The Timaru Herald

New berth for Wahine linked boat

- JENNIFER EDER

A former lifeboat for the Wahine will soon retire, as the disaster’s 50-year anniversar­y approaches, but there’s life in the old girl yet.

The Matakana was built as a spare lifeboat for the Wahine but was still sitting in a shipyard when the passenger ship ran aground at the mouth of Wellington Harbour on April 10, 1968.

Outdoor education school Outward Bound had opened at Anakiwa, in the Marlboroug­h Sounds, four years earlier and was desperatel­y short of boats.

Outward Bound maintenanc­e manager Vic Koller said the ‘‘poor old girl’’ was gifted to the school by the Union Steam Ship Company in the early 1970s.

‘‘After the sinking, she was surplus to requiremen­ts. She was just a sad little girl waiting for some action. So the director at the time asked if we could have it,’’ Koller said. ‘‘We were struggling financiall­y at the time, in the early days and being a not-forprofit, so to get a boat like this, and especially in such good shape, it was fantastic.’’

The Matakana was converted into a launch and used by instructor­s to keep an eye on the school’s cutters as students sailed or rowed through Queen Charlotte Sound. It also took students to their solo adventures, a highlight for a budding explorer, Koller said.

‘‘They usually get dropped off at night, so it’s very spooky, and they don’t really know where they are. They stay there for two nights and then the Matakana will go back and pick them up.’’

The boat came with a Fleming hand-propelled system, which drove the boat by pumping levers instead of using oars, as getting passengers to row in tandem while they were in shock was near impossible, Koller said.

Outward Bound staff Len Baxter and Bruce West, who have since died, removed the Fleming system, added a fourcylind­er Ford engine, decked her with plywood and added a wheelhouse.

But as the Wahine’s 50-year anniversar­y approaches, the Matakana has been struggling to keep up. Three new cutters replaced the old fleet after an old cutter was rammed by a catamaran and badly damaged in 2011.

‘‘Back then they were all secondhand boats on a shoestring budget. These days, of course, we’ve got a fleet of very reliable boats bought new, with donations,’’ Koller said.

‘‘But the new cutters are very fast. Times have changed, and she’s not the glamorous boat she once was. But for us, she’s been absolutely awesome.’’

Two new Tortuga boats were bought to monitor the new cutters, and the school was hoping to replace the Matakana with a third Tortuga during Project Refresh Anakiwa, the largest fundraisin­g project since the 1980s.

‘‘Having all three boats the same would make it easier to maintain them, and to train new instructor­s,’’ Koller said.

He is now looking for a good home for the Matakana.

One of the old cutters, the Resolution, was displayed at the Nelson Lakes Classic Boat Museum at alpine village St Arnaud, west of Marlboroug­h, and the Matahoura was given to the Nelson TS Talisman Sea Cadets.

Koller said he would prefer to see the Matakana spend the rest of its life on the water, rather than going to a museum.

‘‘It’s a good work boat. I can still see it doing some work in the Marlboroug­h Sounds, she’s still quite strong. She’s got quite a bit of life in her yet,’’ Koller said.

 ?? SCOTT HAMMOND/STUFF ?? Outward Bound maintenanc­e manager Vic Koller says the Matakana needs a new home. The vessel was originally a spare lifeboat for the ill-fated Wahine.
SCOTT HAMMOND/STUFF Outward Bound maintenanc­e manager Vic Koller says the Matakana needs a new home. The vessel was originally a spare lifeboat for the ill-fated Wahine.

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