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Mr. Park himself said he was a little confused about the dates of completion of the course. He said that he had however taken children out on the lugger boat, as indeed some of those entries in 1976 and the log book indicate. He told us about the boats he had before and after 1976. He told us that he initially learnt to sail with his father by a teach yourself method. They bought a boat called a GP14 when GP himself was 14 by coincidence. They had the boat for three or so years, sailed it on Coniston and Rowe Island. In 1958 or 1959 Mr. Park told us that his father had acquired a caravan he kept at Coniston, and the boat was kept there with it. After the sale of the GP14, Mr. Park told us that his father acquired another boat at Morecambe, and they sailed it across the bay to Rowe Island, where it was sailed from time to time and kept moored on the mud. It was a power boat, and they sailed up and down the channel and went fishing. He also told us that he crewed for a man called McIntyre in competitive races at Rowe Island. His next boat was a small eight foot pram dinghy which he built for himself at Bluestones in 1970 he said, i.e. about the time the children were arriving. This was a craft, a small type, with a square front rather than a usual rounded bow, and he said he used a trailer to transport that. He used it he said on most of the English lakes. So that would be the period of 1970 to 1974. Perhaps it was therefore that boat and trailer which Mrs. Farmer saw. We do not know perhaps, but it is a possibility. Then he said he bought the 505, the fast racing dinghy from a man who lived at Woking in Surrey. He says he sold that in June of 1976, but we have seen the entry suggesting that in fact it was July. Then he built the Big O. That was 16 foot in length, five foot wide. It was covered and had seats. He also had access to a lugger which was owned by the Cumbria County Council, kept on Windermere, and after the Big O he said he had another dinghy, a Merlin Rocket, which he raced on Coniston. He joined the Coniston sailing club in 1985, between the time when he had sailed on Coniston with his father and had joined the sailing club in 1985. He said he had hardly ever sailed on Coniston. We do have his log book entry, which suggests that he had sailed on Coniston in the earlier period, and it was possible he said he had taken his small self-built craft there and launched it at Mid Thwaite. He said he had taken that boat to Coniston and rode out to Peel Island with the children. It may be of course it is one of those trips that Kay Gardener remembers, when she sailed out to an island, and she could not remember if it was Windermere or Coniston.