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A daysailer with sneaky speed.

Many designs start as an idea brewing
away in the back of my mind, and are only brought to the
fore when a prospective client enquiries for something
that fits the idea.
Rogue was one of these, I’d been
thinking for a while about a fast, general purpose sailing
dinghy that would row and outboard, all things which are
not usually compatible and the compromises to make the
boat work in all modes often mean that she doesn’t
do any of them well.

My experiments with a series of open
boats had given me some experience and thoughts on proportions,
construction methods and layout, so when Bill Harford
rang, wanting a light but roomy outboard motor powered
dinghy for fishing around Northlands Cavalli Islands I
was already halfway there in terms of how I was going
to approach the project. Then Peter Elstone phoned from
Napier wanting a sailing dinghy to carry two friends and
a pile of camping gear around the lakes and inlets to
which he would trail the boat.

After the proposal sketches were accepted
by the two clients I started the serious part of the design
process, but due to other commitments it took a little
longer to finish the drawings than I would have liked
and I remember going to the copy shop and sending off
a sheet at a time, hoping I was staying ahead of the two
builders.
About the same time I sold my own boat
to a man who threatened me with a chequebook, (totally
unfair tactics ) and, in order to have a boat for the
summer I got stuck into building one myself, she took
eight weekends and quite a few midnights to get finished.
Rogue and I had a really good time that summer, covering
about 1500 miles around the Hauraki Gulf and the Kaipara
Harbour.

Sailing the boat was everything I had
hoped for, and during the year I kept her she was raced
with a surprising degree of success, something that has
been the experience of other owners. She aquitted herself
honourably in the two pair oar class of the Weiti River
Rowing race finishing second (with two passengers aboard,
the race is not a serious one but once the gun goes all
friendship ceases) I camp cruised her a lot. I was single
at the time and had few commitments so had time to explore
the many bays and estuaries in the area. She proved to
be just about perfect for the job, and there were times
when I took friends away for a weekend, cruising in this
little boat put a new face on yachting for a few lucky
people, several of these people are still out there cruising
in their own small boats.

In addition to the big voyages she turned
out to be ideal for those lovely afternoons when being
anywhere but on the water would be second best, and as
a daysailer she is capable, comfortable, fast and very
quickly rigged.
This design won the 1988 Traditional
Small Craft Society Beach Cruiser design competition,
with her traditional styling and rig, built from modern
materials and with an efficient underwater shape she gives
away nothing in performance while retaining her classical
looks. Those who have built her have been very happy with
the performance whether pottering about an estuary, making
longer passages with camping gear aboard or using an outboard
motor to putt out to the point to do some fishing. |