Mostly I row in PicoMicroYacht, but last Friday I had the
privilege of visiting London Rowing Club at Putney for a rowing eight outing.
The scratch crew consisted of four members of my extended family, with other oarsmen
from London Rowing club completing the crew.
The purpose was to commemorate Morris K ‘Geoff’ Morris, a relative who won the Diamond Challenge Sculls at Henley Royal Regatta nearly 96 years years ago, and whose
photograph was being unveiled in the club house.
The rowing journalist Tim Koch had organised the event
and brought together the Morris family either to row or to watch.
Timothy Koch in the foreground, who coxed the scratch Morris and London Rowing club eight
Morris K Morris won the Diamond Challenge Sculls in sweltering
heat, unexpectedly beating off the competition in only his fourth formal racing
event. He was so tired at the final finish that he fell in and had to be rescued.
Morris K Morris goes on to win the final of the Diamond Challenge event, beating D H L Gollan
The newpaper account of MK Morris being rescued
In our scratch rowing eight, three Morris’s combined with
Jeremy Fisher Smith, whose father was a step son of MK Morris.
The Morris/ London Rowing Club scratch rowing eight. Jeremy Fisher Smith is number two, Robin Morris number three, Ed Morris number four and Sean Morris, the veteran rowing champion, is number seven.
Together, we found
that we could still row roughly in time with sweep oars and sliding seats, with
only one slight crab occurring in an hour’s rowing despite a lively breeze and
messy water. After the row we went to the club for the unveilling of the photograph. The average age of the crew was nearing 70 years old.
The Fisher Smith website, with a photograph of a rowing skiff built by Jeremy; note the diamond shape used in the insignia design, a nod towards MK Morris winning the Diamond Challenge event.
It was my first meeting with Jeremy who is an expert boat
builder, who crafts superb classic wooden boats as well as running a boatyard
near San Francisco. It was a privilege to meet Jeremy and chat about all things
boating, including the fun we both have sea adventuring in small open boats.
It was two days before the Oxford and Cambridge boat race
and we shared the club with the Cambridge men’s boat crew, discretely ignoring
them so as not to interfere with their coaching.
This made it more special when today Cambridge won the boat
race, their number two oarsman being James Cracknell, the oldest person to row in
the boat race by 10 years and following recovery from a serious brain injury.
Cambridge win by a length in a tight race
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