V1701
Well-Known Member
That's the secret! I think just as many trips get done in 'ordinary' yachts than specialist built boats.
The important thing is a combination of good skills amongst the crew and a realistic evaluation of the risks, and then taking practical precautions to counter them, both in the preparation for the trip and in your actions once there.
Experience learnt slowly is worth more than any specific boat. The weather once in the far north is often very settled and no yacht has the heft or strength to deal with ice to any significant amount. So really you need a boat you're happy to do two North Atlantic crossings (there and back), and one that can carry enough stores (including lots of diesel) for you to do whatever you want, in a degree of comfort with which you are happy, once there.
So if you have Bob Shepton's experience and the tolerance of cramped conditions that his 'passengers' seem to have, then a Westerly Discuss is all you need. Judy Lomax was also happy in the Beneteau 345 "Cloud Walker'. In my experience the sailors have more in common with each other than the boats they choose.
Starzinger and Evans have posted the RCC info pack on their site which gives lots of useful information from people who have been there, in their various craft.
http://www.bethandevans.com/pdf/Arctic guide.pdf
And hasn't an Albin Vega 27 done the Northwest Passage?
Yes!