This one took only a few hours but the story behind it stretches at least back at least 200 years. In the 1830s/40's a group of sealers were in a boat that was upset in the surf on the remote Western Victoria border. At this point only a handful of settlements existed within a few hundred km except. Anyway, some of the men drowned unfortunately and the rest staggered along the beach to civilization. Not long into their trip they spotted something dark behind the beach in the Sand Hammocks (dunes sparely covered with bushes and scrub), there embedded partially high up in in a dune/in between dunes (sources vary) 200-1000 yards inland. lay a very weathered and bleached wreck, mostly intact and judged to be between 100-300t. As towns sprung up, people visited the hulk, playing on the half buried hull as the sand swallowed it up slowly and people used parts of her timbers for other uses until her upper works were either removed or the sand consumed it entirely around 1890. Since at least 1933 people have been searching for the wreck especially in light of when Indigenous Elders were asked how the ship came to be here on such a stretch of coast so far from the sea. They had no clue, it had been there at least 60-80 years before them and no part of their oral tradition mentions it with any detail with the exception that "Yellow/white men came from the wreck". Hence the theory has been generally that a Portuguese or Spanish ship was dumped by an enormous storm high and dry and far from home. This isn't the only wreck that possible predates Cook by a decade or a few centuries in these Eastern waters but it is the most documented over the years with dozens of accounts.
A little over a decade ago, a local man by the name of Graham Wylie started building at similar ship from reclaimed timber. Recently, it was launched and now the Notorious prowls the Australian Coastline visiting ports along the way. The people behind the "Notorious" were only too happy to give me permission to draw their vessel (Seeing as it was privately owned I thought it was only right). Further more they wished us luck with our ongoing effort, lovely of them!
If no glaring issues are found I'll send this to the Notorious Group tomorrow and finish up the sails and the three mast configeration
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Work list(Current)
Miscellaneous|
Victorian Colonial Navy|
Murray Riverboats|
Colony of Victoria AU|
Project Sail-fixing SB's sail shortage
How to mentally pronounce my usernameRow-(as in a boat)Don-(as in the short form of Donald)Dough-(bread)
"Loitering on the High Seas" (Named after the good ship Rodondo)
There's no such thing as "
nothing left to draw" If you can down 10 pints and draw, you're doing alright by my standards