Bull City
A fine fellow
Mmmm... no. Alternative Facts?
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Well, someone just needs to find and read a copy of his book,Assuming her account of being left to fend for herself and raise her little brother while the parents sailed away is a bold-faced lie, then I would imagine the father would have an account that they stayed together throughout this adventure.
Has anyone found this alternative history?
Sounds suspiciously woke to me.It is a very interesting Marxian reading of this obscure bit of modern cruising history (and modern. British history). (Obscure enough that the father’s grandly titled cruising narrative referenced above, celebrating Captain Cook’s voyages, is nowhere to be found for sale online.)
Now, can we get a post-structuralist, and then a feminist, reading of the story too? These would be good fodder for conversation. It’s getting a bit thin around here lately.
Frank Blair, who built Maggie B, had another big Nigel Irens schooner with a free-standing rig built by Covey Island in 2010. It used to live on a mooring near me in NE Harbor. He has also built several other Nigel Irens designs.Well, someone just needs to find and read a copy of his book,
Schooner to the Southern Oceans: The Captain James Cook Bicentenary Voyage 1776-1976
I’d actually be interested in reading it (if it was easily obtainable) just for the descriptions of Southern Ocean sailing and their shipwreck and self-rescue (which is impressive). (For now, there’s “The Schooner Maggie B: A Southern Ocean Circumnavigation”.)
My guess is that Cook is probably quite self-deluded and thinks of himself as some sort of latter day seafaring great like Captain Cook and that he did it all for the benefit of his family. Interesting psychological investigation in light of the daughter’s tearjerker of a book.
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Well, someone just needs to find and read a copy of his book,
Schooner to the Southern Oceans: The Captain James Cook Bicentenary Voyage 1776-1976
I’d actually be interested in reading it (if it was easily obtainable) just for the descriptions of Southern Ocean sailing and their shipwreck and self-rescue (which is impressive). (For now, there’s “The Schooner Maggie B: A Southern Ocean Circumnavigation”.)
My guess is that Cook is probably quite self-deluded and thinks of himself as some sort of latter day seafaring great like Captain Cook and that he did it all for the benefit of his family. Interesting psychological investigation in light of the daughter’s tearjerker of a book.
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So what was going on with the poverty routine?I'd like you to read it, Jud, and report back.
I've pretty much written the guy off as a trust-funded prat.![]()
I missed poverty. Being strapped to pay for the upkeep of a 70'er? Seems like pretty ample means was coming from somewhere for a guy with no job to be sailing for a decade and more.So what was going on with the poverty routine?
Some of you need remedial reading comprehension. I skimmed it once and recall several times when they by necessity took on paying crew for various legs to support boat upkeep. When dad was working the inland NZ job, mom took the boat out for paying customers, leaving the kids alone. Who knows what is true, but it usually lies somewhere between two sides to a story.
Google of father's name and 3000 rare books shows a telegraph article from 2018 that seems to confirm they weren't hurting for funds when they left, but article was behind a paywall.
“The book will focus on how we survived being shipwrecked, the wonderful places like Fiji that we visited and how I managed to then educate myself to go to university. Much of the story is set in Fiji as it is the place that we sailed to possibly most of all the Pacific Islands.”
While in the country, Mrs Heywood is also hoping to meet people who will have information about Wavewalker.
“I hope that I can find someone who can tell me what happened to Wavewalker. I really hope that I have the chance to see her again as I was never able to say goodbye after she was my home for so long.
Thankfully, the internet contains virtually everything if you look hard enough. It is, definitely, a book written from the perspective of a man hyping himself up. It ends when the schooner arrives in Fremantle for repairs, unfortunately, and the remainder of the pacific is teased in a sequel which seems to never have been published. There’s also a few key differences from the daughters tale:Well, someone just needs to find and read a copy of his book,
Schooner to the Southern Oceans: The Captain James Cook Bicentenary Voyage 1776-1976
I’d actually be interested in reading it (if it was easily obtainable) just for the descriptions of Southern Ocean sailing and their shipwreck and self-rescue (which is impressive). (For now, there’s “The Schooner Maggie B: A Southern Ocean Circumnavigation”.)
My guess is that Cook is probably quite self-deluded and thinks of himself as some sort of latter day seafaring great like Captain Cook and that he did it all for the benefit of his family. Interesting psychological investigation in light of the daughter’s tearjerker of a book.
For this and all subsequent major decisions about our future voyages we discussed the options in detail at a family conference and then had a family vote. I was delighted when I opened the four voting slips to find that we had all voted to continue the voyage.
Overall it could have served with an editor and was definitely a product of an amateur author polishing his memories of events thirty years prior.Sue and Jon grew up on the schooner, which meant that they were unable to go to school. Mary continued to teach them but was constantly worried that they would not achieve good educational standards. Eventually we were able to register them at the Australian School of Distance Learning in Brisbane. This entailed them studying their subjects on the schooner and then posting their work back to Australia for marking. Often the marked work would go astray when we were away at very remote islands but this did not stop Sue and Jon getting excellent grades and eventually returning to good universities in England, where they both gained degrees and doctorates.
Welcome aboard! Looking forward to your book. Be advised that while there are a lot of knowledgeable and accomplished sailors here (not me), it can be a rough and tumble place; I trust you have a thick skin.Hi all. I’m Suzanne.
Hi! Welcome to CAHi all. I’m Suzanne. Wonderful that you are interested in the story. If you would like, after the book is out (April 13), I would be delighted to do a call with all of you and answer any questions you have about it, including why it took me so long to tell this tale. Let me know if you would like to do that. Suzanne
Thanks for these. I’ll keep my answers short for now as the book will explain much more. But a couple of thoughts.I'll give you a few to start with:
1. How often did you meet and interact with other cruising kids? Your experience seems very different than the typical sailing family. Pretty much no one takes kids through the Southern Ocean for one thing and most cruising families I have come across tend to try and find other boats with kids to give them some social life outside of adults. I still remember how happy a circumnavigating family with a 10 year-old was when two of us anchored our boats nearby with kids around that age. The kids all went nuts having a blast swimming and getting towed on a tube behind my dinghy.
2. Can you expand on your time in New Zealand? Exactly how old were you then? I am pretty sure in 2023 in Maryland social services would do more than say "sucks to be you" if they got a call from foreign minor children left to fend for themselves.