Pinas (ship)

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A Malay Junk of the Pinas-type.jpg
British postage stamp depicting a Malay pinas, 1955

The pinas, sometimes called "pinis" as well, is one of two types of junk rigged schooners of the east coast of the Malay peninsula, built in the Terengganu area. This kind of vessel was built of Chengal wood by the Malays since the 19th century and roamed the South China Sea and adjacent oceans as one of the two types of traditional sailing vessels the late Malay maritime culture has developed: The bedar and the pinas.

Description

The pinas Sabar, (87' LOD), the last original sailing pinas of Kuala Terengganu, 1980

The pinas is a sailing vessel built exclusively in the kuala (Malay: rivermouth) [1] of the Terengganu river. It was the largest of the ships built in the area, and was only used for deep sea navigation to distant ports. The pinas carried two masts, one in the bow, called "Topan", slightly raked forward, and the main mast, called "Agung" placed a bit forward of the center of the boat. The pinas had a very long bowsprit, slightly bent downwards by the bobstay.

The pinas Sabar in the museum of Kuala Terengganu, 1998

Both masts carried a fully battened lug or "Junk"-sail of typical Chinese design. These sails were not made of cloth but of a matting material called "tikal" that is also used for floor matting and other purposes. Like most junk sails the battens were made of bamboo, usually creating 6 individual panels to the sail. The haliard was attached almost in the middle of the yard, and since the luff of the sail was nearly straight and only about half the length of the markedly convex leach, the yard, when hoisted, was sitting in an angle of about 15° - 20° with the vertical.

The foresail was set on the port side of the Topan and the mainsail on the starboard side of the Agung. A relatively small jib was set on the very long bowsprit. All pinas, even the big ones of 80 feet and above were steered by a tiller with a pully block system easing the strain on a conventional rudder hinged on the stern post. This tiller was operated from within a round cabin (cup) placed on the stern of the boat. This cabin was housing the accommodation of the crew as well. The hold was reserved for the cargo.

These boats sailed best with the wind on the quarter or just aft of the beam. Since the sails are fully battened and may be set almost at a right angle to the boat, they were able to set the Topan sail to windward, sailing wing to wing as soon as the wind was well aft of the beam. Going to windward was not the strong point of those junk rigged vessels, since the junk rig performs not as efficiently to windward as the modern Bermuda sail or the Gaff sail and the hulls of the cargo freighters were well rounded and offered not much lateral resistance.

File:The Naga Pelangi under full canvas.JPG
The Naga Pelangi, a 72' (LOD) pinas built in 2009 on Pulau Duyong, sailing in Langkawi 2010

The clipper type bow of the pinas often carried a carved figurehead called "Gobel" and the transom stern was raked aft and reached pretty high up above the waterline. The pinas had a well defined sheer and was a seaworthy vessel.

The hull of the pinas is influenced by European boats of the early nineteenth century or later, and might well be a copy of the East Indiamen of the middle of the 19th century. The locals say that a Frenchman whose boat was wrecked on the shore of Terengganu in the 19th century settled there and his knowledge is said to have influenced the boatbuilding of the shipwrights.

The word pinas, locally pronounced almost sounds like penis, is obviously derived from the French word pinasse, which describes a small, usually two-masted sailing vessel. The English word pinnace, a man-of-war's tender, is a deduction from the French word.

These boats are also called Perahu (Malay: boat)[2] pinas Golok, to distinguish them from other types built with a straight stem and without a beak (figurehead) the pinas Dogar. Golok, (Malay: cleaver/machet)[3] or sword with a convex cutting edge, refers to the curved, clipper like bow. [4]

These picturesque boats had been plying the South China Sea for centuries hauling cargo or being used in the pirate trade and the last few were still used as sailing freighters in the 1980s.

Building technique

The building of a traditional Malay pinas with the frames inserted later, Terengganu, 2004

The pinas boats of Terengganu are built using the indigenous technique the Malays have developed to build wooden boats. They build without plans, hull first, frames later. The planks are fire bent and joined edge on edge (carvel) using "basok" (wooden dowels) made from Penaga-ironwood (Mesua ferrea). There is no European style caulking hammered into a groove between the planks: Before the new plank is hammered home, a strip of kulit gelam (Malay: paperbarks skin)[5] of the Melaleuca species is placed over the dowels. This 1 – 2 mm layer of a natural material has remarkable sealing properties.[4] It is an ancient and unique building technique, the origins of which might date back to the Proto-Malay migrations that colonised the archipelago thousands of years ago.

History

The tradition of building wooden boats in modern Malaysia reaches far back in time: For overseas trade, for fishing, for piracy, for travelling up the many rivers, for each purpose they developed a special design.[6]

With Malacca becoming the main trading centre for the spices arriving from the Molucca islands (Indonesia) the Malay Peninsula turned into a melting pot of the seafaring, trading civilisations: Indians and Cinese, Arabs and Indonesians, Vietnamese and Thai, Burmese, Europeans and others, they all arrived in their distinctive craft, inspiring the Malay shipbuilding.[6]

The two “Perahu Besar”, (Malay: big boat).[7] of Terengganu, the pinas and the bedar are the result of this cultural interchange. Jib and bowsprit of the two are of western origin, with junks almost never carrying one.[4]

The desire for the ever faster and more manoeuvrable vessel, combined the positive elements and created these junk hybrids.

The boatbuilders of Terengganu were re-“discovered” during the 2nd world war by the Japanese navy who had wooden minesweepers built there by the carpenters and fishing folks.[6]

Since that time the Malays have stopped building sailing boats for their own use, but they kept manufacturing fishtrawlers and ferries, built using the old techniques. Rising timber prices and lack of demand forced one after the other yard out of business, so today this tradition is on the brink of extinction, with very few able craftsmen still practicing this rare old building technique.

After the 2nd world war was over, the boat building of the island of Duyong in Kuala Terengganu was again discovered by traditional boat enthusiasts from western countries. Amongst those boats that were built, there were 8 pinas including one big enough to qualify as a "Perahu Besar", the pinas Naga Pelangi.

The pinas built for westerners are:

Name of boat Builders (shipyard) LOD Year built Original owner Country
Jun Bathera, now June Bathra Abdullah bin Muda 52 ft (16 m) 1976 Christine, Rohani Longuet France
Sri Duyong Abdullah bin Muda 52 ft (16 m) 1976 William Harburn Australia
boat was never named Che Ali bin Ngah 45 ft (14 m) 1982 - project abandoned Claude Besnar France
Bilbo - bedar/pinis mix Che Ali bin Ngah 60 ft (18 m) 1985 Francis Clement Belgium/Italy
June Bathra 2 Abdullah bin Muda 52 ft (16 m) 1976, launched 1986 Larry Smooky USA
Haji Rashid (Seberang Takir) 60 ft (18 m) 1986, launched 2003 Olivier Switzerland
Yok Yor assembled craftsmen of Duyong 60 ft (18 m) 1997 Philippe Poggi France
Naga Pelangi Hasni bin Ali 72 ft (22 m) 2004, launched 2009 Christoph Swoboda Germany

[8]

Gallery

See also

External links

References

  1. http://translate.google.com/#ms/en/kuala
  2. http://translate.google.com/#ms/en/perahu
  3. http://translate.google.com/#ms/en/golok
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Cargo Boats of the East Coast of Malaya, Gibson-Hill, C.A. (1949), JMBRAS 22(3), p106-125
  5. http://translate.google.com/translate_t?&text=kulit%20gelam
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 Keeping the Tradition of Boatbuilding Alive, Keith Ingram, Magazine: Professional Skipper March/April 2007, p70
  7. http://translate.google.com/translate_t?&text=Perahu%20Besar
  8. Boats, Boatbuilding and Fishing in Malaysia, The Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society,, MBRAS 2009, p349/350