I had a wonderful day today. I visited the HMB Endeavour replica while it was visiting the port of Portland, Victoria, Australia.
Here's the official website of the ship:
http://www.anmm.gov.au/site/page.cfm?u=1372
Briefly the HMB Endeavour was the ship Captain Cook sailed around the world and discovered Australia in, in 1770.
This replica was built painstakingly between 1988 and 1994.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HM_Bark_Endeavour_Replica
On with my potted pictorial tour...
The Endeavour, centre of pic, in Portland harbour:
Close up:
The hull, which is made of Australian jarrah:
The ship's bell:
Some of the 29,000 metres (nearly 30 kilometres) of rope on the ship:
The mess:
Some hammocks:
The cat-o-nine-tails, which was kept in a red bag (which came out pink in the photo for some reason). When punishments were carried out, they "let the cat out of the bag", which is where the expression came from.
The middle class seamen's quarters. So cramped you can't stand up. I'd hate to see what the lowest class quarters were like. The lowest decks are modern for the replica's shipmen to use.
Mr Buchan (the artist)'s desk, who shared quarters with a Mr Parkinson:
My favourite bit, Joseph Banks' quarters. (The famous botanist.)
Captain Cook's quarters:
The Great Cabin (shared by Cook, Banks and his men). In the centre of the photo is a ship nail (forgotten the word for it) which was taken on the Space Shuttle Endeavour, which was named after Cook's ship.
On deck again, showing the boat Captain Cook would have used for embarkation:
The ship's wheel:
This lovely (American) tourguide was sailing with the ship on the way to Portland, and they were in a Gale Force 8 storm. She was hit by the wheel, broke her collarbone and was thrown to the ground. She spent 4 days in pain before they reached Portland where she was taken to hospital. And she's still working. What a trouper!
A small cannon/gun:
A larger cannon:
And lastly, the obligatory tourist pic of me (on the right) "steering".
Thanks for joining me on my tour. Mind your step on the way down the gangplank.
Here's the official website of the ship:
http://www.anmm.gov.au/site/page.cfm?u=1372
Briefly the HMB Endeavour was the ship Captain Cook sailed around the world and discovered Australia in, in 1770.
This replica was built painstakingly between 1988 and 1994.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HM_Bark_Endeavour_Replica
On with my potted pictorial tour...
The Endeavour, centre of pic, in Portland harbour:
Close up:
The hull, which is made of Australian jarrah:
The ship's bell:
Some of the 29,000 metres (nearly 30 kilometres) of rope on the ship:
The mess:
Some hammocks:
The cat-o-nine-tails, which was kept in a red bag (which came out pink in the photo for some reason). When punishments were carried out, they "let the cat out of the bag", which is where the expression came from.
The middle class seamen's quarters. So cramped you can't stand up. I'd hate to see what the lowest class quarters were like. The lowest decks are modern for the replica's shipmen to use.
Mr Buchan (the artist)'s desk, who shared quarters with a Mr Parkinson:
My favourite bit, Joseph Banks' quarters. (The famous botanist.)
Captain Cook's quarters:
The Great Cabin (shared by Cook, Banks and his men). In the centre of the photo is a ship nail (forgotten the word for it) which was taken on the Space Shuttle Endeavour, which was named after Cook's ship.
On deck again, showing the boat Captain Cook would have used for embarkation:
The ship's wheel:
This lovely (American) tourguide was sailing with the ship on the way to Portland, and they were in a Gale Force 8 storm. She was hit by the wheel, broke her collarbone and was thrown to the ground. She spent 4 days in pain before they reached Portland where she was taken to hospital. And she's still working. What a trouper!
A small cannon/gun:
A larger cannon:
And lastly, the obligatory tourist pic of me (on the right) "steering".
Thanks for joining me on my tour. Mind your step on the way down the gangplank.