Fantasie 19
Well-Known Member
no doubt, a Wayfarer.
+1... Wanderer if it's considered too big.... use the car to pull it up the slip
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no doubt, a Wayfarer.
Thinking about a sailing dinghy I could enjoy purely for pleasure, none racing, robust, with centre board, that I could manage on my own, that I could row, possible small engine if required, mainly for use on River Medway and up creeks. Properly Broards use, that could give a bit of cover for summer night sleeping. Or am I asking to much from a dinghy
Dan, even a Gull or Otter is a serious pain on slipways for a light or solo crew, so there is a strong case for going your way with a big relatively heavy Osprey ; going where one wants quickly and enjoyably before any real bad weater hits, with the huge bonus of sailing the 60's boat equivalent of an E-Type Jag' !
I think you have hit the nail on the head with the "cruisified" Osprey: fast and handles very nicely indeed. You can always slow down a fast boat, you can't speed up a slow one. Possibly the fastest I have ever been in a non-cat dinghy is three up (one trapezing) on a broad reach in an Osprey in a half gale. We were on our way back to the club to get out a rescue boat as several other boats were in serious trouble in rapidly rising wind and sea.As someone who raced Ospreys, 505s and Fireballs in the 60's & 70's I have a few observations.
1. The Osprey is probably the best seaboat for a dinghy that I could imagine, and I have seen them raced in weather that you wouldn't believe... I find it difficult to imagine the "step down" from flat out racing to cruising one.
2. Both the Osprey and the 505 were designed in the 50's (I was even privileged enough to see a mkI full clinker Osprey designed to be sailed three up, no trapeze), and STILL they provide a performance benchmark that other later dinghies (particularly skiff types) struggle to meet.
3. They both handle beautifully, because their original design was just right
PS, I'm not suggesting a 505 as a cruising dinghy by the way....
no doubt, a Wayfarer.
Masses of cruising potential, and it's all well documented.
I had a racy one. Electric fun, especially when the hairy dinghies had to cancel races.![]()
As someone who raced Ospreys, 505s and Fireballs in the 60's & 70's I have a few observations.
1. The Osprey is probably the best seaboat for a dinghy that I could imagine, and I have seen them raced in weather that you wouldn't believe... I find it difficult to imagine the "step down" from flat out racing to cruising one.
2. Both the Osprey and the 505 were designed in the 50's (I was even privileged enough to see a mkI full clinker Osprey designed to be sailed three up, no trapeze), and STILL they provide a performance benchmark that other later dinghies (particularly skiff types) struggle to meet.
3. They both handle beautifully, because their original design was just right
PS, I'm not suggesting a 505 as a cruising dinghy by the way....
Gladys,
I was lucky enough to crew a Fireball for a few ' Snowflake ' winter series at Chichester - I found it huge fun to crew - not helm - I'm sure Plan A with 3 crew and no trapeze would have made it a right pain and no fun - and a 505 on a round Hayling Island race, I thought it boring even when on the plane.
As you say, the Osprey was an inspired design; to the extent I'd say designers should have put down their pencils there and then and moved on to something else like cruisers or spacecraft...
I sailed cats latterly and similarly to the Osprey/505, the Tornado (under original rig anyway) and Hobie 17 did the same sort of thing. The Tornado would let you know you were pushing your luck, whereas things like the Dart 18, and Hurricane 5.9 would just ditch you spectacularly
Yes, the Otter. Great boat to sail. Loved sailing a borrowed one a few years ago.
Along similar lines (although hard chined, not round bilged) is the Pacer dinghy. Likely to be older but cheap and defo great fun to sail.
If you're up for something light weight but twitchy, have you considered a Lark? Light weight can be a bonus, especially at the end of a sail when you're pulling a Wayfarer up a steep and slippery slipway...
He obviously hadn't released the mainsheet.t. I have memories of following a GP14 to a buoy, and seeing it pile straight on with the tiller on the weather gunwhale as the skipper tried to bear away,...
In a very extensive dinghy racing career I was amazed at the difference between an inspirational boat that behaved in a predictable way and the majority which would find ways of catching you out. I have memories of following a GP14 to a buoy, and seeing it pile straight on with the tiller on the weather gunwhale as the skipper tried to bear away, whilst I bore away and gybed underneath him... And don't ask me about poxy Enterprises....
I sailed cats latterly and similarly to the Osprey/505, the Tornado (under original rig anyway) and Hobie 17 did the same sort of thing. The Tornado would let you know you were pushing your luck, whereas things like the Dart 18, and Hurricane 5.9 would just ditch you spectacularly