prv
Well-Known Member
Could be used for a spot-the-lifejacket competition.
And is anybody dying?
Pete
Could be used for a spot-the-lifejacket competition.
Our mission this summer is to set a mizzen staysail, just for fun, not so we get somewhere quicker.
Ketches are pretty, and why shouldn't that be a consideration in choice of rig? We all do this for pleasure, after all.
Well, a Fisher is not actually a sailing-boat, IMHO. That's a motor cruiser with a bit of auxilary sail.
Ever since watching Sir Francis and Gypsy Moth IV returning to Plymouth in
‘67 I’d fancied a ketch. No other reason really than I like the look of them, bit more like an old sailing boat.
I've bought one, eventually, which is perfect for what I want to do, easy cruising for the amateur.
Got to thinking though, what are the advantages of a Bermudian rig over a ketch, or vice versa from the serious sailors point of view? I suppose there must be quite a few points considering there respective ratios in numbers I've seen.
Thanks for your thoughts.
To misquote Animal Farm....
" One mast good..... Two masts better! "
We bought a ketch so Jane could easily handle the split sail plan. As said they are reaching machines but not too bad upwind if you follow Searush's advice about the mizzen. Downwind we use a reefed mizzen and poled out twin twistle rig headsails.
I also agree with Searush about how sad it would be if there weren't 'old fashioned' designs around, most are very pretty. I never seen a pretty AWB they all look much the same unfortunately.
Dear Kipper, have you tried adjusting the main & mizzen sheets much?The mizzen, being so far aft, does have a significant impact on balance & I find that while it is best sheeted harder than the main when on the wind, slacking the mizzen sheet slightly will remove any tendency to weather helm when off the wind.
As a cruiser rather than a racer, balancing the rig to achieve easy sailing on a given course is preferable to trying to maximise speed (which may cock up my arrival time for the many tide gates in my sailing area).
Mind you, the Pentland mizzen is tiny at about 70sq ft, maybe yours is much bigger.
Searush
Is your mizzen boom sheeted from the centre of the stern or on a triangular rig? I often try to set the mizzen slightly to windward to improve on the wind performance. Sometimes it seems to work and other times not so good.
We bought a ketch so Jane could easily handle the split sail plan. As said they are reaching machines but not too bad upwind if you follow Searush's advice about the mizzen. Downwind we use a reefed mizzen and poled out twin twistle rig headsails.
I also agree with Searush about how sad it would be if there weren't 'old fashioned' designs around, most are very pretty. I never seen a pretty AWB they all look much the same unfortunately.
I have no idea what the hell terms like AWB mean and am too embarrassed to ask...
...(but) I get the feeling that saying all AWB’s look the same, might not endear you (to) a lot of people.![]()
Seadog, I hope you've discovered since posting earlier, that AWB means Average White Boat? Actually that's far less cryptic than 'MAB', used for the opposite (or just the four-decade older) variety: the Mouldy Auld Boat...
...as to derogatory comments about AWBs, their owners are ever-ready to defend their choices. In fact they're often pre-emptively vociferous, presumably because they recognise the soulless banality of their safe, white, sensibly efficient, caravan-charisma sloops...
...sorry, getting carried away there.
I wonder if, to sailing kids, the mizzens of yawls and ketches are equivalent to the spare wheel on the boot-lids of old cars...
...because even though there was every good reason for the old layouts of cars and cruising yachts, designers' competitive pursuit of efficiency overrode style by degrees, knocking off most of the interesting corners rather than maintaining individuality.
So now, the market presents us with roomy, compact, frugal, lamentably similar, forgettable cars and likewise, dozens of bulbous lightweight white two-sail single-masters. On the road, money spent for fun, generally goes on coupes, convertibles and classics...
...yet, if we sail for pleasure, it seems sad that so many boat-buyers plump for the floating equivalent of Vauxhall Vectras...
...no wonder AWB owners are often so noisily insecure......sorry! Sorry. Mustn't say that. Not politically-correct.
![]()