Readers' Boats....Warning - LOTS OF PICS!

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Hi everyone

Greetings from Port Huon Tasmania Australia

This is my Spacesailer 20 built in 1986 which is a fixed fin keel yacht designed by Kim Swarbrick and built in Western Australia

Port Huon is on the Huon River in Southern Tasmania and the boat is on a mooring outside our home

The Huon is a beautiful River and it takes us approx 3 hours to sail to the mouth or if you head further south the next stop is Antarctica

Regards Don
 

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Hi everyone

Greetings from Port Huon Tasmania Australia

This is my Spacesailer 20 built in 1986 which is a fixed fin keel yacht designed by Kim Swarbrick and built in Western Australia

Port Huon is on the Huon River in Southern Tasmania and the boat is on a mooring outside our home

The Huon is a beautiful River and it takes us approx 3 hours to sail to the mouth or if you head further south the next stop is Antarctica

Regards Don

Welcome, Don. She is a beauty
 
http://www.whereis.com/tas/port-huon?id=5774FA280EBF33

I have posted a map of the area above

We are at Port Huon and the river here is around 2 klms wide and approx 15 meters deep and as you get closer to the mouth it gets wider & deeper

Upstream from Port Huon the River is shallow with only a channel to allow passage so you need to be careful where you go

It can be dead calm with magnificant reflections or blowing 40+knots (sometimes just hours apart)

Here is a link for the wind forcast for Port Huon http://wind.willyweather.com.au/tas/southern/port-huon.html and it generally gets stronger as you get closer to the river mouth

The Huon River and the D’Entrecasteaux Channel are sheltered from the Southern Ocean by Bruny Island but it can still get a bit wild on the water

The river is pretty much deserted most of ther time with the main traffic being work boats from the Atlantic Salmon Farms that are scattered along the river although if you go for a sail for the afternoon you might only see 5 other boats on the water in the 4 hours out sailing

The area has many sheltered bays where you can normally anchor in most weathers and the scenery is magnificent

There is a tradition of wooden boat building in the area with many old wooden boats still sailing and new ones being built with the Wilson Family still building in the area

Regards Don
 
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Kandula, my Westerly Fulmar

This is my Westerly Fulmar, named Kandula, after a famous Sri Lankan Elephant.
Mine since March 2012 and based on the North East coast. She replaces Piffi, my Invicta 26.
 

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My new baby arrived safely at her new Cornish home port today having survived the road move from Essex relatively unscathed...

Now all tucked up in the winter boatyard ready for the off season doings etc... Phew... Glad that's all gone smoothly.

Following on from the pontoon neighbour thread, while she was suspended mid air a chap sauntered over and said "Is that yours?" in a slightly curt tone. I replied " What? The boat, the truck or the crane?" in a friendly bantery manner.

He sniffed and said "Actually, It's not a boat, It's a yacht... " in a quite patronising tone and wandered orf! I'm thinking of renaming her 'Ima boat' just for sheer badness... ;-)
 
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