Last chapter of Old Boats of the Club, Part 5: the Keelboats
San Juan 21
This boat and the Penguin are the only two classes of boats
that the club had gotten rid of before I joined. I don't remember anyone telling me anything
about this boat. Pretty much the only
thing I know about the San Juan 21 is that it has a swing keel. http://sj21class.org/
Bristol Caravel 22
This is known as a sturdy cruiser with a lot of interior
room. While not a stellar sailor, it
wasn't bad. One thing that made it worse
was when a know it all student who was keelboat fleet captain decided that the
110% lapper which was the biggest sail that came with the boat was too small
and that the boat needed a 150% genoa. A
sail was purchased and a track installed.
Now we had some horsepower. The
problem now was that this was always the last boat to Blake Island if it was
upwind. Years later I, I mean the know
it all, did some math. I had finally
noticed that at best with the genoa the boat tacked through 120 degrees. When sailing with the lapper which sheeted in
between the uppers and lowers to a block on a post at an inboard position the
boat could tack through 90 degrees.
This means if I changed jibs from the genoa to the lapper I could point
30 degrrees higher, but would lose some speed.
I would have to lose more than 30% of my speed or about a knot if I were
doing hull speed under genoa to make it to my destination later with the
lapper. Since sailing that much slower
under the lapper would be a rare circumstance the lapper would have been the
sail of choice for most any upwind work.
By the time I had figured this out the club had bought a used
replacement lapper that no longer sheeted to the post, but instead had to be
sheeted outboard to the genoa track, so
it didn't point very well either.
The blue boat in the middle is Caravel, the boat on the left
is Excalibur.
Caravel with its original lapper.
http://www.bristol22.com/A_Website_Devoted_to_Bristol_22s/A_Website_Devoted_to_Bristol_22s.html
http://www.bristolowners.org/22/bristol22.html
Islander Excalibur 26
This felt like a fast boat, and it handled well. My first cruising adventure was as crew to
rescue the boat from Skyline Marina in Flounder Bay near Anacortes. Keelboat users will trade off in the Islands
to save having to take the boat back to the club. Apparently one user left the boat at the
marina and the next person didn't show up.
The first person made no arrangements with the marina. A week later the marina called us and asked
us about a boat that had been left in the marina with no payment.
I was taught a lesson on this boat. I was sailing along rail almost in the water
and the boat had almost no weather helm.
I commented to the more experienced sailor how well balanced the boat
was with no helm. He looked at me funny
and said look at the tiller. I then
noticed that I had the tiller in my lap, at least 20 degrees from straight. That's when I learned that a well balanced
spade rudder makes it so you don't have to pull hard on the tiller even when
there is massive weather helm causing you to drag the rudder through the water
like a big brake. http://www.toyecorp.com/aquaries.html
Columbia 26
The Columbia 26 was not a well liked boat. Maybe it was the nearly flush deck that made
it look funny, maybe it was that some felt that it was a poor sailor. http://www.columbia-yachts.com/c-26mk2.html
Cal 25
A donation that needed a fair amount of work. Deception, a Catalina 27 was donated before
it was put in service and the Cal 25 was subsequently sold.
Neptune 24
People complained about the transom being weak. I discovered that the transom wasn't attached
to the deck anymore, so when you pressed on it you could move it in to create a
gap at the hull deck join. The
importance of a bridle on the spinnaker pole was demonstrated when the foreguy
connected to an eyestrap in the middle of the pole caused the pole to
snap. The shock to the mast caused the
tang for the lower shroud/spreader base made of pot metal to fail, now that
there was no lower the mast bent. http://cruisingresources.com/Neptune_24
Stone boat
I forget why we took a donation of a 20 foot ferrocement
hull with a wood deck. If you see any
mention of stone boat fleet captain in old club documents, you now know what it
refers to.
The Bristol's name became "Spackle" about the time much of her deck had to be redone due to wet core issues. You can guess by her new name how she looked afterwards. (BTW: this rental KB was 6" shorter and 150 lbs lighter than the Pearson Ensign.)
ReplyDelete'Excal' was purchased by a Commodore as a family boat. Before they hauled it out people in the club insisted it had never had a blister before, so it should be a quick haul-out. It was weeks of grinding and rebuilding hundreds of tiny and dozens of near-through massive blisters before we got her in the water again.
I thought the stone boat was a personal boat, not a club boat.
www.mselectron.net/~papillon/sailing/steff/steff.html