Weather has been so good recently I took time out to stroll
around the boatyard and was pleasantly
surprised to note that I now seem to
have the shiniest boat around, even though she is cloaked in fine dust from gel
coat sanding and polishing.Anyway here is an interesting boat that I came across. Her owner brought her up on the top of the tide careened and antifouled her.
She’s interesting in that I guess she reflects the passion
(often misplaced or misapplied) that us boating folks seem to develop. For many
of us sailing is only half the story. The other half is about boat ownership –
and not just any old boat. In my case it’s a passion for an old Westerly Nomad
– not the prettiest or fastest of boats, not even the best design that her
architect came up with, but when I’ve finished with her, she’ll certainly turn
heads, even if only because she looks so unusually retro.
In the case of the boat in the picture, it seems that some
guy in Normandy wanted a South Seas trading schooner and, because he couldn’t find
one for sale in France, he decided to commission a naval architect to design
and build one for him. Well into the
build he noticed that the architect had stipulated aluminium masts, this didn’t
fit with the owner’s sense of aesthetics or his wish to have an ‘authentic’
design. He wanted wooden masts but the architect insisted the additional weight
would unbalance the vessel – and so at enormous expense, the owner insisted on
carbon fibre masts sheathed in wood. Wooden masts taper and so the dimensions
of the wood cladding strips had to be drawn, measured and cut using the latest
high-tec computer CAD/CAM equipment. So, she now looks like she has wooden
masts but despite this, everyone who looks at her feels she looks ‘odd’ in some
way – not quite seaworthy. Maybe if the masts had really been wood, the hull
dimensions would have been different. To the best of my knowledge she hasn’t
left the estuary since she was brought here. I might be wrong of course but
that, at least, is the word on the river.
Meanwhile, here is another boat which showed up here
recently. I’m not sure how seaworthy she is either but she looks like a lot of
fun (in sheltered waters). I think our US cousins would describe her as a
‘Shanty Boat’. Plenty of space and accommodation, great for river exploration,
but take a liferaft and don’t lose sight of land!
Seaward
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