“IT’S AN ILL WIND”
STRANDED PORT BOWEN
WANGANUI’S HARVEST
WORK FOR MANY PEOPLE
Undoubtedly it was an ill wind, no matter how lightly it may have been blowing, which brought the Port Bowen ashore north of the entrance .o the Wanganui Harbour, but, like all ill winds, it /has blown somebody some good. Many hands are employed in the task of salvaging the vessel. To rebuild it would cost the owners of the ship at least a quarter of a million, so if sihe can- be salvaged at half that it wiil be money well spent, says the Wanganui Chronicle. There is a big demand for ocean-going freighters for world l trade and she can ill be spared. Her cargo is exceptionally valuable, the meat alone being worth more than £30,000. Saving that is well worth while.
Nearly all the money involved in the cost of salvaging cargo and the vessel itself is being spent in Wanganui. Waterside workers have drawn good pay so far arid more money still will circulate as the result of expenditure on labour.
Building a two-way staging on which to run motor lorries to the ship's side will not be done by a mere flick of a single pound note. It will cost money, and a Patea- contractor and his employees will benefit. Cost of the Tugs
Four tugs were in action when the Port (Bowen first went ashore, and as the cost of the Terawhiti to the stranded 1 Indrabarah, in 1913, amounted' to £l2O a d ! ay, £2OO a day for each of the four at Wanganui would probably be a modest estimate. The carting of frozen meat to Imlay is being done by a contractor, and a Wanganui stevedore firm has charge of the 'unloading operations: Normally, the task of that) firm would) have been the loading of a quantity of cargo into the holds of the ship, but the ill wind has resulted in the unloading of the whole cargo, a much bigger and longer task. Abnormal road and l tramway traffic has been encouragedl by the stranded steamer, there having been visitors from many parts of the North Island to Wanganui. One Waikato family spent a week-end 1 there specially to sc-e the vessel, breaking a journey via the 'Paraparai road to the Wairaiapa. Hawke’s Bay, Wellington, and New Plymouth visitors have been noticed among those who have made a pilgrimage to the beach in search cf all the latest information.
Wanganui pho'ographers, bakers, butchers, greengrocers, restaurants, and hotels have all had some direct benefit from the stricken -shio.
“Jealous Wellington”
“But how jealous Wellington is,” a Wanganui man remarked facetiously. "Many Wellington citizens have been coming to Wanganui daily to see that stranded ship. At first the belief was that it would be a nine-days'’ wonder, here and then gone, but since the ship is still ashore Wellington looked for the proverbial red herring to draw across the scent. And what happened? Wellington landed a whale. But what care we for that? The longer the whale stays on Wellington's) beach) the more people will leave Wellington to come to Wanganui to see the Port Bowen.”
So even the ill wind that caused a whale to be washed ashore at Lyall Bay blew Wanganui some good.
Permanent link to this item
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Bibliographic details
Gisborne Herald, Volume LXVI, Issue 20016, 15 August 1939, Page 2
Word Count
546“IT’S AN ILL WIND” Gisborne Herald, Volume LXVI, Issue 20016, 15 August 1939, Page 2
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