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Ice Bird
Painting -Oil on Board
91.5 x 61 cm
The painting depicts David Lewis at the helm
of the steel sloop Ice Bird late morning of 26th January
1973 in latitude 64 degrees 21 minutes south approaching the ice
bergs lining the west coast of Anvers Island on whose southern shore
Palmer Station is situated.
Under a subsiding force eight gale from the
north-east, and having been previously twice dismasted, Ice Bird
is under a jury rig using the boom for the mast with knots tied
in the original staysail to shorten it, and the trysail set.
The perspex dome above the hatch and the rope
system from the tiller into the cabin, enabled the ship to be steered
and navigated primarily from the relative comfort of the cabin minimizing
the time needed to be spent in the sub zero conditions. The steel
plates bolted over all windows meant that there was "... perpetual
gloom below..." Only the frames remain from the storm dodger
and self steering gear.
In his book Ice Bird - The first Single-Handed
Voyage to Antarctica , David provides a description of his first
sighting of this landfall. "Beyond the thirty foot seas,
amongst which the yacht laboured, gaps in the cloud-wrack revealed
icefields sweeping up to vast snow mountains and, nearer, a jagged
snow-streaked rocky pinnacle and a jumble of pallid tabular bergs."
......." By midday winds continued to decline, seas still huge,
if less dangerous ... & sun intermittently visible."
Later in the day as he nears the south-west
corner of Anvers near the end of his first leg, he describes the
magnificent panorama as "sixty miles of ice cap and glacier
topped by serrated summits two miles high.." and states
how "I sat in the cockpit choked with emotion.
David Lewis set sail from Sydney on 19th October
1972 and sailed through the roaring forties and furious fifties
with constant gales, snow storms and freezing temperatures until
some six weeks out from Sydney the Ice Bird capsized and
was dismasted. A temporay jury rig was made up using the spinnaker
pole, but after another capsize a more substantial rig, using the
main boom as a mast, enabled Ice Bird to struggle on to Anvers
Island where repairs were made which subsequently enabled him to
continue his voyage as far as Cape Town.
Specifications and details on Ice Bird.
Designed by Dick Taylor - Sydney. Built 1962
Built of 1/8" steel - hard chine design with 6' fin keel
Ballast: 2.5 tons lead
LOA: 32 feet
Beam: 9ft 6in
Draft 6ft
Sloop rigged with roller reefing
Engine: Dolphin 12 hp petrol
See details on the painting
process.
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