steve yates
Well-Known Member
That last sentence is a bit presumptuous John, sure most folk will never be in those extreme conditions, but then most folk just coastal sail and choose their weather.I agree with most of what you say. An interesting point that I’ve made in the past and consistently gets ignored is the way materials and available fastenings affect boat design.
If your only material is wood then designing and building a boat with a long keel is a bit of a Hobson’s choice. It’s difficult to build it any other way. Centuries of boat and ship building takes us up to the 19C. We then get the beginnings of leisure sailing and the first ocean passages in yachts (initially thought impossible madness!) and some of the myths about long keels are born because GRP and modern glues and the possibility of fin keels hadn’t happened yet. If anyone argues that there are some excellent examples of long keeled boats (like the Twister) I’m not going to argue. However what I’m disappointed in is the OP (wherever he/she’s got to) swallowing the line from some sailing literature that somehow he’s going to be better off with a long keeled boat in some sort of extreme conditions he’s unlikely to ever be in.
We have no idea if the OP will be most folk or if he will be one of the tiny minority to point his bow westward and head off round the planet in a few years time.
And again, while almost every tub and bucket under the sun can cross an ocean, some folk will choose a design that is proven to look after you if you are unlucky enough to encounter strong gales en route.
Anyway, the answer is obvious is it not? If he has read any other threads he should get a vancouver