Thursday, January 29, 2009

More on Caprices



I recieved this email, adding yet a little more info about the Caprice.
" I read with interest the post "what boat is this". The general opinion is correct it is a Caprice
probably mk 1 made from marine ply and the B&W photo is nice. Showing us how simple a boat can be.
The caprice design is of course Robert Tucker. 1962 the supplier and builder of later GRP versions was Glenn Ridge and company England and Island Plastics, Isle of Wight who also I believe constructed a number of varying sized fishing vessels in GRP, from about 16ft to 23 ft.
I once owned an IP 16ft simulated clinker angling/fishing boat. If I am correct the Island plastics Co. stopped manufacturing boats in the late 1980's or early 90'S and concentrated on making GRP moldings for caravans and caravanettes.
I believe they were based in Ryde, Isle of Wight. The Caprice was a very popular boat and of course slightly differing designs would have been constructed for export no doubt some finding their way into the home market, as the basic spec sheet for the latter MK's states. MK11 MK111, UK MK111. Available in Fin or Bilge keel. I myself own a caprice in GRP probably a mk11 (see pictures)."

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Mystery boat (Caprice) update

Got some more comments about the latest mystery boat which is, positively identified as a caprice Mk II. More info here. More pictures here.

It may also be noted that the famous story of Shrimpy, the Caprice that sailed around the world can be found online here.

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Another mystery boat


I recieved this email from John Millichap who is wondering what boat he just bought. Any ideas?

"I recently acquired an 18ft sloop on ebay! Neither I or the seller knows anything about it although he supposedly owned and sailed it for 4-5 years. I believe it to be fibreglass or GRP but it may be ply sheathed in same. It has bilge keels half metal and a central finkeel astern of these. It has a well for outboard rear of the cockpit and a locker astern of that, 2 berths and wqhat appears to be a forward hatch that was not in the original design!"

I attach some photos and would be very appreciative of any information you or your readers may be able to give me. The boat is in a pretty bad way and I am particularly worried about the three keels as the bilge ones appear to have problems at the hull end and the fin keel appears to have water draining out of the hull where it joins."



Update: The boat is most probably a Caprice, designed by Robert Tucker. Not sure really which version though. Thanks to the guys at Scuttlebutt!

Friday, January 2, 2009

Small Craft blog


I just discovered that the Small Craft Advisor Magazine also has a blog. It's relatively new (since October) but it seems like it gets updated frequently. Well worth a look.

Saturday, December 20, 2008

Lysander link


I recieved an email from James Robinson of the Lysander Owners Association who asked me to provide a link to their website. He writes:
I've been reading and enjoying some of your articles in the twin keeler website. My boat is a Lysander which was designed by Percy Blandford and built by Don Haslam back in 1975. I have only been out in the boat twice this year as I received it at the end of June and it took around three months to get it ready for the water and like many others I enjoy doing 'improvements' to my boat when not sailing.I was wondering if it was possible to include a link in your online newsletter to the Lysander website http://www.lysander.org.uk as I believe in a kind of solidarity between trailer/sailers and you never know we may get to read of more adventures of folk in boats than might otherwise be the case. I hope you like this picture of my boat 'Amity' where she is moored all year round at her mooring 'a running mooring that allows me to pull her in from the slipway'. I wish you all a lovelyChristmas & New Year and hope for all of us a good season of sailing next year.

The boat really does look nice. I have checked the website and couldn't really find out if it is a bilge keeler but I guess it is.

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Mini website

David Chamberlain is the guy who sailed his modified Vivacity 20, "Mini" from the US to Hawaii in 1992. On this website he publishes useful tips for those who want to take their small craft over big stretches of water - or at least dream about it.

Monday, November 10, 2008

On the Hard

If you live north of about 35o north (or south of 35o south), your boat probably spends up to half the year out of its element – on the hard. The annual ritual of getting it there is part of the rhythm of boating, at least in the temperate climates.
When I had my Alacrity, the autumn haulout was a simple, if not easy, process that became almost second nature. After one last sail late in October, I took the sails off and lowered the mast to its cradle. Next I picked up my trailer from the storage lot and brought it home. Then I motored the boat to the next marina downriver where they had a launch ramp, while someone drove my trailer there.
Then came the hard part – getting the boat onto the trailer. In order to get the trailer low enough to allow the keels to slide on, I had to attach a length of chain to the hitch, and then back all the way down the ramp until the truck’s rear tires were just short of the water. If there was any wind, motoring the boat onto the trailer was a real challenge. It often seemed to have a mind of its own, and it sometimes felt like trying to put our cat into the carrier for a trip to the vet.
Anyway, I always managed to get it on, usually after some rather sailor-like language. The moment of truth occurred when I pulled the trailer out of the water, checking to see if the forward edges of the keels were snug against the stops on the trailer, meaning that the boat was properly balanced for towing. If not, it was back into the water for some adjustments. By that time, nearly everyone in the marina had become a spectator, most had offered advice, and some had even offered to help. Once the trailer was back on the hitch, the worst was over. After a quick stop at home to take off the motor and remove the last of the equipment, it was off to the storage yard to put on the tarp for the winter. Finally, a beer, to reward my helper of the day.
This all happened one last time when I sold the Alacrity this past summer, to make room for my new Ranger 26. This time my assistant was the new owner, literally getting his feet wet with his new boat. When I dropped the boat off in his backyard, I was done with this process.
But, along with my new boat came a new haulout routine. First, I had to find a new place to store it, since it won’t go on a trailer like the Alacrity. I had to find a real marina, with a TravelLift instead of a launch ramp. The marina where I keep it in the summer was out of the question because they barely have room for a parking lot, which fills up quickly in the autumn with the most favored boats. So I went shopping for winter storage.
I found a spot about five miles upriver, at the marina where I had been storing my trailer over the summer. In preparation, I stopped by and picked up a contract. On the second page was a list of questions that reminded me I had moved up to a grown-up boat, not the teen-ager the Alacrity seemed in retrospect. Did I want them to winterize the fresh water system? Did I want a pump-out? Did I want it shrink-wrapped? I could hear the cash register gaily ringing away in the background.
Finally I had arranged everything, and it was time to get Greyhound to her winter home. I took most of the “stuff” that had accumulated in the half season I’d had her home, and made arrangements to deliver her up to Ossining. Unable to arrange any crew for the delivery date, I decided to singlehand it. That decision began to look a little suspect as the weatherman predicted a “sou’easter” for the Saturday I had to sail. However, he said it would hit late in the day while I was sailing early, and I was going north, so I took a chance and set out.
As it turned out, I needn’t have worried. Although it was overcast, the breeze was manageable, ten to twelve knots, and Greyhound galloped up the river. There was hardly another boat to be seen, we outran the following swells, and I successfully avoided the little island in the river that I’d never seen before. I was exhilarated, and was a little sorry to reach the marina entrance in about two hours.
I was a bit worried about docking, since I’d never done it in this marina singlehanded, but the gas dock was just inside the breakwater so I managed to slide in. The management assigned me a temporary slip in the middle of the marina, and I was able to get in there with no bumps or bruises, in spite of the freshening breeze. As I rode home in the car with my wife, I was more than a little pleased with myself. Mission accomplished! Later in the day things really kicked up outside, so much so that a large tree came down just up the street, so I was doubly glad I had made the trip when I did.
This past weekend I found out that Greyhound had been hauled, so I went up to finish the winter prep. I found her in the middle of an aluminum forest, packed into a collection of sailboats, looking like a flock of swans ready to fly south. I had built a PVC pipe frame to support the tarp over the cockpit, so I muscled that and the tarp up the ladder in the drizzle. The hardest part of the job was wrestling the outboard off the transom and into my car. Funny, it didn’t feel this heavy when I was putting it on during the summer!
I ran the motor at home to flush out the salt water, inflated the sorry looking fenders, stowed the docklines, and headed upstairs to watch some football. Greyhound’s ready for winter, and so am I.