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Shipping.

High Water. To-morrow. Heads. | Pt. Chalmers. I Dunedin, 10.26 pma, I 11.06 p.m. | 11.51 p.m. At the Heads. Amateur, barque, from Newcastle. Port Chalmers. ARRIVED. October 26.—Shag, s.s., 31 tons, Wing, from Shag Point. October 27.—Panola, three-masted schooner, 597 tons, Lunt, from New York, June 20. Passenger; Mr Wurts. SAILED. October 27.—Defiance, ketch, 25 tons, Burke, for Knkanui. Franklin Belle, ketch, 38 tons, Forman, for Moeraki. October 28.—Grace, ketch, 16 tons, Dixon, for Waikonaiti. Prince Eupert, ketch, 60 tons, Bushel, for Catlin’s Elver. Waitaki, s.s., 228 tons, Edie, for Oamarn. Maori, s.s., 118 tons, Malcolm, for West Coast Ports, vfa the Bluff. The ship Timaru commenced to discharge her cargo at the railway pier this morning. The barque Amateur, from Newcastle, was signailed at the Heads this morning. The s.s. Wellington steamed to Dunedin this forenoon. The barque Frederick Bassell was removed from the stream to the railway pier this forenoon. The Wakatipn is expected to arrive at Port Chalmers to-morrow morning. She comes direct from Wellington, which port she left at 4 p.m. yesterday. After discharging cargo she will be taken into the Graving Dock to bo cleaned and her bottom repainted. ARRIVAL OF THE PANOLA PROM NEW YORK. The three-masted schooner Panola, with a full cargo of 950 tons, part of which is for this port and the remainder for Wellington, arrived off the Heads this morning, and was cowed up to her anchorage by the Geelong. She left Now York on the 20th June, with a westerly wind, which continned until the 27th; thence light southerly winds and calms until picking up tke.N.E. trades, which proved moderate, on the 9th July in lat. 28 N : they gave out on the 17th in lat. 12 N.; thence until the 28th had light variables; picked up the S.E. trades in lat. 7 N, and crossed the Equator in long. 24 E. on the 80*h. Sighted Trinidad, and lost the trades on the 9ch August, in lat, 18.51 S.; had B. and N.E. winds for several days, and finally they worked round to S.E. by W. until the 21st. Crossed the meridian of Greenwich on the 26th August, in lat. 25, and that of the Cape on the Ist of September, in lat. 39, long. 71; light westerly winds continued until the 9th; thence, until the 15th, had strong S. and S.W. winds; thonce, until the 19th, E. and S.E., which shifted round to the N.N.W.; experienced several heavy gales while running down her easting between the parallels of 43 and 44. On the 25th September she encountered a heavy gale from the eastward with tremenduous sea, during which the ship labored heavily, shipping large quantities of water, and was hove to for a few hours; passed the meridian of i the Leu win on the 4th mat., thence light variable winds were experienced until making the Snares; on the 21st had calms and light airs along the ceast to arrival.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD18761027.2.21

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Evening Star, Issue 4265, 27 October 1876, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
492

Shipping. Evening Star, Issue 4265, 27 October 1876, Page 3

Shipping. Evening Star, Issue 4265, 27 October 1876, Page 3

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