| Cost of study plans will be applied toward the price of full plans if ordered within one year. Study plans contain 1 full size drawing, a Bill of Materials and abbreviated building sequence as well as an illustrated essay titled "Houdini 12 Years On".
My escape machine, the biggest
little cruiser.

Reefed and ready to go
I had planned on using the
sports rowing boat Seagull
as my getaway boat over the Christmas period but when out
on the river with a group of the Traditional Small Craft
Society members I was bullied (he offered me money, an unfair
tactic) into selling her to a guy who had just rowed the
eight miles up and back in a little praam dinghy. This left
me in mid November with the prospect of no boat for the
summer!
That
was Saturday, by Sunday I’d done a stock take of the
materials on hand, checked the space in the work shop, measured
my garden trailer, counted how many days until the two important
T.S.C.S. regattas at the end of January and designed the
boat to suit.
Other considerations were
that I wanted to be able to tent her and sleep two on board,
she could not be too big for wife Jan or 12 year old daughter
Sarina to sail single handed but she still had to accommodate
two adults, a twelve and a three in enough comfort to prevent
friction between the junior members of the crew, and still
be seaworthy enough to cope with my coastal cruising ambitions.
As a cruiser she needed plenty of storage space, she needed
to be dry and comfortable and also had to be suited to my
three year old sons need to scramble around.
So
Houdini ended up just over thirteen feet long but a buxom
5ft 1Oin wide. She has a single standing lugsail on bamboo
spars (the budget was a major consideration!) and a self
draining floor which runs from the mast step back to the
stem sheets providing a seven foot (2.1 metre) long sleeping
space on each side of the centrecase, a big locker under
the foredeck and more storage under the sternsheets (the
raised seats aft)
With her wide side decks,
ample freeboard and high coamings she is a dry boat, her
sharp underwater sections make her stable and much faster
than many would expect, while the amount of room is just
amazing! One could happily accommodate six or seven adults
for an afternoon sail, or four big kids” plus a mountain
of camping gear for a week away. This is a boat that not
only thinks its a twenty footer but manages to convince
most other people that she’s much bigger than she
really is as well.

Houdini has a high power
to weight ratio which makes her fast and nimble, exiting
to sail while the wide beam and high freeboard keep her
safe if some skippers enthusiasm overtakes caution. The
building started off well, she took three weeks of evenings
from when I started that Sunday afternoon to get the boat
planked up, centrecase and anchor well in, seats and self
draining floor framed and fitted. She presented no problems
in the building and I was able to correct the plans as I
went.
My
Father died that February, and family considerations shelved
Houdini for a while, then a job came along that I could
not turn down but which required us to move house down to
Rotorua, all of a sudden there were a lot of jobs with urgent
tags on them so once again Houdini had to wait.
The wait was worthwhile though,
she got finished in Gordon Newcombes (Plywood and Marine
Supplies, the best plywood shop around) showroom, Derek
Hickman made me an excellent sail, and she was eventually
launched into the fresh water of Lake Rotoiti.
There is nothing unorthodox
in the structure and any ordinary handyman ( handyperson
feels a very clumsy word to me, so sorry ladies, please
feel included should I slip up again) could build one of
these in short order. I enjoyed the building, the many short
stints out in the workshop away from the stresses of work
and very helpful in relaxing a person who has to be an “up
and attem” salesman no matter how I feel on the day.
In
any new boat there is a little of trying something new,
Houdini has a lot of this, derived from the American Cape
Cod Catboats to a certain degree I wanted to avoid their
notoriously difficult downwind handling and tendency to
be heavy on the helm so situated the centreboard well forward
with a very large skeg and an oversize rudder aft. This
had the added benefit of freeing up much of the space in
the cockpit improving the accommodation no end and oddly
enough the underwater foils being far apart seems to contribute
to the boats directional stability which is phenomenal for
such a short, fat little boat.
With the big locker under
the foredeck sealed off behind a close fitting hatch, and
a considerable amount of air tankage under the floor and
in the sternsheets she will float very high in the unlikely
event of “canning her out”. But I would warn
that it takes a long time to bail such a large volume boat.
The dinghy bailer in the bottom would eventually have her
dry but it would take a while.

The sprit boomed standing
lugsail rig is a favourite of mine, giving a lot of area
for not much money and short spars that stow within the
boat when on the trailer. These rigs are close winded, easy
to handle, have a low centre of effort and are incredibly
powerful reaching and running .
She’d look very cute
as a gaff sloop, and would, I have no doubt have a very
wide appeal but my feeling Is that the extra windage, weight
aloft and cost would not be worth the improvement in appearance.
Perhaps when I get the 5.3 m versions plans done the gaffer
will be a more practical alternative.

LOA 4.10m 13ft
2in
Beam 1.8m 5ft 10in
Weight 85kg 185lbs Unrigged
Sails 10.7sqm 115 sqft
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