Lelantina classic

tcm

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I was in st tropez and noticed in one the shops that this classic is for sale, but no price. Call us, it said. So i did. It's 1.3m euros says nice marc pajot. Fancy a look round? So i said yes and later the same day we trooped round.

The boat is 1930's steel schooner. Quite a looker i must say. Decent engine, generator and deck arrangement that includes a cockpit and stacnhions means it is at least possible to crusie the thing, unlike Moonbeam IV which are flat decked.

The boat carries a full time crew during summer of 4 and during winter just 2. I'm afraid i wasn't impressed with the boat - mostly because i wasn't impressed with what the skiper has managed to do in the 9 years he's been on board - not much.

Climbing inside the engineroom is neccesarily awkward - but there no excuse for it being a dirty shambles, almost with running rivers of condensation. Almost black paint makes it dark, difficult to see problems - is it that colour to hide rust? Hm

Below decks almost every piece of wood needs sanding and varnishing. The galley and saloon is an excellent area but should be comfortable rather than very "used". The cabins themselves are small and pokey but a function of the boat of course. No evidence of sandpaper, varnishing, paint anywhere below decks - very disappointing.

Above decks it's somewhat better -the boat races the classic yacht circuit. Sails only 3 years old, bit of sanding and varnish needed for the Cosmetic stuff needed all over though and again - no real evidence of those fultime crew who don't race every day. The deck needs sanding (not "replacing" as the skipper seemed to think - it's an inch thick with just slightly proud caulking) and lots of the metalwork items need plating or polishing or painting.

ah well.
 
She was designed by Alden and built for a British owner, Ralph Peverley, I think, in the 30's. Written up in one of Uffa Fox's books.
 
Nice:

40649605.Lelantinaphoto2NB.jpg


Pity about the lack of care down below, but what can you expect at such bargain basement prices? /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif
 
Re: pix error - and making a new one...

Blast. It worked OK when I tried it out but access now seems to be barred, probably because I'd nicked all their bandwidth.

I got it, and several others, by entering Lelantina in Google Images. Let's try this one and see how long it lasts:

Lelantina%20300x220.jpg


You're probably right about being able to build something new for the money - though not sure you'd run to it in a European yard?
 
Re: pix error - and making a new one...

If plans not available then lift the lines from the boat itself? Small fee to the owner would surely clear a path to this.

Plus, if you were going to build such a boat form new you'd want to change the underwater profie to something more modern, like Savannah for example.

Agree with jhr, have it build outside europe.

Nice little project to keep you busy.
 
It would have to be a special skipper to accept maintenance as part of his/her duties. Overseeing the yard workers and touching in a varnish graze is probably the limit for most of these guys, and a sweetener from the chosen yard wouldn't surprise me either.

I am of course talking in general terms and not about your particular skipper of whom I know nothing and would not presume to malign.
 
Think quite recently there was a case of the owner finding out about a rather hefty cash sweetener paid to the skipper of a rather famous J class by a boat yard in Southampton, beleive this sort of thing is quite common.
 
I saw Doriana in Cannes last week, the crew working away at polishing winches till they gleamed and so on. Utterly fab. I wd have thought that a key element of skippering a classic is to do a fair bit of maintenance.
 
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