MegaSack DRAW - This year's winner is user - rgwb
We will be in touch
I saw these while bike touring in the San Juan Islands in Washington State. Holy Guacamole, they were beautiful.
http://picasaweb.google.co.uk/mcmoonter/ClassicBoatsDeerHarbourSanJuans2010?authkey=Gv1sRgCNyup-jm19_aBw#
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this got me googling. My folks had this one for 20yrs, sold it about 15 ago though
[url] http://www.ktkweb.org/phpWS/index.php?module=pagemaster&PAGE_user_op=view_printable&PAGE_id=18&lay_quiet=1 [/url]
I had a deck tour of Velsheda a few years back in Craobh haven on west coast of Scotland. Every block was engraved with the K7 sail no.
Wasnt aloud down below though 🙁
I got the feeling that to own and maintain one and still be rich, you had to start out very, very, very rich.
Anyone remember the Americas Cup Jubilee in 2001. Hundreds of classic boats racing in the solent. Awesome!!
Came past the Needles from Poole and bumped into the J's racing in the Solent (too blowey to go outside). Each one was followed by a life boat as they were always losing crew off the (un guard railed) deck. Stopped for lunch and then sailed through the middle of the start of the Fastnet 😳 ...which was nice 😀
I had a deck tour of Velsheda a few years back in Craobh haven on west coast of Scotland. Every block was engraved with the K7 sail no.
i used to work for the co that made the blocks!
www.jclassyachts.com
That is all.
I was about to post up jclassyachts when I noticed Mr 'F'arts post above.
I'll always remember seeing the lines of Velsheda when she visited Bangor Harbour about 1984. Lots of craftsmanship.
Why stop with classic yachts?
Big boats are always impressive, but there are some really nice smaller ones.
Hallberg Rassy's are pretty damned nice (if a tad expensive)!
J class yachts are incredible. The tallest mast i have ever seen, especially when compared to its hull length. Salcombe yawls are nice, too expensive though 🙁
that's not a 'sailing boat' !!!!!
I had one of these but sold it 11 months ago to Sweeden. Not as pretty in the classic sense but more in a modern/F1/Engineering type perspective.
Hope the new owners enjoy her as much as we did. Fricking awesome performance - we once had 19kts with just the main up on the way out to a race. Max speed we ever had was 25kts.
My dad's mate owns a sweden 42, awesome boat. spent a morning on the irish sea in a force 8, we gave in long long long before the boat would have done 😆
iainc, I know, but she's a classic nonetheless!
sambob, I also spent many a happy hour sailing Yawls! (There is only one type of Yawl, by the way, a Salcombe Yawl!)
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Lovely!
[url= http://www.stonesboatyard.co.uk/the_yawls.html ]More from those lovely people at Stones! [/url]
Sweeden Yachts are special. Think I'd take a Rassey next when I get older as the family cruising boat - maybe a 42/44 - manageable when single handing or limited crew for passage making but big enough for a family to spend time on and manage.
Think I'd take a Rassey next when I get older as the family cruising boat - maybe a 42/44 - manageable when single handing or limited crew for passage making but big enough for a family to spend time on and manage.
when my folks punted their 'classic yacht' as pictured earlier, 15 yrs ago and bought a Nicholson 48 centre cockpit thingy we were all very disparaging....now it the perfect 'grandparent' boat and the kids love it 😛
Anything by James Wharram?
Yachts by Abeking and Rammussen
But the classic of classic that trumps everything here the International Dragon
Devon yawls don't count 🙂 we're there every year for the regatta, very pretty sight when there are lots of them.
Carbon377, at least try and get out on a sweden, we did 8kts over ground with a very reefed jib in a 2.5m sea. the owner sailed it back doublehanded, said it was very easy to manage.
Dragons are stunning get these lot to quote you on a cold moulded one if your minted:
http://www.petticrows.co.uk/dragons/cold-moulded.shtml
I was in Cowes last June for RTI and we were dry berthed with the dragon fleet - they all paid a full time boat keeper to maintain and polish then launch them in time for the owner nipping dow for the weekends racing. Different world eh
sambob - i sailed a Sweeden 41 called "Hotspur of Amble" when I was younger - owner was a gynaecologist but he moved her over to the Baltic when he retired. It was nice but at the time I loved fast fast boats not big slow boats. Im changing as i get older though 🙂
My uncle also owns a soling 🙂 Bought for £300 from the ICC in Salcombe.
😯
Yes Sambob, it's just wrong isn't it?
oh so wrong 🙁 my uncle skippered a clipper 60 around the world and came 2nd 🙂
Here's a pic of Martha we saw moored, all at sea.
http://www.woodenboat.org/boats/Boat_Detail.aspx?processID=1
[url= http://www.marthamboats.com/boats/half-deckers/half-deckers.html ]no experience necessary[/url]
and with rising water levels there are hardly any large cruisers north of potter heigham.
This might be pushing the classics too!
Spent most of my youth on one of these, or in the dingy learning rowing techniques!
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It was one of the best examples of a Westerly Berwick, which parents then sold, then bought a Moody 35, haven't stepped on a sailing yacht for 10 years. 😥
I would love to work on a tall ship, now I could even consider that a holiday.
Salcombe Yawls - my other half's dad has one. Lovely boat. After having been brought up on arse-in-the-water efforts like Toppers and Lasers, I found it a bit staid. The I realised quite how bleeding quick we were going. Still not as instant as the little boats, but I've a LOT more respect for it now.
His family have/had a cottage down in Bantham and used to own a Bantham one design too. The yawl was built by the harbour master there when he worked for Stones.
Jon - it's not a sailing boat but we have a Salcombe Flyer!
My uncle owns the old Custom House (pinkish colour next to the Lifebot place) on the front at Salcombe - nice gaff.
I do like South Devon - inlaws have a gaff in Newton Ferrers so there quite often.
Just to be picky - my dad didn't have a Bantham boat, but had one of the original inter-war prototypes. Now that was really quick and immediate... We used to race against the yawls in the local regatta because it was so much faster than the later Bantham boats.
My uncle has a really odd Salcombe yawl though - I think it's the only one ever fitted with an inboard engine (which could break your thumbs if you weren't careful starting it - old enough to need hand-cranking to start). That was the one we holed at Duck Cove one day in the days before mobile phones, too!













