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Noticing in the Sussex Daily News under Shipping Intelligence;
"Worthing, arrived May 19th, the 'Nautilus' yacht (Burt), from Dieppe,"
our curiosity was excited to know something more about the "Nautilus"
and her doings, as the arrival of a boat from the other side upon
Worthing beach is not an everyday occurrence.
Forthwith we interviewed the skipper, and had better let him tell
the story in his own fashion. - "You wish to know why the two of us
started for Dieppe and back in a small boat? We have talked of this all
the way home from Calcutta, wondering whether the boat was unsold, and
arranging all the details. Wait till I get my pipe on. Do I smoke? Why
of course I do; what's a fellow to do at sea, who doesn't drink,
without his pipe? Well we found that the 'Nautilus' was still on the
beach and as soon as possible commenced to get her ready. What sort of
boat is she? Why she was built by EURE, of Dell Quay, for the Rev. R.
NUNNS of Appledrum, he sold her to Mr W.H. Mason, who used her for
cruising around the Isle of Wight. She now belongs to Mr John Belton.
She is 16ft. long, 6ft broad, cutter rigged, partly decked forward with
a coming round, about two tons nett, and a good sea boat. We overhauled
the gear, putting new where necessary, borrowed a couple of six-gallon
breakers for water, ballasted her partly with iron, and the rest
shingle, found a couple of side lights in Mr. Dunford's loft, which we
cleaned up, repainted &c., and fitted them on screens of the
official size - determined, as you see, that if we were run down, it
should not be for want of complying with the regulations, - laid in our
stock of provisions and every requisite we could think of, including a
chart of the most recent date. How did we cook? Bought one of those
small petroleum stoves fitted with frying pan and kettle. We had an
empty lard bucket; this we intended to use as a drogue if we had to lay
to. We placed the stove in the bucket - when cooking this kept off the
wind - it answered admirably, but the pan would only cook one man's
rations at a time - one cooked while the other steered.
Well, we made a start on Saturday, the 10th, at 6.30 p.m., on the
flood; fired a salute - I forgot to tell you that we had a revolver and
a gun, - there was slight breeze from the south at 7. We then tacked
and stood along shore; took an amplitude of the sun, and found error of
compass to be two points nearly; off Lancing at 7.30, Shoreham Harbour
light bearing east by compass; lit binnacle and sidelights, Beachy Head
light being east-half-north. Wind south-easterly, but very light and
variable; hazy in shore, no lights visible, but could hear the break of
the surf on the beach. Martin relieved me at midnight, it was very
cold; had some tea, and went below for a sleep, i.e. lay partly in the
locker and partly in the bottom of the boat, covered with an oilskin
cover. Slept till 4 am Sunday; Martin steering/ heavy dew/ strong tide
against us. Martin me up to set the top-sail; gentle breeze at
day-light, relieved Martin at 5, very chilly; several vessels around
us; had a shot at a diver but he was too sharp. At 7 o'clock went
about, and passed close to s.s City of Bristol, too close to be
pleasant; tide took us back a lot. When about 14 miles off Worthing,
passed a ship, the Bay of Cadiz I think, towing down. Breakfasted at
7.30, cocoa, fried bacon, and eggs, very welcome, I assure you, for
after a couple of hours at the tiller you get weary; fired at
guillemots, wounded two. Tried to get a wash, but had mislaid the soap
- bad luck to it. Did about 10 miles by guess. Martin broached the
bottle of Burgundy at noon. We passed the s.s. Schiedam, who waved to
us, and we dipped the tri-colour in return. Dined at 2. Splendid day
but little wind. Nearly run down by the ship Ladakh, of Liverpool,
fired two shots just in time to let them hear, for there was no one on
look-out; as it was we only cleared her by getting out the oars at a
distance of 20 yards. Finding that the tide was against us, we brought
up, in company of two other boats. Slight catspaws began to ruffle the
water, and we weighed anchor at 8.15, the tide with us and a fair wind;
lit the lamps; Martin at the tiller and I at the look out. The French
girls had got hold of the tow-rope, and we hoped they would keep it.
Had a wink at 12, but at 1 am Martin called me to take in the top-sail,
for a heavy squall had struck her; took it in; dew falling heavily.
Nearly run down by a steamer, fired shots and flashed our lights, but
it was no use, we had to put her about. Wind freshened, and presently
had a beautiful job to lower the mast, the top-sail halyards had got
jammed between the mast and sheave. Wind died away; no land in sight.
On Monday gave her a wash round, and luckily found the soap, so we had
a wash ourselves. Went about and spoke to a schooner, THE BLUE JACKET,
who told us we were 12 or 14 miles off St.Valery, between Fecamp and
Dieppe. The wind was very trying, here and there, as if you were in the
doldrums. The Newhaven boat, Normandy, passed us as we lay becalmed,
and some of the passengers waved to us. Very monotonous waiting for a
breeze. Heavy thunderstorms around us. Got a breeze at 4, and sighted
land to the westward of Dieppe; glad to get the breeze; not a sail in
sight, and the wind felt chilly after the hot sun. Spoke to the St.
Louis , of Dieppe, who asked us if we came from l'Angleterre, and when
we said "Oui" (nearly all our sum total of French) he wished us
"bon-voyage".
Chain and sheet lightning very vivid, took the top-sail off her
,and just got the main-sail lowered in time for a squall struck us, and
very nearly buried us in water. Away she went with only the jib set at
the rate of seven or eight knots; had to take the jib in and set the
spit-fire, and afterwards we were going at three knots under bare
poles; with a nasty sea. Point d'Ailly light bore south-east-half-east,
so we let go the anchor with 30 fathoms of chain and rope, and we were
dragging them all the time; we put a good spring on the cable, which
eased the jerks, though she was pitching the thing about. Lit the
hurricane lamp and hoisted it, but the wind and rain were too violent,
and put it out, so we hauled it down and placed it in the bottom of the
boat. It moderated towards midnight, and we both got under the cover
and went to sleep, although it was raining hard and we were nearly wet
through.
Well, we remained at anchor, though it was anything but pleasant. We
were afraid to run for Dieppe in the dark, not knowing the place. At
seven in the morning we tried to weigh anchor, both of us pulling at
it, but we couldn't get more than a few inches, and we were in a proper
fix, as you may imagine, but as I find I must go down to the boat to
get some of our gear, if you will look me up shortly I will tell you
how we got on."
(The Yarn Continued).
"Well, as I have said, we were in a fix; one consolation, the
weather was fine, and the sea moderate; but it was the only anchor we
had aboard and cable, however we hauled up all we could get and made it
fast, and took everything weighty aft, breakers, ballast, &c., and
went aft ourselves. As the tide rose she gave a jerk and started it,
but the other fluke caught. We hove on it again and went aft, put a
drogue over the stern so the tide would drag her, and presently she
gave a tug that sent her bow up and her stern down, and we had cleared;
we hauled it up and found both flukes polished bright, but not a bit
bent, so it must have been a good one; in fact it was one specially
looked out for us by the owner. We took a cast of the lead and found
bottom at 16 fathoms; very hot, and appearance of another thunderstorm,
which we didn't want after our experience of the previous night. The
wind was still light and favourable, chiefly southerly. We spoke to the
French luggers Hirondelle and Adrienne, said Dieppe bore S.E., as well
as we could understand, very hazy and thick, which made it very
difficult to know where we were with a puzzling tide.
Thunder with rain waking up, raising a swell, we steered the same
course as a Newhaven boat which passed us, at noon the weather calm but
cloudy, tide setting to the westward, snugged her down, and rowed into
Dieppe at dead low water, took her up to the place we picked out for
her, the Quai de Lacalle, I think it was, and were up till about 2
o'clock fixing her. We found that she grounded at low water, the tide
leaving her about a couple of hundred yards; slept in the boat all
night; crowds of "young France" down in the morning to look at us. The
morning was rainy and overcast, but I thought I had better go and see
if we could get anything to eat. Tired? I believe you, we were tired,
being so long cramped in the boat, it was as much as we could do to
walk.
First impressions of Dieppe were that it was a queer looking hole
which might improve upon further acquaintance. Well, we went ashore, as
I have said, to a café, where we stayed the day, and were very glad to
turn in for a good night's rest in a comfortable bed. The next day it
was blowing hard from the north-west, with heavy sea. The French boys
gave us a deal of trouble; like other boys, they were very mischievous.
On Thursday morning when we came down we found the boat was shifted
from the place we put her; two Frenchman explained this by saying they
moved her at 1 o'clock in the morning as a heavy sea was breaking in
the harbour, and she ran risk of damage. It was very kind of them and
we had great difficulty in inducing them to receive any payment for the
service. Dieppe can't be a pleasant place in such weather, for there
were green seas up in the streets. They charged us so high a rate at
the café that we resolved to sleep and have our meals on board. The
wind was still a head wind for us, but we busied ourselves getting
ready for sea again, took her alongside the steam tug Deanville, and
lay there waiting for a favourable wind. Martin went ashore after
provisions, tried a dozen shops before he could make them understand
what he wanted. Friday brought a westerly wind with heavy sea on the
bar, so we were still fixed; but the town and harbour was gay with
flags &c., to receive a Minister of Public Works, who was coming to
inspect the harbour. We hoisted the whole of our bunting to be in it,
and what with the sun shining, guns firing from the Newhaven boats,
soldiers marching, drums beating, and trumpets blowing, they kept
things alive.
The Landlord of the café where we had been staying came down to the
boat for a present; he got one, as sailors say, with a hook in it, for
he had piled it on too much while we were with him. The town was
illuminated at night. We found that the fishermen were considerably
exercised as to why we had paid them a visit in such a small craft;
couldn't understand our doing it for amusement. On Saturday we washed
down, breakfasted, and set sails for sea; lovely day and a nice fresh
breeze, found that the captain of the tug could speak English pretty
well. He accompanied us ashore, and showed us the chief objects of
interest, was very kind indeed, and would not let us repay him in any
way. One of the crew was equally polite, handing me materials for
cleaning my gun, without my asking for them, and would not take aught
in return. However, I handed him half a bag of powder, and this pleased
him mightily. We left Dieppe on Saturday, at noon, the people on the
quay wishing us "bon voyage". Little wind from three until about 8.30,
when we got a steady breeze, and passed through two or three tide
races, with a disagreeable choppy sea. We lost sight of Point D'Ailly
at 3.30 a.m.; wind became very unsteady and variable, we were afraid it
would come dead ahead, very cold towards morning.
Sunday morning, the wind still light, breakfasted, but a troublesome
job to put a fresh wick in our cooking stove, as the other had got wet;
had a sleep afterwards, so did Martin for a couple of hours, weather
became thick in the water, now and then a breeze, followed by calm,
nothing in sight but a few coasters. Tired of waiting, we resolved to
seek consolation after my old friend Mr James Osborne's fashion, in a
cup of tea, so on went the kettle forthwith. At seven o'clock a light
breeze sprang up, thick and hazy all round, but clear overhead; no land
or lights visible.
Monday brought a breeze from the north-west, not enough to clear the
haze. Sighted Beachy Head light as the fog lifted, but the light was so
indistinct that we took it at first as a fishing boat's light. Saw the
Royal Sovereign light ship at day-break, lots of ships standing in.
Soon the breeze freshened, and home-ward we came, with top-sail and
everything else set. During the night we had the top-sail down, and the
tack twice up, as you could not see the lights till close down upon
them. An east-south-east breeze brought us along finely, and at 11.30
we were on Worthing beach, pleased enough to see G. Belton's genial
face waiting to welcome us. The distance of Worthing to Dieppe? About
80 miles. You think it was rather a risky business? Well you know what
the Captain of the Canoe Club said, himself a boat sailor of the first
order, that 'It is better to be called rash than to be called timid.'
That's your opinion also ? I'm glad of it. Good day."
There's a signal well known to the mariner brace
His guide o'er the waters from perils to save;
'Tis hailed with a welcome whenever in sight,
And the mariner calls it "The Beacon Light."
FOLKARD.
Since the cruise to Dieppe and back (May 10 to 19, 1884)
the "Nautilus", with Bernard Burt and Mr J. Osborne, jnr., as his mate,
has visited the Isle of Wight. Leaving Worthing on July 28th, calling
in the outward trip upon the Owers Light Vessel with a parcel of
newspapers, etc., they were hospitably entertained by the master at
breakfast. A head wind and dirty weather necessitated putting in to
Littlehampton for a day or so; but, eventually, sail was made for the
westward, and a run up by Chichester Harbour brought them to the free
town of Bosham. A walk from Bosham to Funtington gave them an
opportunity of stretching their legs, and a hospitable dinner and tea
with an old school-mate, Mr C. Thomas, made an agreeable diversion from
the cuisine of the "Nautilus", which was necessarily somewhat limited.
A thick fog made the getting out of Bosham harbour a rather difficult
matter, but this cleared off and they had a very pleasant run to the
Island. Standing in to Brading Haven, and passing Sea View, with the
Island looking very lovely in the bright sunlight, they anchored at
Ryde, and on the succeeding day visited Southampton, leaving the boat
at Ryde. According to arrangements they met Mr. A. Stubbs ('Shadow') at
Portsmouth, on Saturday afternoon. A pleasant sail to Cowes past
Osborne and up as far as the entrance to Southampton Water, occupied
the earlier hours of Sunday, Leaving Ryde at 3.30 p.m., with topsail
and spinnaker set, a fine fresh breeze brought them homewards; but the
wind dropping at Goring, they had to pull the rest of the way, reaching
home about 10.30.
"All's well that ends well "
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