Interesting Interlude
by
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left P&O and joined a small trading company Burns Philp, transporting goods for their trading stores and loading copra and cocoa for the return voyage to
A number of the ports were anchorages. To service these the ships carried motorboats and surfboats. Often in order to cater for the heavier cargo items it was necessary to build rafts of the surfboats.
One voyage the ship was delayed at Lae as the wharves at the ports of Lae and Madang were occupied. On that occasion I had the chance to visit and photograph the gold mining operations at Bulolo. At this location there was a bucket dredging operation undertaken by a dredger weighing 2,500 tons that had been air freighted from a location close to Lae by the Junkers G31 aircraft in 1930.
Aside from the seafaring side of my background, there was the life experienced by my wife to be. She was resident on the small
Upon returning to
After leaving Norfolk Island the vessel called to
Leaving Kieta the ship loaded logs at Allardyce. Leaving here the ship rode out a cyclone before returning to
About the Author
John Vint was born in Bombay India and educated in India and at Brighton College, before pre-sea training on HMS Worcester. He joined P&O as an apprentice and served on cargo and passenger ships around the world, leaving to live in Australia after passing his Master’s Certificate. Here he joined Burns Philp trading around Papua New Guinea and the Solomon, New Hebrides (Vanuatu) and Norfolk Islands. On leaving the sea, he was a Pilot/Wharf Manager in Western Australia before returning to UK in 1973. Posts as Marine Superintendent in Iran and New York followed and then he was employed as a Marine Surveyor/Consultant by a London company initially in Hong Kong, later London, before setting up his own business travelling worldwide. Now retired he lives in Sussex