  
                 
              The UK’s Whitton Modellers Starlet  fleet              assembling for a start 
This  months column is a kind of `bloggy’ one which some with myopic outlooks may not  enjoy but the truth is that ever since the death of Vic Smeed, and because of  the immense pleasure that his Starlet has given so many including the writer, I  have felt the need to pay plaudits both to the man who was a legend in his own  lifetime and a friend-never-met, and to the little 34” long design that he  created.   
We were in Roy  Lake’s garage cum boatyard in  Sunnynook on Auckland’s North Shore,  just Roy and I, still unable to settle on a name for the Starlet he was  building for m on his workshop bench. We were tossing possible names around  each one getting more ridiculous and often spawning hearty guffaws. 
              “She’s got to have a name Roy –  otherwise I will be forever referring to the boat as `it’ or `the boat’ (I  remember saying) – and it has got to be a good name, none of those names like Woftam the letters of which I remember  being told by the owner of a one metre yacht stood for `Waste of f-ing time and  money’. 
              It was way back somewhere in the mid  nineties, a couple of Saturday mornings before I retired, back in the days of  our Last of the Summer wine model  yacht sailing group of five who enjoyed its sailing on a placid private lake in  the Hobsonville area outside of Auckland. We were slightly more modern versions  of the old jossers of the British Sitcom television series of the same name, Compo Simmonite, Norman Clegg, Foggy Dewhurst and Cyril Blamire and friends. 
                
                Those joyful days – `Compo' Simmonite and friends (and two non-Starlets)
                 
              Photo by `Marina'               
              Roy had kind of got initial interest  going in the Vic Smeed designed Starlet boats in New Zealand and had built one  that is still being sailed by Ancient  Mariner, Dennis Lake who was also one of the Summer Winers and decided after I had joined the group that I  needed a Starlet of my own and that he would build it. He also built several  others, two for himself including a larger in size version and on reflection I  would say that resulted in many Starlets and Starlet-based boats in the Ancient  Mariners. 
              I remember well also, a private Starlet  `race series’ (The Hokus Pokus)  that Roy and I competed in on Onepoto lake,  one that went on for months with races held `when we both felt like it’ on a  deserted Onepoto Auckland lake. All in fun, I recall that Bells & Whistles was well down on her quantity of wins overall  but then I am not a racing man I make that clear, I am a windler who enjoys his  sailing at a relaxed and leisurely pace - if I had wanted to race I would have  bought a racehorse ! 
                
                
              “I think we  might win this one !”  
              
                
                  
                                           Aucklander Bob  Walters' Lengthened cabin Starlet. | 
                     
                      Two Starlets built to plan
in Sydney, Australia by Ian Hunt
  | 
                   
                 
                
                  
                    | Ron    Rule’s gaff-rigged Starlet-based trading boat.  | 
                     
                      Another Starlet build in 
                     Victoria, Australia by Robert Pett | 
                   
                 
               
              When my Starlet, still unnamed was  complete, Roy presented it to me and added “It’s  got all the bells and whistles’ to which I replied “That’s it Roy !   BELLS AND WHISTLES it will be !”   With her tan gaff rig sails of Jeparra cotton she looked resplendent on  the day that we officially launched her at Onepoto, and he had carved out of  balsa and beautifully painted an Ancient Mariner helmsman with the name of  Charlie Breeze which he insisted “even looks like you !”   
              The first  Smeed designed Starlet first appeared in Model Boats in December 1966 which  according to my mathematics makes it 46 years old. Vic designed it principally  as a freesailer but one that was adaptable to radio control. It’s length was  34” and should not be confused with another so-called `Starlet’ 36” in length.  Easy to build (says this geezer who is not skilled at model boatbuilding !) as  a building project the Starlet became extremely popular first in areas of  Britain where Smeed was a trusted journalist and a household name in both model  boats and model aircraft. 
                
              McGarrity’s  one-off giant among Starlets 
              Interesting is that Andy McGarrity in  Britain chose to build a sail-aboard replica 88” in length while my friend Ron  (Innovator) Rule of the Auckland Ancient  Mariners developed an enthusiasm to effect change in the design and the  result was that many Starlets that were not quite true Starlets to the original  plans started to appear. Well, some might argue that Vic’s design was never  stated to be a `one design’. I corresponded with Vic for several years and gave  him a complimentary subscription yearly to my magazine Windling World which he said he always enjoyed and read from cover  to cover. It was he who sent me the photograph of himself  with the original Starlet which he had  retained. 
                
                The man who gave  us the Starlet, Vic Smeed
              with the very  first one which he retained 
              
                
                   
                  Ron Rule’s clear plastic hulled Sea Through   | 
                   
                  Dennis    Lake, Ancient Mariner with Tusitala  | 
                 
               
              
                
                   
                   Cuddling and suck-facing  Starlets! | 
                   
                  One day while    out flyin’   | 
                 
               
             
              
              I own several sailing boats all of which  I have a passion for various reasons, but because of the pleasures I have  derived for so many years, I still tend to sail Bells & Whistles, the only gaff rigged Starlet that I know of ,  week after week with our group. Easy to sail, ultra-responsive perhaps because  of her slightly deeper spade rudder, small enough to transport to and from the  lake in the car, easy to lift and launch and then retrieve (unless `Charlie  Breeze’ getting on like me, loses control and runs her into the far side reeds  !!!  I never do that and I have him to  blame !)  I can honestly say that given  the years that the design has been around, the Starlet in my humble opinion is  ‘the best little model sailboat of the period it has been around in.. 
                
              In  New Zealand (that I am aware of) there are some 50 to 60 Starlets scattered  around, and the Ancient Mariners sailing  and cruising groups tally of members Starlets regularly seen (in March 2011) is  conservatively numbered at thirty-six of those.   Prolific Ron Rule has built so many Starlets and Starlet-based  `Starlets’ that I tend to refer to some of them as `mod squaders’ and anyone  wanting to buy one off him could probably have a choice of maybe half a dozen  all pretty well sound performers. We have a very competitive Starlet schooner  sailing with us built by Lawrie Pittams who owns two other Starlet sloops and  there is a lovely ketch version somewhere in West Auckland.  Another member has two Starlets, one of them  being the marginally smaller `Starbaby’ Starlet put out by Vic in year 2010,  the only one that I have seen.               
                
                The late Vic Smeed – one of the last
photos taken of him 
              December  2016 will bring up 50 years since Vic (who died 4th January 2011)  brought the Starlet into the world and I would like to think that something  special will perhaps then take place to mark the fact that this wonderful  little boat (by then half a century in age) is still with those of us who have  enjoyed owning and sailing it. Maybe someone will build a `Starlet Fifty’ for  no other reason than to mark the occasion, maybe there will be a kind of  special day of sailing. – there are lots of possibilities and ideas. I might  not be around of course and since generally people take so much for granted  while easily forgetting those like designers who made it possible, as well as  both length of span of years and origins, time will tell whether it ever  happens. 
The  Starlet represents an easy to handle, predictable, attractive to look at little  boat designed perhaps as an early intro into low-cost model yachting as a  free-sailer which would also easily adapt into the world of radio control and  the Auckland Ancient Mariners group  each year stage Starlet Day events, indeed the boat forms the backbone of it’s  fleet.               
  
                
              A bakers dozen  Starlets at Onepoto, New Zealand 
              
               
                
                
              A wee period back I ran a  challenge to find the smallest model schooner on Planet Earth which some  followers of this colum, as well as readers of Marine Modelling International  might just remember. 
              I have been asked a few  months ago to run another challenge on an aspect of ship modeling, and a couple  of visits to Auckland, New Zealand dock areas and wharves convinced me that  perhaps those who model ships might like to show off their skills at the aspect  of modeling involving `weathering’ of vessels, perhaps close to being abandoned  by rust, others with their hulls damaged and in need of attention to wooden  areas and so on. It is a challenging skill often applied to model railway  engines, but having looked at an old tug in a stream and almost sinking in the  shallows, it had such a look of having been abandoned that applied to ship  models, sail or powered the effect could make for both appeal as well as  admiration of skill that went into achieving the realistic effect. 
              I got my friend Harry Duncan here in New Zealand to produce for me  that lovely little dory, the Dora Starr for an article in Marine Modelling  International that appeared in my story in the November issue, and  followers of my column here online on Duckworks may possibly remember it there  also. That showed lots of the skills applied by Harry to the small model barely  16” long made out of balsa, various bits of card and pretty well everything  from his odds and ends or bits and bobs box at hardly any cost whatsoever. 
              Every modeller keeps one of  those with items `that might just possibly come in useful one day !’  So those of you up to the challenge in your  Northern hemisphere Winter months, if the idea of creating a used, tired, rusty  and timber scarred sailboat or powered boat, possibly a `tired’ tugboat because  there are classes for both, you could win one of three complimentary year-long  subscriptions to Marine Modelling  International magazine. 
              Model size is limited in each  class (Class A for sailboats and Class B for powered craft) to between 12” and  18” in length and must be display models but be able to sit on the water to be  photographed nice and close to enable the detail on board and the extent of  weathering achieved to be clearly seen by the judges. Modellers without access  to the internet may enter and must submit images ashard copies posted with the  entry form to MMI Weathering Challenge, P.O.Box 4239, Shepton Mallet,   BA4  9AQ 
                Inited Kingdom. 
              There is also a class for  Juniors 16 years or below. 
              Those entering online must  sent hi res digital jpeg photos by email to  weathering2012@comcast.net by the closing date of 30th  September 2012.  No correspondence will  be entered into and the winners and a selection of others will be featured in  the November issue of Marine Modelling  International. (Those on the internet can email for entry details using the  same email.) 
              When entering specify  Modellers  name, which class, length on  deck of model, your mail address. 
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