terça-feira, 3 de março de 2009

O LUGRE PRÓDIGO ARGUS

O ARGUS em provas de mar, 1939

Pois é verdade, no trabalho que postei no meu Blogue Navios à Vista, “Temos Navio, Temos o Santa Maria Manuela, é da Pascoal!”, agora com a aquisição do Polynesia, lá em St. Maartens, nas Arubas, pela Pascoal & Filhos, já poderemos afirmar “Temos Navios, Temos o Santa Maria Manuela e o Argus também, são da Pascoal!”.
O navio é de muito boa construção, até porque foi preparado para campanhas extensas nos mares dos gelos da Terra Nova, Labrador e da Groenlândia. Note-se que o Polynesia, como navio de cruzeiros, tinha manutenção regular e apenas há algum tempo foi abandonado pelo armador, tendo, ultimamente permanecido arrestado, o que sucede, frequentemente com muitos desse tipo de navios.
Se prolongássemos de braço dado o NTM Creoula com os seus dois gémeos, o que seria interessante um dia ocorrer, teríamos a verdadeira imagem do trio dos “Lugres do Gelo” ou “Cisnes Brancos do Noroeste do Atlântico”, três dos últimos quatro representantes da mundialmente conhecida “Portuguese White Fleet”.
Estão de parabéns todos aqueles que se interessam por estas coisas do mar e dos navios, antigos capitães, pilotos, maquinistas, pescadores dos navios bacalhoeiros, que todos eles sofreram na pele os rigores da Faina Maior, Portugal e sobretudo a empresa Pascoal & Filhos, que de certeza irá ter grande sucesso no empreendimento, que está a levar a cabo.
Uma surpresa destas, até parece milagre! Allan Villiers lá nos Céus deve ter feito alguma prece!
Agora o que é deveras lamentável, é os nossos governantes ainda não se terem pronunciado pelo menos com uma simples palavra de estímulo, só lhes ficaria bem! Devem andar atarefados com as penhoras a torto e a direito e com o ridículo prolongamento da idade das reformas dos trabalhadores baseados na “esperança de vida dos Portugueses enriquecida de maleitas”!
Imagem: (c) autor desconhecido
Rui Amaro



segunda-feira, 2 de março de 2009

THE PORTUGUESE SCENE OF 1972 BY ROBERT SIMPER

Rubert Simper at the wheel of the Thames barge LORD ROBERTS in the Medway, 1968


Robert Simper was the responsible by “Sail Review” of the SEA BREEZES, the British Magazine of ships and the Sea, which I gave my collaboration in this small work inserted in that magazine.


The CREOULA and ARGUS anchored in river Coina, Tagus estuary, near her owner's plant, 1972


It seems that one of the last stronghold of vessels using sail is finally doomed.
Every April the cod “liner” schooners of Portugal have sailed to the Grand Banks, but for several years this has been increasingly uneconomic and the owners are now converting to pure motor-ships using drift nets.
In March I boarded the 1.195 gross ton motor-ship NEPTUNO at Lisbon and was shown by Capitão João Matias how the five new small boats will be operated from her. Built 1958, the NEPTUNO formerly carried 102 men who fished from dories with outboards; now she will have only 60 men but will still return to Portugal in October with salted cod and cod liver oil for export for Britain.
The Parceria Geral de Pescarias still have the schooners ARGUS and CREOULA which I was able to see their cod-drying plant at Barreiro. The ARGUS will not sail in this year’s campaign but she might go next year. The CREOULA will sail with a total of 68 men of which 54 will be fishermen using dories. O Capitão Marques was at least optimistic about his beautiful 4-masted schooner remaining in operation for a few more years.
From what I could gather in Portugal it seemed that only about three of the auxiliary schooners would sail to the Grand Banks this year, the rest being motor-ships. Mr. Rui Amaro tells me that north port of Oporto once had an important fleet of Grand Bankers, but no longer has any.
The side trawler INVICTA, motor-ships SENHORA DO MAR and VILA DO CONDE were transferred for other ports. As recently as 1956 Portugal still sent 25 schooners to the Grand Banks and many of these were lost there. One of the last of these was the 4-masted, 635 gross ton auxiliary CONDESTAVEL, built at Gafanha, Aveiro, in 1948 and converted to a motor-ship before being lost.
Of the Portuguese coastal traders only five former sailing vessels are still trading as motor-ships. These are the JAIMESILVA, SADINO, VITORIOSO, VIANENSE and CARLOS AUGUSTO which trade between Setubal, Lisbon, Oporto, Leixões and Viana do Castelo carrying cement or salt northbound and returning south with ballast.
Vessels that appear to thriving are the River Tagus fragata. These gaff sloop sailing barges carry freights from Lisbon to wharves further inland. Tiller-steered, they have an open hold and their most noticeable feature in their graceful curved bow. The mast rakes aft and the loose footed mains’l is stowed by letting the peak halliard go until the gaff is against the mast, the lower part of the sails picked up with a brail.
The fragata are expertly handled and in dock everything is stowed neatly. In recent years I have been accustomed to looking at working craft reminded me just how much of the mystic is lost when a craft stops trading.


The CREOULA as motor-vessel anchored in the River Coina, Tagus Estuary, ready for 1972 cod fishing season.


The ARGUS on laid up, anchored in the River Coina, Tagus estuary, in 1972


The NEPTUNO of 1958 anchored in Belem, Tagus estuary, ready for a new cod fishing season /(c) unknown Photographer/


Signed by Robert Simper - SEA BREEZES vol. 46 no. 319 July 1972.

Photos (c) by Robert Simper

Rui Amaro