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of study plans will be applied toward the price of full
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full size drawings, a Bill of Materials and abbreviated
building sequence.
Sport
cruising on a budget

Sweet Pea was designed to produce a racer
for a club I based on a very large estuary. With a mostly
mature membership and close to 200 miles of sparsely inhabited
fairly sheltered tidal coastline to play with, there was
a need for some simple cruising accommodation as well as
enough performance to be a fun class racer.
To provide this within a budget I proposed
that they build the boats as bare hull and deck sets as
a club effort and send them home for finishing. This way
the boats would be turned out quickly, the building jig
and patterns would provide control for the class rules,
and the advantages of bulk purchasing would still be available.

There were 6 Sweet Peas Built in the first
winter effort, and by all accounts the boats are doing their
jobs admirably. I gather that there was to be another “batch”
done at the end of the season so they must have made an
impression!

I am offering here two new versions of
Sweet Pea that would still measure under the class rules,
but the structure is better suited to building one at a
time. Using plywood bulkheads and stringers with a 9mm plywood
skin over, building her is about as simple a job as one
could get in a boat this size. Simplicity saves costs as
well, so there would be few boats with the combination of
low budget, speed and cruising capacity that this one has.

Light in weight so that the tow vehicle
can be quite small, needing only ankle deep water with the
plate up so she can be slid into the water pretty much anywhere,
Sweet Pea has a cockpit big enough for six, even allowing
for the outboard motor in its well at the after end of the
starboard side seat. There is enough space to seat four
below, she can sleep two in better comfort than some and
has permanent mountings for a stove, storage for the portaloo
and enough gear for a weekend!
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cabin looking forward |
cabin looking aft |
Sweet Pea is a hot performer, she has
a very high power to weight ratio, a fine entry and a clean
run. There is enough lateral plane in the big steel centerboard
to minimise leeway on the wind, and there is enough weight
in that board to steady her a little. With her kite up out
there on the fixed prod there is enough speed there to keep
even the most avid racer happy.

She’ll plane on a reach or run,
even the alternative yawl rig derived from the cruising
Navigator has the power to really move the little craft
and it will take a pretty serious dinghy to keep up whether
racing or exploring the coast and inlets.
As a cruiser, this sort of boat is a camper
rather than a five star hotel, but there is enough space
for a couple of friendly people to enjoy a few days away.

With the cruising yawl rig, she’ll
be simple to rig with short spars, easy to handle, easily
reefed in a blow and very capable.
I like boats like this, for a relatively
small investment in time and a few dollars a week buying
the materials the builder gets a capable little cruiser,
the social contact of club activity and a huge amount of
satisfaction.

LOA 5.3m 17ft 5in
Beam 2.24m 7ft 4in
Board up 0.2m 8in
Board down 1.34m 4ft5in
Sail areas:
Sloop 18.39 sq m 198 sq ft
Yawl 16.72 sq m 180 sq ft
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