Skip to main content
MARIS at Lord Howe Island in 2013
Maris
MARIS at Lord Howe Island in 2013
MARIS at Lord Howe Island in 2013
Private Collection

Maris

Vessel numberHV000233
Sail NumberCYC 6
Sail Number780
Designer (1921 - 1995)
Date1958
DimensionsVessel Dimensions: 11.12 m x 7.53 m x 2.9 m x 1.43 m (36.5 ft x 24.7 ft x 9.5 ft x 4.7 ft)
DescriptionMARIS was laid down in Jock Muir's Battery Point yard in Hobart in 1958, and was the first of the Tasman Seabird class yachts to begin construction. It became the second to be launched after sister ship CHERANA, but was the first to go sailing.

MARIS has a splined Huon pine hull, Tasmanian oak keelson, spotted gum frames, oregon spars. Many of the fittings Payne drew for this design were custom made items. It was the first splined hull built by Muirs. The Tasman Seabird designs are classics of the 1950s and 60s in styling and functional layout. Around a dozen are thought to have been built. They were designed by Payne to be sea-kindly, robust ocean racing craft with a number of features in the design giving them a favourable RORC (Royal Ocean Racing Club) rating.

First owner, Jack Earl, equally well known as a marine artist and yachtsman had sailed his previous yacht the double-ended ketch KATHLEEN GILLETT in the first Sydney to Hobart race, and then undertaken a circumnavigation of the world.

Jack initially approached Payne with sketches of a double-ender similar to KATHLEEN for ocean racing and cruising. Payne showed him the plans he was preparing for the sloop-rigged Tasman Seabird and was able to convince Earl that this would be suitable. Earl had one condition; he wanted a two masted rig, and after MARIS was launched it was fitted with a mizzen mast and rigged as a yawl. Earl also instructed the builder to include a rack and pin arrangement to secure the tiller at different angles, while balancing the boat with the set and trim of the sails, a feature he had used with success on KATHLEEN.

Earl competed in two Sydney to Hobart races in MARIS, and sailed it extensively around the Pacific to Canada and the USA, often with his family. In 1971 Jack decided it was time for a smaller boat and sold the yacht to Ian Kiernan.

Kiernan continued to cruise MARIS around the Pacific Ocean, competed in four Sydney to Hobart races, including the devastating 1998 event, several Lord Howe Island races and the single-handed Trans-Tasman race in 1978. In that event he won Division 1, sailing through cyclone 'Hal' which sank three other craft. Kiernan was unlucky to experience an accident in MARIS when it went ashore on the mid-north coast of NSW. It was repaired by Cec Quilkey and remains a fine example of the Tasman Seabird class.

MARIS still leads an active life, owned by a syndicate on Sydney Harbour. In late 2007 it was again at Lord Howe Island, joining in the traditional November yachtsman's barbeque, while in 2008 it was taking part in some of the classic ocean races on the eastern seaboard, winning the Lord Howe island race on IRC, a formidable achievement against modern yachts.
SignificanceMARIS is a timber racing yacht built in Tasmania. MARIS was the first of the well-regarded Tasman Seabird Class yachts, a classic design by accomplished naval architect Alan Payne. MARIS was commissioned in 1958 for artist and sailor Jack Earl, and also achieved recognition with its subsequent owner the late Ian Kiernan, well known environmental campaigner and successful solo sailor.
Veteren yachtsman Peter Mounsey aboard SMOKY CAPE at the AWBF 2017
Cec Quilkey
1973
CHERANA in 2010
Trevor Gowland
1959
KATHLEEN GILLETT racing in Gaffer's Day 2004 on Sydney Harbour.
Colin Archer
1939
Danu
Alan Payne
1962
WESTWARD in 1948
Jock Muir
1947
QUESTING on its trial sail after being restored by Sydney Wooden Boats in 2015/16
Andrew Riddell
1949
MALVEENA on the slips, date unknown
RC Masters Pty Ltd
1966
KALEENA in 2005 at its mooring, and now used as a family cruising yacht.
Alan Payne
1958
STELLA  MARIS on display
Ike Innes
1922
ANITRA V on Sydney Harbour
Lars Halvorsen Sons Pty Ltd
1956
LARAPINTA at sea
William Gordon
1945
BALANDRA under restoration in 2017
Jock Muir
1966