Government regulations and maritime notices




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copies and particulars of all the Appointments, Regulations, Acts and proceedings whatever issued, made, or done by him under the delegated powers of the said Act.

  1. If the Provincial Council of any Province shall by resolution declare there dissent from all or any of such Appointments, Regulations, Acts and Proceedings, such Resolution shall be forthwith transmitted by the Speaker to the Governor for his consideration.

FORSTER GORING,
Clerk of Executive Council.

Colonial Secretary\'s Office,
Auckland, 15th September, 1863.

HIS Excellency the Governor, with the advice and consent of the Executive Council, has been pleased to delegate under the "Diseased Cattle Act, 1861," to the Superintendents respectively of the Provinces of

Auckland,
Taranaki,
Wellington,
Hawke\'s Bay,
and Southland,
Nelson,
Marlborough,
Canterbury,
Otago,

the several powers vested in the Governor by the 2nd, 4th, 5th, 7th, 9th, and 10th Sections of the said Act, subject to be rescinded, as in the said Act provided, and subject to the Regulations contained in the Order in Council of even date herewith.

ALFRED DOMETT.

Provincial Secretary\'s Office, Nelson,
October 1, 1863.

HIS Honor the Superintendent directs the publication of the following Extract from the Southland Government Gazette, for general information.

J. C. RICHMOND.
Provincial Secretary.

SAILING DIRECTIONS FOR ENTERING, THE PORT OF INVERCARGILL

Vessels bound for New River should steer for the north end of Point Island, around which, to within a cable\'s length, there is not less than five fathoms. A small patch is said to exist about a quarter a mile off in a westerly direction, but the pilots have not been able to find less than five fathoms on it, hard sand bottom. Outside the Bar, in six fathoms, is moored a spiral-shaped black buoy, bearing from the north end of the Island north half a mile. Steer for this buoy, and as you approach it the leading beacons, painted white, will come on with

each other bearing from you E. ½ S. Keep the beacons, in one, leaving the black buoy on your port hand, which will lead you over the bar in fifteen feet at low water, spring tides. The breadth of the bar is about a good cable\'s length, and inside of it, in four fathoms, is a spiral-shaped white buoy, marking the south side of the channel.

The course from this buoy, to about two cables\' length above the Pilot Station, is E. ½ N., and from thence, to about four cables\' length farther up, E. by N. The channel then gradually bends to the northward until past the Bombay Rock.

The Pilot Station is situated between the leading beacons, and, except in heavy gales, a pilot will board the vessel abreast of the station; but, should the wind and sea be too strong for him to put off, the shipmaster, by attending to the following directions, may be able himself to conduct his vessel to a place of safety:—

The Channel is marked by white buoys on the starboard or south side, and by black buoys on the port or north side. Keep midway between the black and white buoys.

About three cables\' length below the Bombay Rock lies a small rock called the "Guiding Star Rock," with only four feet water over it. A white buoy has been placed on the west side of this rock, in twelve feet water. The Sand Spit, on the opposite side of the Channel, has been advancing into it during the last six months, and at present the breadth of the passage between the Spit and the rock is so narrow, that it would not be prudent for a stranger to run through.

It would be safer to anchor abreast of the second black buoy, above the Pilot Station, where a vessel with good ground tackle could ride in comparative safety.

The leading mark to pass midway between the rock and the Spit is:—Keep the high hummock on the extreme end of Sandy Point a sail\'s breadth open to the eastward of the iron white beacon on Bombay Rock, bearing N. E. ½ N. When abreast of the white buoy, keep off a little, so as not to shave the point of the Spit too close; a N. by E. half E. course will then lead you through between the Bombay Rock and the black buoy on the opposite side of the channel.

On the west side of the Bombay Rock is placed an iron beacon, surmounted by a barrel painted white. The top of the beacon is fifteen feet above low-water mark, and the rock projects from the beacon twenty feet W.N.W into the channel; immediately beyond there is eighteen feet of water. The course from abreast of this beacon to the second white buoy, as you proceed upwards, is N.E. by N., and from thence to the third



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Online Sources for this page:

PDF PDF Nelson Provincial Gazette 1863, No 32





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🌾 Regulations respecting delegation of powers to Superintendents under Diseased Cattle Act, 1861 (continued from previous page)

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