tatali0n
Well-Known Member
I reckon a good reliable engine that can push the boat comfortably along when the wind fails is probably a bigger factor than the configuration of the keel. And I hate motoring.
Given the choice, I'd have probably gone for a fin for whatever small margin of performance that might have given us over the bilge keel of our Griffon. But Dad, who to be fair was the one buying the boat, over-ruled me.
I think his original reasons were because of all the green and yellow you see on the charts around here. He had it in his then still "Bristol Channel innocent" mind that if you got caught on a sandbank you were better off doing it in a boat that would stay stood up. I don't know that this was necessarily sound logic; the trick around here is to definitely NOT get caught on any rogue sandbanks. The way that tide comes in most days, taking it stood up or lying down probably doesn't make much difference.
In practice, I've not hit a sandbank yet. Any performance deficit is probably as much the fault of an 80's family cruising hull and blown sails as it is the fault of the keels.
However, the shoal draft has been a real advantage at times. And it is an absolute, unmitigated charm being able to nudge into Ilfracombe's outer harbour, pick up a mooring and just step off the boat onto hard sand once the tide has run out. Although I think I've now reassured Dad that I can keep us off the accidental sandbanks, he'd still insist on sticking with bilge keels for the sake of Ilfracombe alone.
It does strike me that in three years of bobbing around the general area, Ilfracombe and Porlock are the only places we've actually dried out onto our keels. Everywhere else we've so far remained afloat.
We're not adverse to starting the engine to make the tide, and as a result have generally only ever missed it intentionally when I've persuaded Dad to let me carry on sailing regardless. But on the odd occasion we've ended up sat outside Porlock or Ifracombe having arrived on the ebb from up channel, it's never been a particularly long wait for enough water to flood back so we can get in.
Given the choice, I'd have probably gone for a fin for whatever small margin of performance that might have given us over the bilge keel of our Griffon. But Dad, who to be fair was the one buying the boat, over-ruled me.
I think his original reasons were because of all the green and yellow you see on the charts around here. He had it in his then still "Bristol Channel innocent" mind that if you got caught on a sandbank you were better off doing it in a boat that would stay stood up. I don't know that this was necessarily sound logic; the trick around here is to definitely NOT get caught on any rogue sandbanks. The way that tide comes in most days, taking it stood up or lying down probably doesn't make much difference.
In practice, I've not hit a sandbank yet. Any performance deficit is probably as much the fault of an 80's family cruising hull and blown sails as it is the fault of the keels.
However, the shoal draft has been a real advantage at times. And it is an absolute, unmitigated charm being able to nudge into Ilfracombe's outer harbour, pick up a mooring and just step off the boat onto hard sand once the tide has run out. Although I think I've now reassured Dad that I can keep us off the accidental sandbanks, he'd still insist on sticking with bilge keels for the sake of Ilfracombe alone.
It does strike me that in three years of bobbing around the general area, Ilfracombe and Porlock are the only places we've actually dried out onto our keels. Everywhere else we've so far remained afloat.
We're not adverse to starting the engine to make the tide, and as a result have generally only ever missed it intentionally when I've persuaded Dad to let me carry on sailing regardless. But on the odd occasion we've ended up sat outside Porlock or Ifracombe having arrived on the ebb from up channel, it's never been a particularly long wait for enough water to flood back so we can get in.
