Big Eyed Chicken

  • 21 Jul 2016 21:51
    Reply # 4149233 on 4139447

    Using a crew member to guess at a scale figure, I reckon the Bi-Eyed Chicken in the photo to be about 75 ft. (~23 m)

    Swatow, according to Google Earth, is about 210 miles north-east of Hong Kong.

  • 20 Jul 2016 00:24
    Reply # 4143420 on 4139447

    In Marine Rescue I hear many boat names over the radio but Big Eyed Chicken would definitely get a chuckle or two.:)

  • 19 Jul 2016 22:34
    Reply # 4143286 on 4139447
    Fascinating photographs, Jim.  The photo of the boat sailing, certainly looks as though it was taken in Hong Kong.  Do you notice that she is 'rowtor' sailing: but the guys are hauling on sweeps, not 'yulohing'.

    What really intrigues me in the model, which looks, and I assume is, accurate, is the mizzen mast.  It seems to be held by a large, fore-and aft timber, the stern rail and a large component of faith!

    The caption on one photo of a Big-Eyed Chicken in Setting Sails is captioned: "Big-Eyed Chicken" under full sail off Hong Kong's Shek O."  But, as you say, apparently they originated from near Swatow and a further photo shows one from Swatow.

    But as for a favourite - I wouldn't be able to say: Foochow traders and pole junks, junks from Amoy, the deep sea trawler of Hong Kong, or the extraordinarily-rigged boats of Ningpo - they all make my a bit misty-eyed, in truth.


  • 19 Jul 2016 11:31
    Message # 4139447

    The Chinese junk pictured in this month's Boat of the Month is a so-called "Big Eyed Chicken". It is featured in Derek Maitland's 1981 book, "Setting Sails: A Tribute to the Chinese Junk" As I recall, not having the book in front of me, the author said they hailed from a port other than Hong Kong.

    For me, she is the quintessential Chinese junk, my favorite.

    I have uploaded to my Albums, some pictures of a model of this vessel that shows us better the hull shape  than do the photos one can find on the web.

       " ...there is nothing - absolutely nothing - half so much worth doing as simply messing about in junk-rigged boats" 
                                                               - the Chinese Water Rat

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