| A practical tender
for tiny keelers

Designs come about in all sorts of ways,
and this one was more unusual than most. My friend Marcus
had been “ sorting out” his 19ft long ferro
cement Donovan designed keeler and had extracted a casual
promise from me that I would design him a tender .
One Friday evening he turned up at our
door to tell me that he was “ off” on Monday
and did I have the plans ready as he wanted to build the
tender over the weekend! Of course I had forgotten all about
it, so, in order to buy a little time sent him off to buy
a couple of sheets of ply and a pot of glue.

When he returned I had the outline done
and some of the parts drafted out at 1/5 scale, Marcus took
the plan original off to the the copy shop and left the
original to me while he went and built the frames. That’s
how it went all weekend, I managed to stay one or two items
ahead of him and it was with barely set glue and paint still
soft that “Roofrack” followed “ Roc”
out down the channel on Monday morning.
A tender for such a small boat is not
easy to design, the boat will be towed a lot of the time
so must stay straight and dry at speeds higher than her
hull speed, she will have to be able to safely carry a big
load when an inebriated crew returns after a party aboard
another boat. Lifting the tender aboard cannot be only for
graduate bodybuilders and the space available for her stowage
limits her size.

All of these were criteria for Marcus,
and because of the diminutive size of the parent vessel
we had even less room to play with than normal, a tight
budget and only two days of building time made it even tighter.
I drew this tiny pram with all of these in mind, and Roofrack
fulfilled all of the demands made on her really well.
Marcus disappeared off up the coast for
several months and returned with all sorts of stories about
the adventures he’d had, and told us that the little
boat had turned out to be a gem, in spite of the fun made
of her by some who saw her my friend was very fond of her
and told me that she was as near perfect for the job as
one could get.

Since then the boats have been built by
quite a few, some in the shortened version which will fit
into the back of a medium sized station wagon and most at
2.18 m which carries three plus a few stores comfortably.
She is a lot more cute than pretty but has proven much more
capable than most expect from such small and simple boats.

LOA - 2.18m or
1.85m 7ft2in or 6ft1in
BEAM - 1.16m 3ft 4in
WEIGHT - 30-35kg 66 -77lb |