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Simple little load carrier, or sporting sailor with a lot
of performance for the money.
I
was fiddling around with the scale models and drawings for
a proposed series of flat bottomed skiffs when Richard Desborough
visited. I've known Dick for more years than either of us
care to admit to and for a lot of those years He has been
going to build one of my boats.
Now the fact that the Desboroughs live
a good thousand kilometres away means that our contacts
are not so frequent and that the ideas as to what he wants
have usually changed from one visit to the next, however
on one recent visit I was proudly told that the house renovations
were at last finished and could I draw a cartoppable sailing
flattie of graceful shape that would suit the estuary where
the family holidays each summer.
There was a bit of tooing and froing as
we set the parameters, the size and weight had to suit a
compact Japanese car already loaded with four adult sized
people and their gear, and yet it had to carry the same
four on the water
in a reasonably comfortable and safe way. Performance was
not to be a criteria but I've known the man a while, so
she has a very high power to weight ratio which allied with
the long waterline and slippery shape gives the boat very
exiting performance with one aboard, and more
than adequate speed with a heavier load.
I know of one which, in the hands of its 11 year old budding
"Whitbread" star is a constant headache for his
club handicapper and which, pushed with a three hp Mercury
still carries his dad, a mate, two dogs and a pile of gear
out to a "maimai" in the duck season.
Setnet is the fishermans version, without
the centreboard, bouyancy tanks and foredeck, she provides
a stable and easily propelled fishing platform. One which
will stand quite rough conditions in reasonable safety as
long as the user doesn't expect too much speed. She can
be built very light enabling someone who doesn't feel like
humping heavy weights to slip her into the water, and the
same light weight makes her easy
closer winded than many realise, I know that there are more
than a few around who are embarrassingly familiar with the
shape of "Golden Bay's transom.
Building this boat is just the same as
"Fish Hook". She needs the same care to keep her
square and straight that the others in this series of "jigless"
sewn seam boats, and being a bit longer benefits even more
from the use of a lighter weight plywood such as Gaboon
or Occume.
Sail
her "free" rather than pinching her, you'll find
that you make much less leeway when moving fast. The end
result is that you make better progress than otherwise,
and the boat is much easier to control. Note that this type
of sail is very powerful off the wind, and rather like many
of the old working boats from which she is descended Golden
Bay" may need reefing for downwind runs when the breeze
really gets up.
I really like these little boats, they
are simple enough to not intimidate the first time builder,
don't cost very much, even when nicely finished, and return
more fun for the investment than anything else I can think
of.

L.O.A. - 3.90m
12ft 9in
BEAM. - 1.30m 4ft 4in
WEIGHT - 43kg 95 Ibs
SAIL AREA - 6.9 m2 66 ft 2
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