of Villefranche-sur-Mer; an owner from Istanbul who followed Herman Melville’s edict to stay true to childhood dreams; and a group of skilful and sympathetic craftsmen who carried out the work on the hull, deck, interior and rig, as well as updating the yacht’s systems. The tale begins 88 years ago, when Adventuress was launched at Fife’s Fairlie yard for Glasgow resident Norman Clark Neill. He had six boats built by Fife over the years, including the 6-Metre Marmi, which sailed in the 1920 Olympics, and another taken to the US for the British American Cup of 1922. Adventuress was his next yacht, built the year after his uncle Kenneth MacKenzie Clark commissioned Kentra. In 1929 Neill also commissioned Maryk, a cruising 12-M. He sold Adventuress in the mid-1930s and she was taken to the Mediterranean, but it was there that she was seized by the Germans for use as a patrol boat during the Second World War. Who knows where she was taken ALISON LANGLEY during that time, but she was doubtless used hard, and it was only her strong construction and teak planking that kept her salvageable after the war and several years at the bottom of Villefranche harbour. She was raised and refitted as a stemhead ketch with a bermudan main, a rig she carried for the next 50 years. Renamed Isabelle, she then had several French and Italian owners, one of whom used her in the Med during the summer and had her delivered annually to the Caribbean. Though her ship’s logs have been lost, it is said she crossed the Atlantic 15 times. From the mid-1970s she had several American owners, eventually passing to Steve Vaitses of Clinton, Connecticut, son of boatbuilder and writer Allan Vaitses. In 2000, she was purchased by Jim Lynch of New York who restored her original name of Adventuress and undertook a refit with the goal of returning her to her original form. That is the official history of Adventuress, but she has another story: Kenny Coombs of Antigua Classics has mined the rumour mill and it seems the captain back in the 1930s was murdered by a guest for sleeping with his wife. His ghost is said to remain on board. “I have not met the ghost yet,” Kenny told me, “but I know people who have.” The boat was part of the well-known Nicholson’s charter fleet in the Caribbean in the 1970s, where Janie Easton, who ran a boutique in Nelson’s Dockyard, fell in love with her and married first the captain, and later the CLASSIC BOAT NOVEMBER 2012 9 ADVENTURESS ALISON LANGLEY ALISON LANGLEY “He found Adventuress and decided that her restoration would be his donation to yachting history” KATHY MANSFIELD ADVENTURESS Length Over spars 99ft 9in (30.4m) Length On deck 82ft 2in (25.1m) Waterline length 57ft 6in (17.5m) beam 17ft (5.2m) Draught 9ft 8in (3m) Displacement 123,200lb (55.8 tonnes) Sail area 3,430sqft (318m2) 10 CLASSIC BOAT NOVEMBER 2012 Above left: A coal stove found in Mallorca sets off the sumptuous, panelled interior Above right: White ceilings and a huge skylight; owner Victor Januvich helms owner, Hank van Beaver. She chartered in the Virgin Islands in the 1980s, and Kenny spotted her in Newport, Rhode Island during that time. A new owner and direction Victor Janovich grew up in Istanbul, studying philosophy in the US and later turning to commodities and ethicallygrown coffee. He arrived in Newport on a mission, borne out of the pain of losing his yacht in a terrible accident, and needing a new project, as he explained to me. “In the summer of 2009, on a bright, sunny day, five miles southwest of the island of Mallorca, sailing under full canvas in 25-knot winds, I was rammed on my port quarter to windward by a fishing boat under way at full speed but not under command. Lilli sank immediately, and miraculously, I escaped with my life.” Lilli II was the 60ft (18.3m) wooden yawl that Victor had bought from the president of Istanbul Yacht Club, built in the shipyards of the Golden Horn in its heyday. He’d fixed her up, sailed her to Barcelona and fully restored her on the Costa Brava over five years. She was eventually traced at a depth of 607ft (185m), her sails still set, but too deep to salvage. Victor was devastated, and began to hunt for a project to assuage his loss. One month later, he found Adventuress, and decided her restoration would be his donation to yachting history, and to his dreams. The first task was to find the best boatyard for the job, and Victor was prepared to look worldwide, from New Zealand to Maine. In the end the decision was made over a beer and a handshake with Taylor Allen of Rockport Marine, a man Victor had known for less than an hour, but whose confidence he instinctively trusted. The initial plan was for a winter’s work, but once the deck was off, it was clear that all the beams needed replacement, and when they were removed, there was rot in the beamshelves (sheer clamps). Both stem and stern were going to need work soon, and a reassessment of the job ahead was called for. Victor had been there before with his previous yacht, and accepted with equanimity that instead of a multi-stage process, a full restoration would be necessary. a different perspective Sam Chamberlin had been put in charge as designer on the project, and knew that the rebuild stretched to everything: rig, interior, systems, deck layout. “Victor’s directive was to build a ‘Fife schooner’, which meant to bring back many of her original features, but we were not bound to the exact condition of Adventuress at the time of her launch.” This process is what lead Sam to Europe. From the beginning of the project, Fairlie Restorations was involved as a consultant, and of course the source of the original plans. “As I started to get into the design work CLASSIC BOAT NOVEMBER 2012 11 ADVENTURESS ALL PICTURES BY ALISON LANGLEY “In many ways, Fife yachts are very similar to the American yachts of that period” and think through many of the details, it quickly become apparent that pictures alone wouldn’t be enough to understand how these boats worked.” Paul Spooner at Fairlie helped to put together a trip to visit Altair and Mariquita in France, and Kentra at Fairlie’s yard on the Hamble. “These visits proved to be an indispensible part of the process,” Sam said, “as they allowed me to really understand how all of the Fife details came together to make a whole. “In many ways Fife yachts are very similar to the American yachts of that period, but my first reaction was to look at individual details and think: ‘Oh, we know how to do that better over here.’ Only after you step back and look at the whole yacht, the sum of all the details, do you understand how well they work together.” right team for the job Restoration was far-reaching. About two-thirds of the teak planking was still good, plus the ballast keel and keelson, but there were significant repairs to the white oak frames, there was a new stem and forefoot, and the entire stern counter was rebuilt. Taylor Allen at Rockport Marine bought seven teak logs for the project. There were new beamshelves, deck and deck beams, a new deck structure, a new interior, systems, rig and rigging. Original Fife construction plans were followed as closely as possible for the hull and deck, including wood species and scantlings. Details were scarce for the interior and rig, so a lot of research and work was needed in those areas. Paul Spooner was an invaluable consultant on Fifes and provided some of the bronze parts. Brian Englander and his crew solved many puzzles, Tom Ward of Traditional Rigging worked with Nat Wilson Sailmakers to bring a fine new gaff-rigged schooner to life. There are 14 sails – the gaff main, fore, staysail, jib, three jib topsails, the main and fore gaff topsails, jackyard topsail, two fishermen, a drifter and a trysail. Adventuress carries her Fife pedigree with pride, but on such a major restoration there is a need to integrate practical and useful electronic technology unobtrusively. Spending the time early on to configure electronics lockers, to house the engine control panel and autopilot within a traditional-looking wheelhouse and to find discreet places to mount the antennae, can make the difference between a good and a great restoration. Updated technology includes the bronze winches – actually hydraulic Harkens with a bronze custom housing, to cut down on crew numbers. The interior had to be designed from scratch as well, looking at other Fife yachts, with crew quarters forward, a spacious saloon aft of the galley, guest cabins and a light, airy master cabin aft of the main hatch; the engine room just before. Martha Coolidge sourced period features for the interior, focusing on a William Morris artichoke design Above right: A rare moment with eight sails aloft Above left: Rockport’s joinery is only outshone by the lustre of the varnish CLASSIC BOAT NOVEMBER 2012 13 ALL PICTURES BY ALISON LANGLEY ADVENTURESS in a tapestry silk on the antique Biedermeier chairs in the saloon, with dark-grained walnut panelling and lights made to an Art Deco design. I particularly liked the antique coal stove in the saloon that the owner found in Mallorca. Other Morris designs brighten the cabins. Adventuress sets sail I was invited to sail on Adventuress for Maine’s trio of classic events: the Castine Regatta, the Camden Feeder and the Eggemoggin Reach Race. Castine was my first chance to see the boat under sail, and she was in good company, including the Fife yachts Belle Aventure and Sumurun, plus the small Fife R-Class yacht Fifi. I stepped over the varnished bulwarks onto the new teak decks, so bandbox new they were almost slippery. Everything, from the lines and fittings to the varnished hatches and comfortable cockpit, had that pristine look of a new yacht that hadn’t yet been to sea. But she will soon settle down. Adventuress exuded strength and grace, and she’s already shown her mettle over the last eight decades. I met some of the crew, including my friend Kenny Coombs, organising the sail-handling, and skipper Alastair Doyne-Ditmas, flanked by Sam Chamberlin, who was having a crash course on the navigation equipment. Soon Kenny had parcelled out jobs and the sails were going up – despite the hydraulic winches there’s no substitute for human input when the intricacies of tacking all these sails are involved. The topsails add to the excitement. There was a palpable sense of achievement, helped by Kenny’s encouragement, as the boatbuilders aboard saw Adventuress gather speed and begin to heel to the breeze. Sails were adjusted and halyards were heaved until the set was just right. We all longed for the wind to strengthen, to put her through her paces, but that will happen in time. Meanwhile we were quiet, mindful of the fog, the race, the other boats and those frustrating lobster pots. They plagued us throughout the races, those lobster pots, and we snagged more than our fair share. At one point, Rockport designer Brendan Riordan had to dive to cut one from the bottom of the rudder. Lobstermen are king in these waters – even during a major regatta the course is studded with their bobbing, coloured floats. We never did get enough wind during the three days to give Adventuress a chance to show her strength: she’s not a light-wind boat, but she picked up speed nicely when the breeze did freshen, particularly during the Feeder Race, when eight of her sails were flying. Next day, we tackled the Deer Isle Thoroughfare, lined with the clapboard houses of Stonington, rocky islands, lobster boats and lighthouses. It was with excitement that we watched the huge main gaff going up, then the foresails. We had become a crew, each enjoying the moment as the sails billowed above us. It doesn’t get much better. Her owner brought another element to the day’s sail when he joined us in Camden – his calm happiness was infectious. Victor was obviously delighted, hauling a sail with the crew, stretching out on deck to watch those sails and enjoy his boat under way. His words from the launch of Adventuress perhaps entered his thoughts: “John Keats, in one of the most memorable lines in English literature, says that ‘a thing of beauty is a joy for ever’.” Still going strong after 80 years of enchanting looks, Adventuress embodies that spirit perfectly. Clockwise, from top left: There were new deck beams throughout; shaping a beam for the companionway; launch day at Rockport; the keelson was in good condition, but one third of the planking had to be replaced CLASSIC BOAT NOVEMBER 2012 15