GRV James Cook

GRV James Cook was a research vessel of the New Zealand Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries. It was built in 1966 as the New Zealand Sea Products Export Ltd trawler Sea Harvester II and purchased by the New Zealand government in 1969 when the company went bankrupt. The ship was renamed James Cook after Captain James Cook and used as a research vessel until 1991, when it was replaced by the RV Tangaroa. From 1973 to 1991 Andrew Leachman served as first mate and then captain; he went on to captain the Tangaroa for over 20 years.[1]

History
New Zealand
Name: James Cook
Namesake: James Cook
Owner: Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries
Operator: MAF Fisheries
Builder: Akers MV, Trondheim, Norway
Launched: 17 Aug 1966
Acquired: 1969
Out of service: 1991
Homeport: Wellington
Identification: IMO number: 6618366
Fate: Scuttled in December 2007
General characteristics
Displacement: 499 GT
Length: 42.67 m (140.0 ft)

James Cook was purchased by Seafresh New Zealand Ltd for use as a fishing boat but the company ceased trading soon after. The ship was in poor condition and made its last voyage under power from Nelson to Wellington in 1997. It was purchased by James Cook Shipping for use as a charter boat in Fiji.[2] It was stripped of most of its equipment in July 2004.[3] It suffered damage after breaking free from its moorings in October 1998 and again in August 2007. It was also set on fire by vandals several times. The hulk was scuttled in the former explosives dumping ground about 15 nautical miles (28 km) southwest of Cape Palliser on 2 December 2007.[4]

References

  1. "Antarctic captain who played his saxophone to penguins while on daring rescues in the Southern Ocean". Stuff. Retrieved 2019-05-19.
  2. "Nautical News: "James Cook"". New Zealand Marine News. 51 (3): 146. 2003.
  3. "Nautical News: "James Cook"". New Zealand Marine News. 53 (1): 41. 2005.
  4. "Three down, some to go". scoop.co.nz. 22 February 2008.
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