Could you please identify the ships? I guess that this is an annual rally, and they arrive from the many countries which support sail training.
Many have come to Australia through the years: period goodwill visits (
Esmeralda from Chile,
Derawutji from Indonesia, one from Italy, one from Japan).
The big rally was for the Australian bicentenary, in 1988. There were two fleets. One was a First Fleet reenactment. The other was a tall-ships fleet, with representatives from many countries (including Germany, possibly Poland).
Australia is also a home for sail training and public voyaging (which helps subsidise youth-training programs).
This is a top-of-head list; I may have missed some:
Hobart:
Lady Nelson.
www.ladynelson.org.au. I had a cruise on one occasion when the vessel crossed Bass Strait to Melbourne.
Windwarde Bound.
www.windewardbound.com.
Sydney:
James Craig. This may be cruising, not training. When I sailed from Geelong (Vic.), most of the crew was volunteer, so there has to be a training component.
www.sailaustralia.com.au/James%20Craig.htm; http://www.anmm.gov.au/site/page.cfm?u=1335.
Young Endeavour. UK's gift to Australia for the 1988 bicentennial.
www.youngendeavour.gov.au/site.
Melbourne:
Enterprize. Cruising with some level of training.
www.enterprize.com.au. This is the keynote for public celebrations on Australia Day (joined with any tall ship in port, and a fleet of yachts and cruising launches, with a public cruise-ferry for onlookers). It is also the keynote for Melbourne's Founders Day, when it relives the original:
Enterprize brough the Fawkner party from Hobart to Melbourne, the first settlers.
Alma Doepel. This was a Melbourne-based training vessel for years. Finances, politics and a disastrous relocation to north-coast NSW have taken a toll. It is back in Melbourne, undergoing an overhaul.
www.almadoepel.com.au. I cruised down the bay on a positioning trip for slipping at Geelong. I did get to go off on a tender for action photography, but was too late for thelast session of the day to climb the ratlines.
Adelaide:
One and All.
www.about-australia.com/travel-guides/south-australia/adelaide/tours-cruises/extended/sa-tall-ships-inc. This was purpose built; I watched the construction. As well as local cruising, the vessel makes occasional voyages to Portland and Melbourne.
Perth
Leeuwin II.
www.sailleeuwin.com. My brother was a regular training-crew member for years.
New Zealand
Bay of Islands.
R Tucker Thompson.
www.tucker.co.nz. This was the smallest ship in the 1988 First Fleet reenactment, UK to Australia, then visiting other capitals. I have been on a public cruise in its home waters.
Other:
Sydney:
Endeavour replica. Apparently sailing display, not training.
www.anmm.gov.au/site/page.cfm?u=1372Sydney:
Duyfken replica. Apparently sailing display, not training.
www.anmm.gov.au/site/page.cfm?u=1849Melbourne:
Polly Woodside (static display). polly Woodside melbourne.
Hobart:
May Queen (a restored coastal ketch, static).
www.discovertasmania.com/activities__and__attractions/heritage__and__culture/maritime_history/may_queenAdelaide:
Falie (was cruising; currently out of survey).
http://portside-messenger.whereilive.com.au/news/story/falie-neglected.
NZ, Auckland.
Soren Larsen (cruising).
www.sorenlarsen.co.nz/history.htmlNZ, Auckland. Scow
Ted Ashby and brigantine
Breeze.
www.maritimemuseum.co.nz/wawcs0142395/voyager-live-sailings.html.
Denmark:
Eye of the Wind (cruises).
www.eyeofthewind.net.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eye_of_the_Wind. This has had extended deployments in Australia.
The photos were taken on the annual Australia Day cruise.
I was aboard
Lady Cutler, one of two Sydney ferries brought to Melbourne by rival operators and refitted for the charter party market. It is the blue one in my photo. One wheelhouse was converted to a galley, so it is now single ended.
Lady McKell, renamed
Victoria Star, is the green one. One wheelhouse was removed to provide two terraced rear decks.
Wattle had been in an earlier cruise (photos not on the hard drive), but was now out of survey.
Alma Doepel had just arrived, but could not cruise.
Lady Stelfox I have posted before, but have a repeat to complete the day's coverage. It is a fake paddlevessel.
Roderick B Smith
Rail News Victoria Editor