BOAT REVIEW Don Senior 17.2m Wawata

February 2018 Launch Reviews
Words by John Eichelsheim, photos by Chris Cameron.
OUR RATING
4.5 STARS
Performance
Economy
Handling
Value
Build Quality
Specification
MODEL DETAILS
MODEL Don Senior 17.2m
DESIGNER Don Senior
BUILDER Marine Evolutions
CONSTRUCTION timber and composite
SPECIFICATIONS
LOA 17.2M
BEAM 4.9M
DRAFT 1.3M
DISPLACEMENT 20000kg
ENGINE 2 x Caterpillar C9 Accert 575hp
FUEL CAPACITY 2400L
WATER CAPACITY 700L
Maximum Speed 29.5 knots
Cruise Speed 18 knots
DEADRISE 8 degrees
ACCOMMODATION three cabins
HIGHLIGHTS
  • Sleek, easily driven hull
  • Enclosed flybridge
  • Top notch build quality
  • Custom everything
OBSERVATIONS
  • Vast swim platform
  • Euro-inspired interior styling, with a Kiwi twist

With her exceptional craftsmanship and modern interior, Wawata is a good example of how a custom-build can precisely deliver the boat of your dreams.


The Maori name Wawata roughly translates as ‘hopes and dreams,’ says owner Peter Dickinson, the driving force behind this Kiwi-designed and built luxury sportfishing cruiser.
Taking a design by Don Senior and working with Marine Evolutions and Donna Maree Yacht Interior Design, Peter has realised a stunning vision of superyacht quality in a thoroughly Kiwi-style motoryacht.
Marine Evolutions founder, Daniel Dickinson, Peter’s son, used to lead construction at Alloy Yachts. Along with business partner Mark Boyce, Daniel is well-versed in high quality custom boatbuilding: Marine Evolutions’ bread and butter is refurbishing superyachts. Wawata was built alongside several such projects and subjected to the same exacting standards.

Don Senior designed sports fisher, launch, Wawata.
Don Senior designed sports fisher, launch, Wawata.
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Peter grew up with Kiwi-style launches – efficient, easily-driven hulls with layouts that suited the Kiwi boating lifestyle. He wanted to replicate those attributes in his dream boat, turning to Kiwi designer Don Senior for a hull that combined stability, sea-worthiness and planing efficiency, but adding European styling touches to the custom interior, courtesy of regular Marine Evolutions collaborator Donna Maree Yacht Interior Design.
Wawata is built from cold-moulded marine plywood with decks and superstructure laminated from ply-foam-ply or reinforced fibreglass and foam. The vessel’s high-quality interior, featuring ziricote, teak, bleached oak and Kyoto timbers and veneers – Oberflex, Greenlam, Laminex and Formica laminates – and Casamace, Sunbrella, Ultrafabrics and Elitis fabrics, is a credit to the craftsmanship of the builders.
Inside-outside
Peter is a keen fisher and diver who loves cooking and entertaining, especially on the water. Wawata is designed to fulfil these roles without any risk of the messy stuff that attends fishing, diving (and BBQ cooking) finding its way into the boat’s plush interior. The swim platform, where all the messy stuff goes on, is vast, leaving the cockpit for al fresco entertaining.

Don Senior designed sports fisher, launch, Wawata.
Don Senior designed sports fisher, launch, Wawata.

Wawata’s transom area is brilliantly set up with a large aft-facing stainless steel BBQ. Housed in a locker, the hooded, twin-grill BBQ pulls out on rails over the swim platform. It’s part of a comprehensive outside food preparation area that includes a stainless-steel bench, a sink with hot and cold running water, stainless steel BBQ splashback and secure gas bottle storage.
Also accessed from the swim platform is the boat’s dive bottle storage locker, Bauer dive compressor, saltwater washdown, cockpit shower and a couple of massive live wells. Removable cavity transom doors open onto the swim platform either side of the cockpit.
Between them, the platform and cockpit present an almost level expanse of warm teak, complemented by the cockpit table and teak treads on the flybridge stairway. Access to the enclosed flybridge is via traditional cockpit stairs rather than from the saloon. A large freezer makes good use of the space under the stairs and there’s a cockpit day head – no need for fishers to track scales through the saloon to use the head.
Engine room access is excellent, via the cockpit sole and stairs that let down into a separate lazarette. This area contains tankage, a washer-drier and ample storage for large or bulky items. The lazarette is adjacent to the brightly lit machinery space extending under the saloon, separated by a dogged hatch.

Don Senior designed sports fisher, launch, Wawata.
Don Senior designed sports fisher, launch, Wawata.

Wawata is a large, sophisticated motor launch, so there’s plenty going on in the engine room, but the engineering and general layout are superbly executed. There’s not quite standing headroom, but its spacious enough with good access to the engines, machinery and various systems. Foam mat engine room sound deadening, also on the bulkheads, contributes to an exceptionally quiet saloon when the boat’s underway.
Stylish interior
Step through custom Sea Mac tri-fold glass and anodised aluminium doors and you are immediately struck by the saloon’s high-quality feel. Well-chosen fabrics, soft-touch vinyl wall and ceiling linings and subtle LED lighting combine with dark laminate and timber veneer cabinets and contrasting bleached oak panelling, to create a stylish, luxurious space.
The gourmet galley is aft and features expansive Hi Macs countertops, Oberflex cabinetry, Bosch appliances, including a full-sized domestic fridge-freezer, and a pull-out pantry that wouldn’t be out of place in a high-end domestic kitchen. The dishwasher on the end of the counter unloads straight into the crockery drawers, a sensible design.

Don Senior designed sports fisher, launch, Wawata.
Don Senior designed sports fisher, launch, Wawata.

Reflecting Peter’s interest in cooking and entertaining, the galley takes up perhaps half of the saloon’s total floor area. A single step up demarcates the vessel’s carpeted lounging zone, which is comfortable and stylish. The ziricote saloon table has folding leaves to save space and there’s a flat-screen TV on the port bulkhead, along with a high-quality Fusion Link multi-zone stereo system.
Donna Maree has put her stamp on Wawata’s interior in the best possible way. Like Dan, she worked with Alloy Yachts for many years and their connection has remained strong: Donna consults on many of Marine Evolutions’ superyacht projects. With a boat like Wawata the scale is different, says Donna, but the quality remains the same.
Peter’s brief was for a European-style interior but with a Kiwi twist. Using 3D modelling, Donna kept the details simple, to make building easier, choosing a colour palette that’s not overly fussy to reflect the boat’s clean lines and allow the timbers and fabrics to shine through.
This theme continues below where three sumptuous, but simply styled, cabins accommodate owners and guests.
To port a large, double cabin features a good-sized double berth bathed in light shining through an opaque skylight from the saloon. To starboard the second guest cabin features one fore and aft single berth and a second berth lying across the beam, tucked into an alcove at the rear of the cabin.
Guest cabins share a well-appointed wet-room style bathroom with concealed drainage and a classy-looking grey Hi Macs floor.
The owners’ cabin in the bow is the largest and takes full advantage of opening ports and overhead hatches. Storage is provided under the bed, in drawers and in hanging lockers. All three cabins have custom Sleepyhead Sanctuary mattresses and are heated for year-round boating.

Don Senior designed sports fisher, launch, Wawata.
Don Senior designed sports fisher, launch, Wawata.

The master ensuite bathroom, also a wet-room style with concealed drains, Hi-Max floor and counter tops, is filled with fresh air and natural light from the skylight/hatch. A Sea Recovery water maker means there’s never a shortage of fresh water.
Like the rest of the boat’s interior, the master cabin is clean and simple, but also luxurious and beautifully finished. Decorated in charcoals and greys, with a striking fabric-covered bulkhead and copper accents, the cabin is a welcoming space.
Up on the foredeck, a sharp-looking OCTenders GRP tender with a 10hp Mercury outboard is deployed using a Davco crane. There’s ample room left over on the foredeck for enjoying a bit of sunshine in a sheltered anchorage. Anchor duties are carried out by a Muir VCR3000 windlass (with chain counter) and a 40kg Maxclaw stainless steel anchor.
Captain of the ship
Peter was very much in charge sitting at the helm on Wawata’s impressive flybridge. There’s a second helm station in the cockpit for docking duties, which was also useful when transferring various bodies between boats during our review and photo shoot.
The flybridge is fully enclosed but stacking Sea Mac rear doors open it wide to the aft deck, rocket launcher, full-width bench seat and Ocean Signal EPIRB. Sliding side windows provide ventilation and a glass hatch closes off the stairs to keep the weather out.

Don Senior designed sports fisher, launch, Wawata.
Don Senior designed sports fisher, launch, Wawata.

The flybridge mirrors the light greys and bleached oak of the saloon, right down to the silver-grey carpet. There’s ample seating under the windscreen and a pair of black leather-upholstered High-Tech helm seats on gas pedestals behind the helm console. Cube chairs supplement the seating, indoors and outdoors.
Electrically operated OceanAir blinds mean the flybridge can be utilised for sleeping: it provides four six-foot berths extending inside the flybridge ‘eyebrow’.
Unsurprisingly, the helm console is clean and uncluttered, dominated by three 15-inch Raymarine MFDs. Wawata runs Raymarine’s Empire Bus system, including digital switching control, remote access via smartphone with SMS alerts.
Peter has set up one of the MFDs to show engine data from Wawata’s twin 575hp Caterpillar C9 engines, but the three screens can be configured in any number of ways. Typically, Peter uses the second to display navigation data (Navionics bathymetric and Lighthouse raster charts) and/or radar, and the third for sonar and/or feeds from onboard, thermal and reversing cameras. However, any combination, including multiple split-screens, is possible.
“It’s all quite intuitive,” explains Peter, “and the combination of touch screens and scroll wheel makes navigation easy.”
The vessel has a pair of wireless Marinco searchlights on the roof, alongside the radar dome and satellite TV aerial. There’s a smaller Raymarine ES 98 Hybrid Touch unit in the saloon, and a full set of Caterpillar gauges in the flybridge helm console hidden under a lid, for full redundancy.

Don Senior designed sports fisher, launch, Wawata.
Don Senior designed sports fisher, launch, Wawata.

Wawata is steered by joystick at low speeds and autopilot when cruising. The Caterpillars are good for a top speed of close to 30 knots and a relaxed cruise speed of between 18 and 22 knots. There’s a sweet spot at around 2,000rpm; 2,200rpm gives 25 knots. A low idle function is useful for close quarters manoeuvring, as is the bow thruster.
Underway the boat feels very smooth and from the quiet haven of the flybridge it’s easy to underestimate her speed. Stand in the cockpit, however, and the sensation of speed is more immediate, but there’s no mistaking this is a 20-plus tonne vessel with authority and presence on the water.
Moving on
The 17.2m Don Senior launch Wawata is a fine looking flybridge sportfishing cruiser designed, built and equipped for Kiwi-style boating. Exhibiting exceptional craftsmanship and a fresh, modern interior style, she is a good example of how travelling the custom-building path can deliver the boat you want, to a degree impossible to replicate in a production yacht.
Wawata has been a happy collaboration between Peter Dickinson, Marine Evolutions and Donna Maree Yacht Interiors. And while the vessel was exactly what Peter wanted when he began the project, he is now ready for something even more ambitious.
Wawata is listed for sale with 36 Degrees Brokers: info@36degrees.nz. She should prove highly attractive to anyone who appreciates good design, a comprehensive specification and top-quality construction.[/caption]

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Ryck 280

At first glance the boat appears to be a large centre console, although hidden beneath the console and forward area is a sizeable overnight cabin.

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