Wansworth
Well-Known Member
Certainly refreshing when you see a different rig amongst all the bermudiansConor O'Brien, who wrote many books about the practical aspects of cruising based on his long experience of ocean voyaging and sailing in Irish waters, came to the conclusion that the ideal cruiser would have a powerful engine and a square rig that could be operated entirely from the deck.
This conclusion assumes that ocean voyaging is done using prevailing winds and when one needs to get in and out of harbour one uses the engine.
The same could also apply to many of today's cruising yachtsmen who don't seem to be very fond of going to windward yet carry a rig designed for that purpose rather than one more suited to sailing off the wind.
Of course there would be practical considerations that did not apply in O'Brien's time. Nowadays yards would have to be cock-billed in marinas or when rafted up!
If nothing else, it would add an interesting new dimension to a yachting scene almost entirely dominated by dreary uniformity
