Saturday, January 26, 2013

SHIPPING NEWS UNREPORTED

This  barnacle  encrusted  and Toledo worm riddled  scribe has had a long association with  the waterfront as a reporter in Sydney, Darwin, Cairns, Auckland, Adelaide , starting  by  cleaning with creosote the bilge of a mother boat in a Sydney –Hobart yacht race , covering  the  start for  a  newspaper  from a ferry of  one of the races , going out in the boat which took Customs and Health officials to meet incoming passenger ships at the entrance to Sydney Harbour in the l950s.

 In Darwin I covered church rounds, courts , police and the  most interesting shipping round, which included the Japanese salvage operations , a 1960 trip to Portuguese Timor as a deckhand when oil was struck by an American drilling company , and a voyage along the Arnhem Land coast in a Methodist supply lugger ( chundered a lot  along the way).

The waterfront beat in Cairns took me down the so-called rough  Barbary Coast , provided encounters with the builders of strange boats ,a  search for the Australian  Tarzan , and Kay’s  Kimino , the owner of the said garment  being a Japanese lady  from which  winning tickets in  a  pub raffle were regularly drawn . In New Zealand , I went out with shark fishermen and tracked down a coffin boat sailor , met people involved in the Pirate Radio ShipRadio Hauraki- and inspected the replica of Bligh’s Bounty when it visited the country. Incidently,  bet you do not know that during WW11  dastardly Germans  on  submarines  slipped  ashore  and  milked   Kiwi cows  at  night ?

Adelaide brought me into contact with enthusiasts with fabulous martime history collections and I  bought at auction  the  personal papers and books of  a sailor  who will be the subject of extensive coverage  in Little Darwin  sometime this year.

No reporter in Darwin seems to really cover shipping news, the  throbbing Brando Beat. This statement is based on observations  of   the upsurge in harbour activity in the past six months and discussions with people involved in waterfront activities. There is an opening for a reporter like Quoyle , the former New York State newsman, central figure in the 1993 Pulitzer Prize winning book , THE SHIPPING NEWS, by E. Annie Proulx, to chronicle the  diverse maritime activity taking place in the port. In visual observations from shore in recent weeks , naval craft were seen plainly taking part in vessel escort duties . Early one Saturday morning naval ships were seen steaming in line and then smaller vessels detached themselves and did manoeuvres. This raises many question . Vessels of all shapes and sizes move about the harbour , day and night . Following   the strange episode at the Larrakeyah naval base in which firearms were stolen from a patrol boat , a fishing boat was seen soon  after  near the entrance to the facility. American naval authorities, with great justification , I am sure , would not allow an innocent looking tinny near the entrance to any of its bases .


Last year , a ship bearing the clearly visible name JUMBO on its hull was seen in port . A quick Google check revealed that Jumbo, a Dutch based outfit, specialises in heavy lifting cranes , with a fleet of vessels capable of lifting 500 tonnes to 1800 tonnes . Little Darwin took a photo of the Jumbo in the harbour and expected to see the local media do a report on this ship and its innovative company. The floating  Jumbo, however, went unnoticed by the media pack. The  mighty dredge which arrived to deepen the harbour  to enable larger gas tankers entry received initial media attention , then seemed to sink with all hands.    It is an astonishing piece of equipment; technically minded persons have spoken almost in awe at the shipboard setup.

Where are the  obvious follow up stories about the brand new pilot boat which went aground the day after it was commissioned ? Cruise ships come and go almost without mention and tourists , on occasions, arrive in town to find few shops open , which reveals poor liaison between the ships, the tourist industry and local business. Talk to the colourful people whose fishing vessels flock together in what is known as the Duck Pond and innumerable stories , some outrageous, emerge . At night, there are frequently scenes of activity at Frances Bay as small coastal vessels load up. An interview with the Darwin Port Authority about the increased activity and the future outlook would make interesting reading . Doing the shipping news can be most rewarding and productive if you actually keep in contact with shipping agents, get out of the office, go to the wharves , speak to the waterside workers , the captains, crew members and spot a vessel with JUMBO emblazoned on its hull. What looked like a Chinese tramp steamer slid into port during our watch ,without mention in the media . Wonder where it came from, what it was doing here? -(Peter Simon)