Hi guys. A few weeks back I went to a local boatyard with 'BTP Joe' and we explored some of the various old bits lying around, and some old boats which were abandoned by the owners and left to decay. The yard is still in use by many others, although a great number of the boats look as if no-one has nurtured them in a while.
Exterminate!
Late 1970s Seawall
Hmmm...
Going down together
My fav shot, this boat probably from about a couple of decades back but not that old.
Inside this boat
We filmed part of our own movie there!
Rope tying bit
Peeling wallpaper porn for UrbanX (saw your radio report very good btw!)
On the modern boat
Quite the view!
Then there was a boat which came from Burnham-on-Crouch, and was used as one of the 'lttle boats' to evacuate soldiers from the beaches of Dunkirk in WW2. The Little Ships’ were some 700 privately owned boats (mainly fishing boats) owned by British citizens, which were volunteers who responded to the call for private small boats to come to Dunkirk and rescue the cornered remains of the British fighting force. One such boat, built in 1937, came from Burnham-on-Crouch, and remains burnt after arson in Smallgain’s Boat Yard on Canvey to-date. It was a 6-man boat designed to catch oysters via ‘dredging’ – a method which involved lifting up sediments from the seabed and capturing fish (or in this case mollusks) in a net. Its remains can be seen publicly to this day, and was in fine shape until its recent arson attack.
Known as 'the Vanguard CK69' it can be seen here today, on Canvey.
Please visit http://beyondthepoint.co.uk/ for more on the boat, and other historic remains within South Essex.
Exterminate!
Late 1970s Seawall
Hmmm...
Going down together
My fav shot, this boat probably from about a couple of decades back but not that old.
Inside this boat
We filmed part of our own movie there!
Rope tying bit
Peeling wallpaper porn for UrbanX (saw your radio report very good btw!)
On the modern boat
Quite the view!
Then there was a boat which came from Burnham-on-Crouch, and was used as one of the 'lttle boats' to evacuate soldiers from the beaches of Dunkirk in WW2. The Little Ships’ were some 700 privately owned boats (mainly fishing boats) owned by British citizens, which were volunteers who responded to the call for private small boats to come to Dunkirk and rescue the cornered remains of the British fighting force. One such boat, built in 1937, came from Burnham-on-Crouch, and remains burnt after arson in Smallgain’s Boat Yard on Canvey to-date. It was a 6-man boat designed to catch oysters via ‘dredging’ – a method which involved lifting up sediments from the seabed and capturing fish (or in this case mollusks) in a net. Its remains can be seen publicly to this day, and was in fine shape until its recent arson attack.
Known as 'the Vanguard CK69' it can be seen here today, on Canvey.
Please visit http://beyondthepoint.co.uk/ for more on the boat, and other historic remains within South Essex.