Friday, September 12, 2008

Steel boat with the telephone pole masts


I had a real "Wow!" moment while finishing Bernard Moitessier's book "Tamata and Alliance"


To make a long (but good) story short he lost his boat "Joshua" in the storm while in port at Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, 25 other boats were lost that day. After digging in tons of sand and gravel they excavated the boat on the beach and found out that despite the total loss of mast, rigging and rudder the 21 old steel hull was intact and watertight and was afloat the same day.


This is the first lesson I have learned, if I ever go to the big blue Pacific for some serious time I will make sure to have a "tank" of a boat made of steel with a full length keel that will allow me to beach and paint the boat in the low tide on the sandy beach anywhere in the world.


Later on, in the book, his friends have built him another boat, Tamata. After buying the steel sheets and welding the boat within weeks according to a design plan, he used telephone poles for the masts which they smoothed with a simple electric plane!


Now, cheap boat like that will not win any speed races, or beauty contests, but think about it... no super-expensive aluminum masts just a common sense set up that have worked for him time-and-time around the world thru the lifetime at the sea.




The picture is of a nice wooden-mast ketch in the Kenosha Harbor.

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