The News, Culture and Practice of Sailing woodenboats
in Australia, New Zealand & The South Pacific.

FOR SALE Mark Chew FOR SALE Mark Chew

Where’s a Wharram?

There used to be one lying neglected in the corner of every off the beaten track boatyard north of Gabo… but perhaps their desirability has grown over the last decade.

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FILM Mark Chew FILM Mark Chew

SAVAGE WATERS

Regular readers may have noticed that here at SWS our interest in Wharram Catamarans has morphed into a minor obsession over the last year or so. Well how could we not sit up and notice this surfing adventure film released today in the UK.

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ADVENTURE Mark Chew ADVENTURE Mark Chew

The Lapita Voyage

When I first became interested, I thought that this taciturn Englishman was working in a space where eccentricity meets the counterculture…. Well-meaning hippies, who were fun to follow, but not to be taken too seriously. But the more I learned the more appreciative I became.

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FLOTSAM Mark Chew FLOTSAM Mark Chew

Impressive but unlovely

When one of these massive, shiny, floating apartment blocks is made out of (mostly) timber then its worth reading about, and taking on board the possibilities.

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FILM Mark Chew FILM Mark Chew

Wharram Women - then and Now

Sure, the videos still have a slightly annoying millennial sensibility, but by combining some authentic James Wharram footage she makes me think that she would have fitted in well aboard TANGAROA in 1955.

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FLOTSAM Mark Chew FLOTSAM Mark Chew

Eight Bells: James Wharram

James was a trailblazer, a fighter with great determination and vision. From a young age he followed his passions – to roam the hills – for fair politics – for intelligent women – to sail the seas – to prove the Polynesian double canoe an ocean worthy craft – to become a Man of the Sea.

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BOOK REVIEWS, ADVENTURE, DESIGNERS Mark Chew BOOK REVIEWS, ADVENTURE, DESIGNERS Mark Chew

“People of The Sea” James Wharram’s Autobiography

The Wharram Catamaran has always held a fascination not because its a thing of beauty but because they reek of the promise of adventure. And not a modern day adventure clutching a GPS and Sat Phone, but a 1960’s hippy adventure with free love, tropical islands bare tanned skin, and the rejection of boundaries imposed by a disapproving society.

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