Episode 16

May 09, 2024

00:16:48

16 The Airship Golden Hind Chapter 16 THE OBSERVATION BASKET

16 The Airship Golden Hind Chapter 16 THE OBSERVATION BASKET
Percy F. Westerman Visual Audio Books from Photations
16 The Airship Golden Hind Chapter 16 THE OBSERVATION BASKET

May 09 2024 | 00:16:48

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Closed Caption Read along of The Airship Golden Hind by Percy F. Westerman

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Episode Transcript

1 0:00:00,000 --> 0:00:05,000 Greetings This is a reading of the book The Airship Golden Hind 2 0:00:05,000 --> 0:00:18,000 Some of the language in this book has not aged well and is indeed no longer politicly correct Take caution when listening to this visual audio-book 3 0:00:18,000 --> 0:00:22,000 Footage and photography are provided by Photations 4 0:00:22,000 --> 0:00:35,000 At Photations we believe that the world would be a better place if people spent their time being creative Join us in practicing art so we all can be The Master of Art 5 0:00:35,000 --> 0:00:48,000 Fine Art Prints available at our store W W W dot Photation Store Dot com Keep our Artwork alive by making a donation at Photations Donations Dot com 6 0:00:48,000 --> 0:00:51,000 The Airship Golden Hind By 7 0:00:51,000 --> 0:00:53,000 Percy F Westerman 8 0:00:53,000 --> 0:00:57,000 CHAPTER 16 THE. OBSERVATION BASKET 9 0:00:57,000 --> 0:01:11,000 While the 'Golden Hind' was struggling towards the shores of Western Australia, Count Karl von Sinzig in Z64 was flying almost due south from Samarang, in the island of Java 10 0:01:11,000 --> 0:01:26,000 He, too, had had a taste of the cyclone, which had extended over the whole of the Arabian Sea and had been severely felt as far north as the Persian-Turkestan frontier 11 0:01:26,000 --> 0:01:36,000 Practically helpless in the grip of the furious blast, Z64 had been driven far off her course 12 0:01:36,000 --> 0:01:58,000 Passing high over the mountainous districts of Thibet, the German airship, unseen and unheard, finally encountered a stiff northerly wind when approaching the China Sea in the neighbourhood of Hanoi Already the start von Sinzig had obtained over his British rival was wiped out 13 0:01:58,000 --> 0:02:18,000 The long detour he had been obliged to take represented twelve hours’ flight under normal conditions, and since he knew of Fosterdyke’s progress by the expedient of picking up the 'Golden Hind’s' wireless message, he realised that the latter had made good her belated departure 14 0:02:18,000 --> 0:02:50,000 At Samarang, Z64 took in fresh hydrogen and petrol Von Sinzig reported his arrival to the representatives of the International Air Board, and stated his intention of proceeding via New Guinea, New Caledonia, and Norfolk Island to New Zealand, where he would be able to fulfil one of the conditions that required the competitors to touch at a spot within one degree of the nadir to their starting-point 15 0:02:50,000 --> 0:02:56,000 But von Sinzig had no intention of carrying out his declared programme 16 0:02:56,000 --> 0:03:29,000 Directly he was well clear of Samarang, he shaped a course due south in order to pick up the prevailing westerly wind south of Australia on which Fosterdyke counted also A stiff northerly wind over the Sunda Sea helped the German to attain his object, and on the evening that the 'Golden Hind' drifted to south of Fremantle, Z64 was skirting the coast of West Australia, in the neighbourhood of Geographe Bay 17 0:03:29,000 --> 0:03:33,000 Von Sinzig was in a bad state of mind 18 0:03:33,000 --> 0:03:48,000 He knew by means of a code message from Barcelona that one of his agents had made an attempt to delay the 'Golden Hind’s' departure What had actually taken place he knew not 19 0:03:48,000 --> 0:03:59,000 All he did know was the galling fact that the attempt had been unsuccessful, and that by this time his rival was practically level with him 20 0:03:59,000 --> 0:04:12,000 'Hans,' he exclaimed, calling one of his subordinates, formerly an Unter-Leutnant in the German Flying Service and before that a Mercantile Marine officer 21 0:04:12,000 --> 0:04:16,000 Hans Leutter clicked his heels and stood to attention 22 0:04:16,000 --> 0:04:21,000 'You know Fremantle ' enquired the count, brusquely 23 0:04:21,000 --> 0:04:24,000 'Fairly well, mein Herr,' was the reply 24 0:04:24,000 --> 0:04:34,000 'I’ve called there perhaps a dozen times in cargo boats The last time was in January, 1914 25 0:04:34,000 --> 0:04:39,000 ' 'There was, of course, no aerodrome there then 26 0:04:39,000 --> 0:04:41,000 ' 'Assuredly no, sir 27 0:04:41,000 --> 0:04:51,000 ' 'According to my information it is on the right bank of the Swan River and a couple of kilometres to the east of the town 28 0:04:51,000 --> 0:04:54,000 It ought to be easily found ' 29 0:04:54,000 --> 0:04:59,000 Hans Leutter agreed that to locate it ought to be a simple matter 30 0:04:59,000 --> 0:05:10,000 'Then we’ll do so, little Hans,' exclaimed the count, grimly 'We might even make the Englishman Fosterdyke a little present anonymously, of course 31 0:05:10,000 --> 0:05:13,000 ' The ex-Unter-Leutnant grinned 32 0:05:13,000 --> 0:05:18,000 'You wish me to take the Albatross for an airing then 33 0:05:18,000 --> 0:05:19,000 ' he said 34 0:05:19,000 --> 0:05:27,000 'Ach, no,' replied von Sinzig 'If our Albatross were invisible and noiseless, it would be different 35 0:05:27,000 --> 0:05:35,000 We’ll use the observation basket Overhaul the mechanism carefully, because you, little Hans, are going to use it 36 0:05:35,000 --> 0:05:39,000 ' Hans Leutter saluted and went for’ard 37 0:05:39,000 --> 0:06:04,000 He was not at all keen on being told off for observation work, but his innate sense of discipline made him accept the duty without outward signs of resentment Somehow he didn’t relish the idea of being lowered from the Zeppelin and allowed to dangle at the end of two or three thousand feet of fine wire 38 0:06:04,000 --> 0:06:12,000 Shortly before midnight the look-out on Z64 picked up the harbour and town lights of Fremantle 39 0:06:12,000 --> 0:06:21,000 It was now a fairly calm night At five thousand feet was a stratum of light clouds, sufficient to obscure the starlight 40 0:06:21,000 --> 0:06:27,000 The climatic conditions for von Sinzig’s plans were exactly what he wanted 41 0:06:27,000 --> 0:06:40,000 When the German airship was dead to windward of the town her motors were switched off and she was allowed to drift in and out of the lower edge of the bank of clouds 42 0:06:40,000 --> 0:07:00,000 From her foremost nacelle a circular basket, fitted with a vertical vane to prevent it from turning round and round like a gigantic meat-jack, was hanging In the basket, with a couple of small incendiary bombs for company, was Hans Leutter 43 0:07:00,000 --> 0:07:08,000 In order to keep in touch with the captain of Z64 Hans was provided with a wireless telephone 44 0:07:08,000 --> 0:07:12,000 'All ready,' announced the observer 'Lower away 45 0:07:12,000 --> 0:07:25,000 ' The well-oiled mechanism ran smoothly and noiselessly until a sudden check in the downward journey told Hans that the observation basket had reached the limit of its cable 46 0:07:25,000 --> 0:07:57,000 From where he dangled--nearly two-thirds of a mile below the airship--Z64 was quite invisible It was therefore safe to assume that the good people of Fremantle were likewise not in a position to see the huge gas-bag five thousand feet overhead, while the insignificant observation basket, although only a thousand feet or so up, was too minute to be spotted against the blurred starlight 47 0:07:57,000 --> 0:08:05,000 On the other hand, Hans Leutter could command a fairly comprehensive view of the town beneath him 48 0:08:05,000 --> 0:08:20,000 The tranquil waters of the Swan River enabled him to fix his position, for even on the darkest night a river can readily be seen by an aerial observer The navigation lamps of the aerodrome almost misled him 49 0:08:20,000 --> 0:08:32,000 At first he mistook them for the railway station but when he discovered his mistake he asked himself why the aerial signalling lamps were still being exhibited 50 0:08:32,000 --> 0:08:51,000 According to the latest wireless messages picked up by Z64, the 'Golden Hind' ought by this time to be berthed in the hangar But, perhaps, he argued, the officials in their demonstrations of welcome had forgotten to switch the lights off 51 0:08:51,000 --> 0:08:56,000 'This reminds me of London in 1916,' thought Hans 52 0:08:56,000 --> 0:09:08,000 'London in those good old days when our Zeppelins came and went almost without let or hindrance Now, my beauty, you and I must part 53 0:09:08,000 --> 0:09:13,000 ' He raised the bomb and poised it on the edge of the basket 54 0:09:13,000 --> 0:09:25,000 In his excitement he had completely forgotten his fears at being suspended by a steel rope almost the same gauge as a piano-wire 55 0:09:25,000 --> 0:09:51,000 The incendiary bomb was quite a small affair, but none the less efficacious In order to guard against identification should any of the metal parts be found, the vanes were stamped with the British Government marks, which showed that von Sinzig, with characteristic Teutonic thoroughness, had taken the precaution of covering his tracks 56 0:09:51,000 --> 0:10:04,000 The British Air Ministry and the Australian Commonwealth Government could appraise responsibility later--by that time Z64 would be thousands of miles away 57 0:10:04,000 --> 0:10:28,000 Allowing for the slight breeze, Hans Leutter telephoned for the Zeppelin to steer ten degrees to the nor’ard Slowly Z64 carried out the instructions, and seesawing gently the observation basket moved in a slightly different direction from its previous line of drift until the crucial moment arrived 58 0:10:28,000 --> 0:10:30,000 Hans Leutter released the bomb 59 0:10:30,000 --> 0:10:38,000 For three seconds the observer could follow its downward passage then it vanished into the darkness 60 0:10:38,000 --> 0:10:43,000 Five seconds later the missile hit its objective 61 0:10:43,000 --> 0:10:49,000 There was no need for a second bomb The airship shed was blazing fiercely 62 0:10:49,000 --> 0:10:54,000 The Hun in the basket spoke into the telephone 63 0:10:54,000 --> 0:10:56,000 'Direct hit,' he reported 64 0:10:56,000 --> 0:10:58,000 'Haul me up ' 65 0:10:58,000 --> 0:11:20,000 Z64 had once more stopped her motors and was rising rapidly above the bank of clouds At the same time a motor winch was winding in the cable, and Hans Leutter’s rate of progress as the basket whirred through the air brought back all his fears concerning his hazardous position 66 0:11:20,000 --> 0:11:36,000 What if there were a flaw in the wire It was ex-Government stuff, he recalled--material that might have been left lying in a neglected condition for months before von Sinzig acquired it for its present purpose 67 0:11:36,000 --> 0:11:49,000 And supposing the wire slipped off the drum and got nipped in the cogs of the winch A score of thoughts of a similar nature flashed across the observer’s mind 68 0:11:49,000 --> 0:12:01,000 He broke into a gentle perspiration He trembled violently as a mental vision of himself hurtling through space gripped him in all its hideousness 69 0:12:01,000 --> 0:12:03,000 But the wire held 70 0:12:03,000 --> 0:12:22,000 Hans Leutter was assisted into the nacelle, where he promptly fainted By that time Z64 was several miles away from Fremantle, but a dull red glare on the horizon unmistakably indicated the extent of the conflagration 71 0:12:22,000 --> 0:12:29,000 Throughout the night Z64 flew at an altitude of not less than fifteen thousand feet 72 0:12:29,000 --> 0:12:35,000 Dawn found her far to the south’ard of the Great Australian Bight 73 0:12:35,000 --> 0:12:47,000 Von Sinzig had good cause for keeping out of the beaten steamer tracks nor did he intend to pass within a hundred miles of the southern part of Tasmania 74 0:12:47,000 --> 0:13:00,000 He counted upon arriving at Napier, New Zealand, at daybreak on the day following, and until then he meant to be most careful not to be reported by any vessel 75 0:13:00,000 --> 0:13:08,000 The commander of Z64 had just sat down to breakfast when one of the crew entered his cabin 76 0:13:08,000 --> 0:13:15,000 'Pardon, Herr Offizier,' said the man, apologetically, 'but the observation basket is missing ' 77 0:13:15,000 --> 0:13:18,000 'What do you mean ' demanded von Sinzig 78 0:13:18,000 --> 0:13:25,000 'We secured it after Herr Leutter had finished with it, Herr Kapitan,' explained the man 79 0:13:25,000 --> 0:13:39,000 'I myself saw that the four bottle-screws were turned up tightly Kaspar Graus, who had been told to remove the remaining petrol bomb, came and reported that the basket was no longer there 80 0:13:39,000 --> 0:13:47,000 The metal clips were still attached to the bottle-screws It would appear that these were torn from the basket itself 81 0:13:47,000 --> 0:13:58,000 ' Count Karl von Sinzig left his breakfast untasted and hurried along the catwalk to the gondola from which the observation basket was hung 82 0:13:58,000 --> 0:14:07,000 His informant’s news was only too true Unaccountably the basket had been wrenched from its securing apparatus 83 0:14:07,000 --> 0:14:10,000 'It is of little consequence,' he declared 84 0:14:10,000 --> 0:14:27,000 'We would not have required it again, and, since it will not float, it is at the bottom of the sea by this time Perhaps it is as well, in case we are inspected by inquisitive officials at our next alighting place 85 0:14:27,000 --> 0:14:30,000 ' It was an unlucky day for Z64 86 0:14:30,000 --> 0:14:49,000 About noon two of her motors developed trouble simultaneously Three hours elapsed before the sweating mechanics were able to get the recalcitrant engines in running order again, and during that period the Zeppelin had perforce to slow down considerably 87 0:14:49,000 --> 0:15:26,000 Consequently, it was half an hour after sunrise when Z64 sighted the Three Kings Island to the north-west of Cape Maria van Diemen Here she altered course, so as ostensibly to appear as if she had been flying straight from New Caledonia, and, skirting the west coast of New Zealand, headed for Napier, where, by the consent of the New Zealand Government, von Sinzig was permitted to land and thus carry out one of the conditions of the contest 88 0:15:26,000 --> 0:15:31,000 'We’ll fly inland when we sight Auckland,' decided the count 89 0:15:31,000 --> 0:15:37,000 'No, don’t take her up any higher There is now no need for concealment 90 0:15:37,000 --> 0:15:47,000 Let these New Zealanders see and comment upon the fact that their islands are not beyond reach of a good German airship ' 91 0:15:47,000 --> 0:16:07,000 And so, flaunting her prowess in the rapidly-growing daylight, Z64 approached the town of Auckland The Zeppelin was within ten miles of the place when one of the crew shouted the disconcerting information that there was an airship on the starboard bow, travelling east by north 92 0:16:07,000 --> 0:16:15,000 Rapping out a furious oath, von Sinzig snatched up a pair of binoculars 93 0:16:15,000 --> 0:16:37,000 He had never before set eyes on the 'Golden Hind,' although the British airship had passed almost immediately above him within a few minutes of Z64 leaving her Spanish base, but instinctively he realised that this was his greatest rival, Sir. Reginald Fosterdyke’s creation 94 0:16:37,000 --> 0:16:40,000 'Gott in Himmel ' shouted von Sinzig 95 0:16:40,000 --> 0:16:47,000 'Leutter, you numbskull, you made a hideous mess of things last night Look--the ’Golden Hind’ 96 0:16:47,000 --> 0:16:48,000 '

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