The call of the sea was strong, and soon Villiers was back at sea when the
whaling factory ship
Sir James Clark Ross with five whale chasers in tow came calling in late 1923. His accounts of the trip would eventually be published as
Whaling in the Frozen South. Named for the discoverer of the
Ross Sea in
Antarctica, James Clark Ross, the
Ross was the largest whale factory ship in the world, weighing in at 12,000 tons and heading for the Ross Sea, the last whale stronghold left. Villiers writes:
"We had caught 228, most of them blues, the biggest over 100 feet long. These yielded 17,000 barrels of oil; we had hoped for at least 40,000, with luck 60,000."
Villiers' passage on board the
Herzogin Cecile in 1927 would result in
Falmouth for Orders and introduce him to the de Cloux family, who later became his partners in the barque
Parma.
By Way of Cape Horn came as a result of his harrowing experiences on board the
Grace Harwar in 1929.
The three-masted barque
Grace Harwar was a beautiful ship as the
"wind in her rigging called imperiously as she lay at the pier at Wallaroo". Yet as Villiers stood on the dock, a wharf laborer warned
"Don't ship out in her! She's a killer." The warning would prove true, as Villiers' friend Ronald Walker would be lost by the time
Grace Harwar made
Ireland. More than 40 years old at the time, she had
barnacles and
algae growing along her waterline. "Dirty bottoms make slow ships, and slow ships make hard passages." But Villiers here showed an early desire that would continue throughout his life to document the great sailing ships before it was too late, and
Grace was one of the last working full-riggers. With a small ill-paid crew and no need for
coal, such vessels undercut
steam ships, and maybe 20 ships were still involved in the trade. The ill-fated voyage took 138 days, the
Grace the last of the fleet for the year, but the experiences netted some 6,000 feet of film and many of the great images we have of the period. Delta Productions in Glendale, California has original audio tracks and film footage from the Dwight Long collection, who presented "Last of the Great Seadogs", "
Square Riggers of the Past" Armchair Adventures lecture series, presented at the Dorothy Chandler Pavillion as a motion picture, Los Angeles, California, circa 1976. Delta Productions is in the process of restoration of these sailing films and photos to help preserve the fine art of "Sailing Tall Ships".