a A plug for Yachting World

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You ask a simple question about an article in a magazine and ther Rotweillers on this forum just dodge the original question and get their coats ruffled.

So, quite plainly I will give my personal opinion of this month's Yachting World - to which , incidentally I was persuaded (by gifts of bright shiney objects) to subscribe for a minimum of three months. I have subscribed to YM on and offfor at least fifteen years (& read it for nearly 40).

In this month's YW there is a superb article on "Athena".

There is also a comparison test, well written with superb photographs on probably the three most drooled after "must have - realistically" quality yachts around. Namely, Najad 380, Malö 36 and Hallberg-Rassy 37

Also there's:- (& yes I have cut and pasted from their website - a darn sight easier)

Diary of a Yachtmistress
We follow our guinea pig through the last stages of her Fast-Track course up to the Yachtmaster exam


Mongoose
The Caribbean is always called ‘Paradise’, but would you want to share Paradise with a boat called Nobar Toofar, or We B Miss B Haven?


Letters to the Editor
‘Weekend sailors’ in Fastnet ’79, using Visa on the move; Mirabella on a lee shore


Robin Knox-Johnston
It seems the Nanny State is trying to wrap its woolly cardigan around the yachtsman, but will proposed rules designed to make us ‘safer’ actually do so?


Gear
A selection of ideas for Christmas for the serious – or not so serious – yachtsman, from wickedly warm wellies to five-star folding bikes, waterproof phones to a James Bond-style indestructible briefcase


Cruise control
A new generation of sophisticated gyro-stablised autopilots is finding its way into cruising boats, breaking new ground in steering accuracy and reliability. Mike Kopman investigates with the help of some top players in the market


Leading Edge
A new type of rigging, run through with fibre optics, which could measure the stress in your rig


Yachts
Daysailers from America and the Med; latest Volvo 70 design from Frers; a canting-keeled performance 60-footer from Stimson; and a long-legged fast 79-footer from Baltic


US ladies of leisure
At the Annapolis Sailboat Show this year there was a definite trend towards a new type of comfortable daysailer aimed at those in the ‘third age of sailing’


Swedish match – 37-footers tested
Three Swedish yards, three bluewater cruisers almost identical to the untrained eye, all robust, high quality and mahogany-finished. How do you decide between them? Matthew Sheahan attempts to assess the Najad 380, Malö 36 and Hallberg-Rassy 37


Modern Classics: the Dragon
Designed as a small, low-cost weekend cruiser for a design competition in 1927, the Dragon is still going strong as a one-design racing class 75 years on. Sue Pelling sailed a beautifully restored classic version


Here be Dragons
And to celebrate its 75th anniversary, the International Dragon class held a hugely successful regatta in St Tropez, to which 267 boats and a number of royal sailors flocked. Sue Pelling was there too


2004 – a year of record
It was a glorious golden year for the British Olympic team, a disaster of Biblical proportions for the Caribbean in the wake of Ivan, a record-breaking year for the speedsters of the sport and a very busy year for Yachting World’s staff – here it all is in pictures . . .


Jim Clark’s Athena
Move over Mirabella V, Athena is the biggest private sailing yacht in the world and her owner can now be revealed as Jim Clark, the Netscape and Silicon Valley multi-billionaire. David Glenn reports


Cruising
Light dues are shelved for yachtsmen – for the time being; a diabetic plans to be the first to sail round the world; the OCC is 50 years old. Plus: cruising in the Canary Islands after the transatlantic rush


Great seamanship
Fastnet ’79 – of the many dramatic stories of that fateful race, the rescue of RORC training boat Griffin by the French Lorelei is one of the most memorable.

Quite simply, one of the best issues of any mag I've read for many a long time. Most of these topics have been raised by subscribers to this very forum. The pics of Athena make Mirabilious look kind of ordinary.

That's it. Nothing more to say. Off to drive to Corfu next week to lay up the boat

Steve Cronin







<hr width=100% size=1>The above is, like any other post here, only a personal opinion
 
Safe Journey

After your "rotweiller" time hopefully your journey and time there will be enjoyable and uneventfull.



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Nice one Steve. I agree. I used to quite like it anyway and was bought a subscription. YW has definately changed for the better in the last few issues and is now a great read. It seems to be a bit more focused towards middle of the road cruising as well as top end- anyway, it's nice to dream about some of the boats in there and to be fair, many of them are realisitic options for a lot of people who may be going long term cruising or live aboard.

<hr width=100% size=1>Just enjoy it.
 
Re: Blatant advertising, pull this thread Kim! (nm)

Does Steve Cronin have a connection to YW?? I don't know, but don't think he does. If he doesn't then it's a fair enough review.

<hr width=100% size=1>Just enjoy it.
 
Re: Blatant advertising, pull this thread Kim! (nm)

Steve, thanks.

I get the gist of it, can you do the same next month, it'll save me buying a copy?

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Cor blimey Steve, your timing is odd. The last YW post you made (Robin KJ thing) was just as the Nov issue was about to come off the shelves, and your review of the Dec issue is made the first day it hits the newsstands!

I haven't read it yet, so will reply later. It's a shame though that YM (and IPC) journos sometimes seem very out of touch. A few months ago MBM ran a picture of one of Roman Abramovich's boats reporting that its deck-stowed tender was a 60foot+ Sunseeker. All very true, but not news, that tender has been visible on his deck all through the 2003 season.

Likewise the quote you make regarding Athena, "her owner can now be revealed as Jim Clark". Athena has been in build nearly 3 years and Jim Clark has been widely known to be her owner since the keel was laid. Widely known to everyone except YW it seems. Small point i know, but it doesn't fill you with confidence in YW's quality when editor only found out who owns the world's biggest private sailboat (ignoring Maltese Falcon) literally years after everyone else.



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I am glad you are well ahead of my reading of YM this month Steve because I was thinking of bringing up the subject of light dues again. If you read all the WZ's broadcast on Niton Navtex this weekend, a great number of buoy/lights are faulty, or even "missing" which leads me to think of why would anyone pay for such a decrpit service? So it is with relief I see your advance info from YW on the shelving of light dues for yachties for the time being.

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