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Eagle is grounded
Years in the water have seen the yachts deteriorate but the work should be finished in about a month

Navy personnel watch and assist as the Sea Adler is lifted from the water for the first time in a while.
Navy personnel watch and assist as the Sea Adler is lifted from the water for the first time in a while.
Photo by ABPH Yuri Ramsey
When a crane lifted the nine metre Compass class yacht Sea Adler from the water at Fleet Base East late last month, all present could see she was not in good shape.

Her lower hull was badly encrusted with marine growth and her paintwork looked dowdy.

A second yacht, a seven metre Swanson Dart called Wee Ripper also looked poorly when she too was lifted to the wharf.

They will not look like this for long, however.

Over the next month, teams of tradesmen and women, supported by Navy Youth Program youngsters and later “Work for the Dole” participants will renovate both yachts.

The yachts belong to the Australian Naval Cadets and were operated by the Sail Training Facility East based at Spectacle Island.

Years in the water have seen them deteriorate.

Refurbished they will again be used to carry out TL4 training under the Australian Yachting Federation’s program during the upcoming sailing season.

A number of people are behind the move to restore the craft including LEUT Greg Read at Spectacle Island, LEUT Pat Marsh (TS Hawkesbury), LCDR Rick Barnett and his FIMA/Sydney team and Geoff Reice and CPO Mike Clement of Port Services.

First exercise saw the yachts brought from Spectacle Island to FBE.

They were lifted ashore, inspected and then measured by FIMA “chippies” to make a pair of cradles in readiness for road transport.

NYP and FIMA staff then gave them a preliminary hull clean.

Next exercise will see the yachts loaded on to a pair of FIMA trucks and driven to TS Hawkesbury near Gosford.

Here they will be used to provide work and a worthwhile project for “Work for the Dole” personnel on the Central Coast.

“The refurbishment should be finished in about a month,” LCDR Barnett said.
  • By Graham Davis

 

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