Boating NZ

Boat brief

Bandit, the first boat built by Sir Peter Blake more than 50 years ago, has been restored to its former glory and is now on display at the New Zealand Maritime Museum.

- LAWRENCE SCHÄFFLER

Blake’s first boat.

Sir Peter, then 17, and his brother Tony started building the keel yacht in 1966 in the backyard of their family home in Bayswater, with help from good friend Crawford Duncan.

At 7m LOA the boat may be small but she is a big part of the country’s maritime history – building and sailing the boat was how Blake gleaned his craft. His 30-year career as the world’s most celebrated yachtsman saw him circumnavi­gate the globe six times, win the America’s Cup in 1995 and head ecological expedition­s from the Antarctic to the Amazon.

Bruce Tantrum of the Classic Yacht Charitable Trust, who discovered Bandit in a shed in Warkworth in 2013, says the Maritime Museum’s Blue Water Black Magic gallery is the ideal place for Bandit to be on display alongside other iconic Blake memorabili­a.

“Having Blake’s first keel boat next to Black Magic, which represents one of the greatest achievemen­ts of his career, is like a little duckling alongside its mother,” says Tantrum.

Blake’s wife, Pippa, is delighted with the restoratio­n and excited for boating enthusiast­s seeing the vessel for the first time. “Although Bandit was before my time, she always seemed to be there. Peter often talked about her and looked back very fondly on those days. That boat meant a lot to him.”

Building Bandit was a true DIY project and it wasn’t all smooth sailing. At one stage during the two-year project molten lead leaked all over the family lawn, after the iron bath tub being used to form the keel cracked.

Upon completion the three young men spent the summer of 1968 racing her on the Hauraki Gulf. Bandit went on to compete in the 1968-69 racing season where she won the Akarana Junior Offshore Group Championsh­ip.

Despite often being the smallest boat in the offshore racing fleets, she was able to attain a speed of 15 knots. Following her racing years Bandit was retired from the water.

Tantrum started Bandit’s restoratio­n process after meeting with Viv Wyatt who had acquired the boat in the late 90s and kept her in Warkworth. Wyatt gifted Bandit to the Classic Yacht Charitable Trust which paid a token sum of 20 cents to complete the transfer.

After 14 years in storage the yacht has been completely restored by Hobsonvill­e’s Yachting Developmen­ts over a two- year period, using as much of the original rigging, fittings, and sails as possible. Yachting Developmen­ts owner Ian Cook says it was remarkable Bandit was built at the Blake family home, given the craftsmans­hip and finishing.

“Some of the apprentice­s involved in the restoratio­n were amazed what Peter, Tony and Crawford were able to achieve in a backyard. Bandit was the start of a legacy that inspired many young New Zealanders to get into boating. She represents the beginning of a journey which shows that if you dream you can achieve great things,” says Cook.

Bandit has been donated to the New Zealand Maritime Museum where she is on permanent display next to NZL 32 ( Black Magic) which Sir Peter sailed to victory at the 1995 America’s Cup.

Along with donations from Sir Peter’s friends, family, and associates, the $42,000 restoratio­n was made possible thanks to an arrangemen­t between Tantrum and Cook. In exchange for the restoratio­n work, Tantrum, a model boat builder, gifted Cook three model boats. BNZ

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 ??  ?? OPPOSITE TOP Bruce Tantrum discovered the derelictBa­ndit and steered her restoratio­n. LEFT The restored vessel, now in the Maritime Museum. OPPOSITE BELOW Built in a backyard, destined for glory.
OPPOSITE TOP Bruce Tantrum discovered the derelictBa­ndit and steered her restoratio­n. LEFT The restored vessel, now in the Maritime Museum. OPPOSITE BELOW Built in a backyard, destined for glory.

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