Articles

Poor-Poise: A Hardware Store Outrigger

 Reports  Boatbuilding  Outrigger Canoes

A reader sends in his account of repurposing plastic canoe and kayak with hardware store parts to obtain a sailing outrigger. A Home Deproa! Thanks for the submission. -Ed

My name is Mason, I’m 25, and I work as a preschool teacher. I first started sailing at summer camp when I was growing up, and I’ve been looking for a way to enjoy it as an adult ever since. A few years ago I bought a 1978 16’ Hobie Cat catamaran, but I ended up…

Poor-poise

06 June 2019     3 comments.

The Baltic Tepuke

 Proas

A Tepuke sails on the Baltic. This seems like fulfillment of the ancient prophecy “When a crab claws the northern sea then the dreaded Old Ones shall return.” Or something.

Thanks to Yurek for the submission!

 

03 April 2019     6 comments.

Mini Cargo Ferry from Harryproa

 New Designs  Proas

Here’s another cool project from Harryproa:

The mini cargo ferry was designed in response to a need to replace the outboard powered fibreglass skiffs which are ubiquitous in the Pacific.  These boats are expensive to run, difficult to maintain and have almost completely destroyed the islanders boat building and sailing skills.

Taking a step back to near stone-age construction materials of plywood/epoxy, the boats are as…

Mini cargo ferry

02 April 2019     2 comments.

Will the Oz Goose fly?

 Hydrofoils  Research

Iain Henehan continues his foiling experiments with an Oz PD Goose, an ultra-simple 12ft (3.5m)  plywood club sailing dinghy designed by Michael Storer.

The Goose was introduced as a larger family version of the OzRacer some 6 years ago. But it was overlooked as “just a bigger OzRacer” until three years ago when Ian Henehan in Texas started to put videos of the boat going very fast with one on board (up to 12.9 knots) and sailing well…

Oz Goose on foils

28 March 2019     3 comments.

Buccaneer 33 seeking captain

 Dock Ranger  Trimarans

This 1987 Crowther Buccaneer 33 is an unusual find for the Pacific Northwest. According to the listing it was built in 1987 of wood/glass/epoxy and stretched two feet to 35.

Spring is here! Just in time for R2AK, you can race to Alaska, and win.

Find it here on Craigslist for $18,500 in Poulsbo, WA. Some assembly required.

Crowther Buccaneer 33

24 March 2019     0 comments.

A proa with no name

 Proas  Racing

UNNAMED PROA is a near 60’ racing design with a crab claw schooner rig! It’s the work of Jeremy Fischer of Martinique, who built the EQUILIBRE some 10 years back. I know little about the design except that it was originally intended to enter the Route du Rhum. The very narrow hull features an extreme wave-piercing bow, no doubt a nod to the submarine like experience of sailing the boat fast in a seaway 😉. A few of the construction pics…

No name proa

12 March 2019     3 comments.

Quiquec - outrigger canoe

 Boatbuilding  Outrigger Canoes  Smallcraft

Browsing through Youtube I discovered this charming 5.6m outrigger canoe named QUIQUEC, uploaded and built by Norbert Rettig of Hockenheim, DE. The 12 square meter lug rig is wonderfully old school but the canoe moves very well even so, and the low center of effort would certainly be appreciated with the lovely torpedo-shaped low-volume ama. All the spars, ama and beams fit neatly inside the hull for storage and transport on the roof…

Quiquec outrigger canoe

11 March 2019     1 comments.

Jacknife

 Boatbuilding  Proas

Ian Aitken’s JACKNIFE is “the world’s first 11m, folding, trailerable proa with freestanding wing mast”.

Although inspired by Rob Denney’s Harryproas, the craft was designed and built by Ian and ‘Barn Job Innovations’ of Taranaki, New Zealand. Well named, the craft unfolds like a Swiss Army Knife, only with more moving parts. Read more at Harryproa

Specifications

LW hull LOA = 11.0 m     one of the bows folds back to facilitate…

Jacknife

11 March 2019     0 comments.

The Camel: a sailing cargo proa

 New Designs  Proas

The Camel of the Sea is a sailing multihull cargo vessel designed for operation by a small crew of 3-6 in areas of steady winds and expensive petroleum. As outlined in The Case for the Cargo Proa, physics favors the proa configuration in the case of widely varying displacement. In this example, the fully laden boat weighs over three times the boat when empty. To recap the argument:

Widely variable displacement on multihulls is a…

Camel - 54' Cargo Proa

19 February 2019     10 comments.