Last modified: 2008-08-30 by jarig bakker
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Geluk BV (litt. ‘happiness’ – this must be a family name) is a Dutch dredging firm situated at Doetinchem on the Oude IJssel River, between Arnhem and the Dutch-German border. Homepage in English: “Geluk Dredging BV is active in the field of civil engineering and is specialized in dredging, reclamation and screening of dredge material. The company was founded as far back as 1859, when the harbour at Tholen was dredged. Since 1996, Geluk BV has been a member of the Smals group, a Dutch company active on the national market for industrial sand and gravel.” Various kind of dredging boats are operated “enabling (Geluk) to operate on open water and in closed borrow pits, dredging to depths of up to 50 metres”.
Shown on the top of the homepage is the deep suction dredger ‘IJsselmeer’
flying a white flag bearing the company logo, a black stylized initial
‘G’ on a yellow ground. Better seen by clicking the relevant caption
in the ‘Equipment’ section (top of left menu there), the ‘IJsselmeer’ photo.
Other images seem to indicate that the logo has no black border when appearing
on the house flag.
Jan Mertens, 28 Nov 2006
General Shipping & Chartering Services (GENCHART), Rotterdam - white
flag, blue "G".
Source: Brown's Flags and Funnels of Shipping Companies of the World,
compiled by J.L. Loughran, Glasgow, 1995.
Jarig Bakker, 21 Dec 2005
The Dutch firm De Gerlien-van Tiem, a (repairing) shipyard is very much present on the Vlootschouw pages, the company logo shows an orange four-bladed screw dipping into three blue waves, see – for instance – the page about the tanker vessel ‘Alexia’ and a number of photos indeed shows the flag, but never very clear. Luckily there is eBay, as such a flag was offered on the French section in May 2005, item no. 6182516780, on which this image was based.
The flag is white, with horizontal orange edges each of which abuts on twin blue stylized waves; the logo mentioned above is in the centre of the flag, the screw as far left as possible, and accompanied by the words ‘scheepsreparatiebedrijf’ (ship repairing co.) and ‘DE GERLIEN-van TIEM v.o.f’ above the three waves, and the place name DRUTEN under them. The letters are black without serifs.
I think this is an example of a flag where a good motif is somewhat pushed aside in favour of the company name and mention of its activity. (And one of many examples, quite common in inland navigation, of customers flying their supplier’s house flag.)
The firm’s website (in
Dutch) mentions 1967 as the founding year of this family business which
not only supplies screws and repairs various kinds of inland vessels but
- since 1995 - delivers them as well in the sense that so-called casco’s
or hulls, built elsewhere, are completely outfitted. Druten, by the way,
is on the river
Waal (as the Rhine is called once it has crossed the German-Dutch border),
not far from Nijmegen.
Jan Mertens, 13 Jun 2006
Jan Mertens reported this link
with mainly Dutch houseflags. Gevelco - three horizontal stripes of green
and white; on white black "GEVELCO".
Jarig Bakker, 3 Mar 2005
Some background information concerning the Gevelco house flag: Link
to company website, officially
‘Gevelco Logistic Services’ based at Rotterdam:
The group consists of four firms: Gevelco DistriPort (logistics and
distribution centre, warehouses, etc.), Gevelco Project Services (project
cargo, heavy lift centre, industrial packaging, etc.), Gevelco Inland Shipping
and the affiliated German company Gevelco-Schot Schiffahrts- und Speditionsgesellschaft
mbH at Duisburg. Incidentally, the name derives from the Van der
Gevel family, still at the helm.
As concerns inland navigation, “Gevelco controls an extensive fleet of approx 60 charter barges which sail all West-European rivers, with the emphasis on the German Canals”. (Some essential info is still missing: when was the company founded, for instance?)
For an example of the house flag as we know it, see this
webpage, photo of ‘Rodort 7’ flying the flag; there is a drawing as
well. A horizontally divided green-white-green flag (Rotterdam
indeed!) bears the (shortened) company name in black upper case letters:
‘GEVELCO’.
‘Binnenvaart’ gives a longer name; ungarbled, it reads ‘Van der Gevel
& Co. Scheepvaart Onderneming (i.e. shipping company) NV’.
A modern
version waved from the top of the Kilamanjaro, held by a sturdy skipper,
Dick Oosse. Now the name reads ‘Gevelco’ in a modern font, showing extract
of photo. I suppose we should call this not a variant, but rather
a touched-up or modernized version.
Jan Mertens, 26 Jun 2006
Yesterday I spotted a Guyana-type flag in the Oude Houthaven in Amsterdam: fly is orange, a blue chevron reaching from hoist to fly, and a white hoist triangle charged with a blue serifed "G".
Jan Mertens was pretty sure it was "Gomatrans", a (small) company based in Krimpen aan de IJssel. Homepage: Gomatrans = Goudriaan Maritiem Transport. Its main (only?) asset is the "Concordia" - but the name "Goudriaan" is well known, e.g. Van Nievelt, Goudriaan.
The Vlootschouw-site
shows the "Concordia" with the houseflag clearly visible.
Jarig Bakker, 29 Jun 2007
Jan Mertens reported this link
with mainly Dutch houseflags. Gruno, Groningen - green flag, white diamond
charged with green "G". - Green and white are the colors of Groningen city.
Jarig Bakker, 3 Mar 2005