0
products in your shopping cart
Total:   $0.00 details
There are no products in your shopping cart!
We hope it's not for long.

Visit the shop

Shipwrecks

list view
  • Kangaroo Island Shipwrecks – Gifford Chapman

    Kangaroo Island Shipwrecks – Gifford Chapman

    An excellent Roebuck production (No 6) published in 1973 a second printing updated with the story of the Amber Star. Very good near fine condition.

    Large octavo, 109 pages with soft covers. Heavily illustrated with great end paper maps of the Island with the positions of the many wrecks. Good photographic images and well researched

    Kangaroo Island more than its fair share

    $35.00

    Loading Updating cart…
  • Saved – Tony Bullimore

    Saved – Tony Bullimore

    Published by Little Brown in London in 1997. Octavo, 237 pages well illustrated from coloured photographs. Fine condition.

    A first edition of … “an extraordinary tale of survival and rescue in the Southern Ocean”.

    Bullimore was an entrant in the, only for the daring, Vendee Globe round the world challenge .. just look at the route to see why daring!

    Bullimore got into severe trouble capsized and was trapped inside his upside down hull. He was a bit out the way … his resulting rescue produced one of the happiest faces ever photographed.

    Bullimore survived the worst …

    $25.00

    Loading Updating cart…
  • Australian Sea Mysteries – Jack Loney

    Australian Sea Mysteries – Jack Loney

    Self published to a good standard in 1983.

    Limited hard bound edition of 500 this numbered 206 and signed nicely by Loney.

    Small quarto, 111 pages with dust jacket. Some ageing to page edges and ownership signature on free end paper. Still a very good copy.

    Another thoroughly well researched book by Jack Loney. Excellent narrative and illustrations about what happened to the Madagascar, the Loch Maree (what a beautiful ship), the Kobenhavn, the extraordinary mystery of the Mahogany Ship (can it be found?), the twin screw steamer Rosedale and the little Christina Fraser … Loney’s usual unusual presentation … which we like

    Sought after signed hard cover … Aussie Sea Mysteries

    $40.00

    Loading Updating cart…
  • Tai Ki – To the Point of No Return – Kuno Knoble

    Tai Ki – To the Point of No Return – Kuno Knoble

    Published by Little, Brown Boston a first English language edition 1976. Translated by Rita and Robert Kimber from the first German edition the year before. large octavo, 276 pages with many colour photographic illustrations, endpaper maps etc. Chips to top and bottom of dust jacket spine, otherwise a pretty good copy , very clean internally.

    Could an ancient Chinese junk have sailed to America? In 1974 Kuno Knobl and seven others built and launched the Tai Ki and set sail across the Pacific.

    They didn’t make it all the way as they were beset by a series of difficulties … it was “worm” that caused the most havoc .. with the crew eventually spending nearly all their time plugging holes created by the little devils. A final typhoon crippled the vessel.

    Luckily they were rescued by the container-ship Washington Mail and the Tai Kai was abandoned 40 degrees north and south of Alaska.

    Tai Ki … almost there but for the worms

    $25.00

    Loading Updating cart…
  • 117 Days Adrift (In the Pacific) – Maurice & Maralyn Bailey – First Australian Edition 1974

    117 Days Adrift (In the Pacific) – Maurice & Maralyn Bailey – First Australian Edition 1974

    Published by The Australasian Publishing Co, Hornsby a first edition 1974. Large octavo, 192 pages with endpaper maps, further charts and numerous excellent illustrations

    This story is up there with Apollo 13.

    Maurice and Maralyn Bailey give up their lives as a clerk and a tax officer in the South of England sell their house to live life at sea. They had the Auralyn built to meet their own needs and finally sailed for New Zealand in June 1972.

    The made the Atlantic and through the Panama without notable incident. However North East of the Galapagos it all went wrong when they were hit by a whale and the boat began to sink. All attempts to save her were in vain and they had to abandon the Auralyn for their inflatable raft and dinghy. Meagre supplies were recovered.

    Along the way we have storms, capsizing, numerous sightings of ship that did not see them … the first on day 8! They captured fresh water but not without difficulty and caught fish and turtles for food. Eventually rescued by a Korean fishing vessel “Weolmi 306” drifting further north having already crossed the main shipping route.

    Their remarkable story and their survival among the marine life of Pacific area known as the “Tropical convergence” warranted foreword by Sir peter Scott

    Incredible story of survival in the Pacific

    $30.00

    Loading Updating cart…
  • The Wreck of the Batavia & Prosper – Simon Leys

    The Wreck of the Batavia & Prosper – Simon Leys

    A fine first hardback published 2005 by Black Inc, Melbourne. Small octavo, 110 pages, illustrated comprising two separate essays of close to equal length.

    The author’s account of the unusual going’s on to do with the wreck of the Dutch East Indies Batavia and the horrid aftermath is good succinct account.

    Despite the unusual format of the title …Prosper is a totally different narrative and not a wreck account … deeply personal the author Pierre Ryckmans (here under his pen-name Simon Leys) recalls a summer spent on a tuna fishing boat off Brittany … his introduction to “proper sailing”.

    Batavia special and unusual combination … Prosper

    $22.00

    Loading Updating cart…
LoadingUpdating…

Product Categories