Mel Deighton
Mel belongs to: The Coble and Keelboat Society
Mel was born in Tynemouth. From childhood he has always had an interest in boats and the sea. Mel has a coble, which he has restored. He joined The Coble and Keelboat Society through a friend. It is a good way to find out information and make contacts.
Mel was interviewed by Carl Greenwood on 16 February 2006. The interview took place at Ouseburn Heritage Centre and lasted 20 minutes and 27 seconds.

The attraction of the coble
"It’s part of the history of the North East and they look nicer"
It’s part of the history of the North East and they look nicer- there’s something about a proper boat made of wood with a history to it which a modern plastic cruiser will never have. There’s people using plastic fishing boats now but I can’t imagine people 20 years, 30 years, 50 years time, wanting to preserve them. There’s something about a wooden boat- I think one that is built for a purpose. In the old days, especially, modern boats are a bit ugly, old wooden fishing boats are beautiful to look. They’re built for a certain purpose, there’s nothing wasteful about them and they just have a certain physical attraction. They are beautiful to look at.
Mel has 15 memories in the memorynet:
Mel's memories with a Adventure theme:
Mel's other memories:
The history of his coble
How he got his coble
Rescuing and restoring the coble
First voyage after restoration
The Mouth of the River Festival 2005
The attraction of the coble
Growing up in Tynemouth
Sounds
The Joan Dixon
Invoice for the Joan Dixon
Moving the Joan Dixon
The Joan Dixon being launched
The Joan Dixon under sail
The Bonga
This memory has these themes:
The North East | Traditions

Use this form to add your comment to the memorynet: