Category: Blog (Page 3 of 27)

A Chance to go Sailing!

Oyez Oyez!

This just in from Dave Brooks, Secretary

Good Morning All.

An opportunity to sail aboard Cambria has arisen for the dates of 26/27 July.
You will muster at Gillingham Pier at 10.00am on the 26th July for a midday departure.
Sit back and enjoy a trip down the River Medway. Lunch and Evening meal will be served.
27th after breakfast a return sail back to Gillingham Pier, arriving midday.
Cost £150 per person.
Kit.
Suitable Clothing for wet and dry weather. Sleeping Bag and Pillows

We need a minimum of 8 people by the 22nd July.
Please contact Dave Brooks at cambriatrustsecretary@live.co.uk or ring 01634 660997

This will be on a first come first served basis

Regards

Dave Brooks

GET IN!

 

Mark Chapman’s Medway Video

Huge apologies to Mark Chapman. There I was shouting out for bits on the Medway Match and Mark reminded me that only on the 14th June he posted me a link to his on-barge video of the Match. I had used it in Twitter, so some of you may have seen it, but had failed to post it to here. It is a superbly evocative thing – Mark has video’d with the sound on, so we hear all the on-board noise, winch pawls clanking, Skipper Ian Ruffles shouting instructions and other crew (Mick Nolan and Reggie Andrews) comment, the wind and the waves. As well, there are, of course, all the lovely visuals, barges alongside and behind us, the river and shoreline. Occasionally, Mark points the camera inboard, so we can see deck activity. Let that tops’l draw! Can you pull the main brail in a bit! Wind this wang in a bit! Is our bowsprit clear of ‘is mizzen? Nice and gently – we’re in his shitty wind now!  Lee HO!

Mark Chapman Medway Video

Mark Chapman Medway Video

24 minutes, 16 seconds of pure joy! Thank you very much to all involved and especially to Mark for the edit and production. It all comes flooding back.

The link is https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QTZ6OdH5aK8&feature=youtu.be

 

 

New Crab Winches.

Sorry it has been ages since I last posted – been a bit mad busy. There has actually been quite a lot going on in the way of charters and the Medway Match where we won our class and re-won the Cambria Cup. Perhaps one of my colleagues, reading this, might like to put pen to paper and furnish me with a Match Report. Or anyone else for that matter – if you were there and know what happened, we’d love to record it here for posterity.

The old Seager crab winches, now replaced

The old Seager crab winches, now replaced

Meanwhile I have this nice piece from Boss of Volunteers, Basil on the subject of Crab Winches.

 

“Last winter, at the refit meeting, it was decided to have New Crab Winches made for SB Cambria. In the three years of operation since rebuild we have lost teeth from the winding drum gear chain on three separate occasions not always from the same winch. Twice they were inoperable, the last time with one tooth missing on the smaller sprocket, operation was rather worrying. Initially the thought was to replace just the gears, but we have frames damaged on two of the winches already so went for complete replacement.

Tim Goldsack has always been very helpful and speedy in sourcing and fitting spare parts for us; but to keep an engineless sailing barge competitive is challenging enough without the added worry of winch failure.
The new ones have been made by the fabricators to be pretty much identical to the old cast iron ones. They are, however , a couple of inches higher making use more comfortable. The frames are cut from steel plate and welded up to the same profile as original, as are the gear wheels. The shafts are of stainless steel running in sintered bronze bearings, the spreading bars are of steel.
The warping drums have been reclaimed from the original winches, and used in the new ones. These would have been very difficult to manufacture , additionally the frames are galvanised.
When the teeth went on the old cast iron it was possible to see casting faults within the metal, with these and the aging of the iron is the reason for them becoming more fragile. The new steel teeth will only wear not suddenly give out. So far operation has been good, but painting still has to be completed. The new winches only went on board the day prior to Cambria’s move out of dry dock thence to Gillingham Pier to start the new season of charters.”

Thanks for that, Basil.

In general, I should add, the Cambria is always in need of volunteers. There never seem to be enough of us about, and some of us are not the young, sprightly Spring Chickens we once were, so if you want to get involved you can probably choose an area you’d like, from painting and cleaning, to indoor ‘Domestic Goddess’ stuff changing beds between charter ‘guests’, to repairs and maintenance. The gang will probably yank your arm off in their enthusiasm to welcome you aboard. If you fancy this, then get in touch – either come and introduce yourself at the barge, or email us on CambriaTrustSecretary@live.co.uk .

 

The Cambria Cup

The Cambria Cup

The Cambria Cup

There is a nice piece from Dave Brooks in the Facebook feed today along with some lovely pictures of the Cambria Cup (pictured, reflecting Cambria’s deck). Dave says…

“The Cambria Cup was first won by Sailing Barge Cambria in the 16th June 1928 Medway Barge Sailing Match Coasting Class, when A.B.Finch skippered the barge to first place ahead of Alf Everard 2nd, Remercie 3rd and John Bayly.
On the 26th May 2012 Cambria re-won the cup in the Coasting Class, when Cambria Skipper Ian Ruffles brought her home ahead of Lady of the Lea and Phoenician in the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee Medway Match.
Ian and Cambria retained the cup the following year, 18th May 2013 beating Lady of the Lea, Ardwina and Orinoco.
On the 7th June 2014 Cambria will again try to retain the cup in the Coasting Class why not come along and watch.”

So there’s a date for your diaries!

Jed Pearson Writes

On the Mud at Gillingham Pier

On the Mud at Gillingham Pier

We were all hugely relieved recently when we were able to finally get one group of young carers away on a successful sail on Cambria after 2 false starts in 2013 when bad weather stopped play twice for the same group. We are, as you know, a motor-less barge so completely reliant on the sails, and therefore sensible winds, to move us about, and if the assigned Skipper on the day decides that it is not safe to sail, then we are as wind-bound as would have been the Sailormen of old. They would have lost their livelihood; at least we ‘only’ lose the pleasure of being able to take the carers out, though it is surely just as galling for them.

Well, on our first charter of 2014 we were finally able to fix this and one of the young trainees has been generous enough to write us a report of his day. I hand you over at this point to Jed Pearson who needs no further ‘wrapping’. Thank you very much for the write up Jed, which I will almost certainly reprint in the next newsletter also.

Jed Pearson: My trip on the Cambria.

It was third time lucky for Crossroads Young Carers to sail on the Cambria; it had been called off twice (in 2013) because of bad weather so when we got to Gillingham Pier and it was chucking it down our morale was not at its best.
We had to wait for the tide to rise before we could get aboard and by this time the weather was improving so it looked like we would finally get to sail. We met our fabulous crew and had a safety briefing before we set off.
We set off up the Medway because we couldn’t fit under the bridge downstream. I had a chance to hoist the mainsail and then we had to turn around and head back because another boat was coming in our path. Once the boat had passed we turned back again and I had ago at steering the Cambria, this was hard because the wheel was so heavy and the wind was pulling the boat off course.
We dropped the anchor and had lunch of bacon sarnies and brownie, YUM!! But had to help with the washing up. After lunch we practiced our knots, I learnt the figure of eight, round turn and two half hitches ready for the Great Knot Race. We got put in teams and had to bounce along the deck on the fenders then when we got to the end Reggie or Ian gave us a knot to do, the team I was on won YIPPEE! Our next task was to scrub the decks and hatches ready for the Sunday open day.
We winched the anchor back up and my job was to put the anchor chain away tidily in its box, we headed back up the Medway to Gillingham pier where had to beach the boat in the mud because the tide wasn’t in far enough, we waited long enough to be able to float the barge boat back to the pier.
We said our thanks to the crew for an amazing but tiring day and I cannot wait to go again!
Thank you Cambria, Crossroads and the Rotary Club

Good Man Jed!

 

New Crab Winches (and Twitter!)

New Crab Winches

New crab winch

Just a quick note to let you know we have gone a bit rash and spent some cash, replacing the old “crab winches” with new. The old ones, much restored and well used were possibly the original equipment and were from the ‘Seager’ foundry in Faversham, now long since gone out of business and replaced by a housing estate of the same name. These winches, which are mainly used to raise and lower the lee-boards but also have different gearing shafts etc for dolly lines and working with any other aft-end gear (vangs etc), were lovely old things but were constructed of old castings which have now become rather brittle. Let go a lee board a bit roughly and they would tend to shatter off teeth from the main sprockets which then meant you would jump that tooth and smash the mechanism up against the next good tooth and break that, till you had stripped enough teeth to make the winch unusable.

2nd new crab winch

2nd new crab winch

In my own experience, we managed this in a Swale Match and had to come home, tacking up the narrow Swale with one of the lee boards permanently down, tacking board for board with Mirosa. Great fun but not ideal, and I was only the bowlin’ man. I was yards away from the cussing and swearing. You can repair these teeth with a good welder but they are never as strong, so the Trust decided to replace the entire winches with modern, new equivalent kit. I am promised some more detailed information on these but meanwhile a couple of pics to look at.

 

Meanwhile, I am trying to set up a Twitter account for those of you who follow such things. I will then post notices that there is a new blog post and any other info that comes to hand. Please respond or re-tweet as you think fit. I have also linked this to Facebook, so it may pop up there also. The account is headed @SB_Cambria . I tried to get the real deal, SBCambria but some guy in Rio de Janeiro has grabbed that one already, claims his name is Sebastian Cambia but he has never posted on Twitter. We’ll make do, I guess. Look after yourselves.

 

Winter Maintenance Pictures

Nothing particularly newsy today, just a fine collection of pics of winter work I have been sent over the last few weeks, which I will post in here as an album for you to enjoy.

They feature…..

1) A nice useful collection of blocks found for us by Skipper Ian Ruffles, which are now being ‘serviced’ ready for either use in the barge’s rigging or as demonstration ‘models’ for sail training.

2) Main companionway, all nicely boxed in.

3) Our lovely new (anchor) chain box under construction and complete.

4) The rigging back up after our little try out of the poly-tunnel. She is back into dry dock soon, we are currently queuing up behind Lady Daphne, who needed some work doing on the main mast deck

5) Skipper Ian Ruffles

6) Long term Volunteer and artist Steve Richards with his fine wheel cover. Steve is responsible for the fine line drawings of barges we use in our merchandise, as well as a ‘montage’ style painting of the story of Cambria in her Dolphin Museum days, among many other art works

 

Date for your Diaries

Nautical Festival

Nautical Festival. Poster borrowed from Facebook feed of Griselda Cann-Mussett

A date for your diary if you can be anywhere near our home port of Faversham in July, the 2014, this year’s Faversham Nautical Festival. This is once more the product of the Kentish Sail Association and takes place on Sat/Sun the 12th and 13th of July. More info on the Kentish Sail website, to which I will put a link on our Useful Links page.

The Call Goes Out

Stairs down into our main hold, now beautifully boxed in

Stairs down into our main hold, now beautifully boxed in (Pic by Dave Brooks)

Hi. The call has gone out on Facebook and via email. We have some big, busy weekends coming up and if you can see your way clear to giving us a few hours as a volunteer then either contact us via CambriaTrustSecretaryt@live.co.uk, or come and find us moored at Standard Quay in Faversham. As Dave Brooks puts it…..

Calling All Cambria Volunteers and anybody else who would like to get involved.
We have a massive weekend coming up.
8/9 March. We are taking the poly tunnel off and the gear is going back up. We need volunteers especially on the Saturday as we need to get the polythene folded. 8.30 to 9.00 am start.

Then

15th March. Continue with the rigging
22/23 March General Maintenance and Painting

Urgently require painters.

29th Mar to 14th Apr dry dock and hull painting.

Please can you let me know via the cambriatrustsecretary@live.co.uk address if you are able to attend any of the above dates.

PLEASE HELP OUT IF YOU CAN.

Under Cover

Some more excellent pics of our poly tunnel cover as seen from inside, taken by Mick Nolan and used, naturally, with his full permission. It looks like a good job to my untutored eye and will work well this winter and for future winters. I am not sure how or where we will store it but I presume the guys will have something up their sleeves. Incidentally, one of the shots includes a Birthday Boy, namely our own Boss of Volunteers, Basil Brambleby. Many Happy Returns for today, Basil. I hope they spoil you rotten and you don’t have to work too hard, at least not on the barge. Still look just as young, handsome and fit as when I first met you. 🙂 Happy Birthday.

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