Nat Thomas and the boys from the 'Havannah' sail along the estuary on a training cruise. When the boat is damaged they put it in to Pembroke Dock for repairs. Nat and the boys stay in the army fort on the island, where they see lights one night.
Description
Nat is once more at the centre of an adventure. The older boys from the industrial ship, The Havannah, set sail for Pembrokeshire but their boat is damaged in a storm. Camping out on a military fort on craggy Thorne Island while the boat is being repaired, Nat and his friends hope to enjoy themselves, but watching out for smugglers turns out to be a serious business.
Round Britain by Sea
Round the Coasts of Britain in Children's Books
Area 1 Tyne to Humber
Area 2 Humber to the Wash
Area 3 Wash to the Thames + Broads
Area 4 Thames to Dover
Area 5 Kent, East Sussex,West Sussex
Area 6 Hampshire,Dorset,West Sussex
Area 7 Devon and Cornwall to Landsend and Scilly
Area 8 Landsend to Bristol
Area 9 Bristol to Llandudno
Area X 10 From Llandudno to Liverpool
Area X 11 Liverpool to Carlisle + Isle of Man
Area X 12 From Carlisle to Glasgow
Area X 13 Glasgow to Ullapool Western Isles
Area X 14 Ullapool to the Forth + Orkneys + Shetlands
Area X 15 Forth to the Tweed
Area X 16 Tweed to the Tyne
Area 2 Humber to the Wash
Area 3 Wash to the Thames + Broads
Area 4 Thames to Dover
Area 5 Kent, East Sussex,West Sussex
Area 6 Hampshire,Dorset,West Sussex
Area 7 Devon and Cornwall to Landsend and Scilly
Area 8 Landsend to Bristol
Area 9 Bristol to Llandudno
Area X 10 From Llandudno to Liverpool
Area X 11 Liverpool to Carlisle + Isle of Man
Area X 12 From Carlisle to Glasgow
Area X 13 Glasgow to Ullapool Western Isles
Area X 14 Ullapool to the Forth + Orkneys + Shetlands
Area X 15 Forth to the Tweed
Area X 16 Tweed to the Tyne
Wednesday, 12 January 2011
Tuesday, 11 January 2011
Thames River
Dauntless Takes Recruits
This is the fourth book in a series of seven adventures. It was first
published in 1950.
The Dauntless boys, lucky owners of a trim little sailing ship, run
into a group of Poplar boys on none too friendly terms. But they soon
discover that these London boys are only trying to express their
resentment at being warned off the river by the unfriendly bargemen.
The Dauntless boys' answer to this problem is to invite Nicky and his
friends aboard for a trip down towards the Thames estuary; and all is
set fair until they run into fog. The Dauntless sits at anchor,
comparatively safe, nut one of the barges which is risking the fog
falls foul of a wreck and the bargeman's family take refuge on the
Dauntless. It is then that David finds that his hospitality has
precipitated an unpleasant dramatic situation from which they are all
extracted only by his tact and good seamanship.
'Dauntless and the Poplar Pirates'
Dauntless and the Poplar Pirates
"Look out, David!" Alex cried warningly. "They are throwing stones at
us." David ducked, then raised himself cautiously. There was a
ringing sound and a yell of triumph.
"Got it!" a voice shouted jubilantly.
"I will get it as well," another voice cried and a stone hit the
Dauntless's mainmast. David saw the attackers as a row of faces
showing over the edge of the bridge balustrade and arms upraised to
throw more stones.
The crew of the Dauntless, David, Bob, Alex and Tim , have sailed
their boat up the Thames and moored her in Bow Creek and they are not
at all pleased at this reception. But they discover the "Poplar
Pirates", as these local lads call themselves, are not really
vicious, just showing their resentment at being warned off the river
boats by the local bargees. The Pirates are all desperately keen on
boats, so David and his friends decide to offer them a trip in the
Dauntless. There is fog in the river and they rescue the
unfriendliest of the bargees when his Thames sailing barge gets
wrecked on a sandbank. The bargee, his wife and granddaughter Jenny
take refuge on the Dauntless, but the Pirates decide to salvage the
barge so they can have a boat of their own.
David is worried about the barge family whose home it is, and the
rest of the story tells of the exciting salvage of the barge and how
finally David extracts them all from a dramatic situation by his tact
and good seamanship.
Another in the series of exciting books about the Dauntless, with the
usual ingredients of a thrilling story and all the fun of sailing as
well as the interest of the details of life on a working sailing
barge in the late 1940-s.
This is the fourth book in a series of seven adventures. It was first
published in 1950.
The Dauntless boys, lucky owners of a trim little sailing ship, run
into a group of Poplar boys on none too friendly terms. But they soon
discover that these London boys are only trying to express their
resentment at being warned off the river by the unfriendly bargemen.
The Dauntless boys' answer to this problem is to invite Nicky and his
friends aboard for a trip down towards the Thames estuary; and all is
set fair until they run into fog. The Dauntless sits at anchor,
comparatively safe, nut one of the barges which is risking the fog
falls foul of a wreck and the bargeman's family take refuge on the
Dauntless. It is then that David finds that his hospitality has
precipitated an unpleasant dramatic situation from which they are all
extracted only by his tact and good seamanship.
'Dauntless and the Poplar Pirates'
Dauntless and the Poplar Pirates
"Look out, David!" Alex cried warningly. "They are throwing stones at
us." David ducked, then raised himself cautiously. There was a
ringing sound and a yell of triumph.
"Got it!" a voice shouted jubilantly.
"I will get it as well," another voice cried and a stone hit the
Dauntless's mainmast. David saw the attackers as a row of faces
showing over the edge of the bridge balustrade and arms upraised to
throw more stones.
The crew of the Dauntless, David, Bob, Alex and Tim , have sailed
their boat up the Thames and moored her in Bow Creek and they are not
at all pleased at this reception. But they discover the "Poplar
Pirates", as these local lads call themselves, are not really
vicious, just showing their resentment at being warned off the river
boats by the local bargees. The Pirates are all desperately keen on
boats, so David and his friends decide to offer them a trip in the
Dauntless. There is fog in the river and they rescue the
unfriendliest of the bargees when his Thames sailing barge gets
wrecked on a sandbank. The bargee, his wife and granddaughter Jenny
take refuge on the Dauntless, but the Pirates decide to salvage the
barge so they can have a boat of their own.
David is worried about the barge family whose home it is, and the
rest of the story tells of the exciting salvage of the barge and how
finally David extracts them all from a dramatic situation by his tact
and good seamanship.
Another in the series of exciting books about the Dauntless, with the
usual ingredients of a thrilling story and all the fun of sailing as
well as the interest of the details of life on a working sailing
barge in the late 1940-s.
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