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Kankama said..
Hey Shaggy - me thinks you are talking about Shotover. I heard the same thing from one of Lock's draughtsmen who said she was quite placid and didn't require quick reflexes. I had the job of sanding her for a paint job once, that took a while.
Thankfully we have come a long way since the early days of my multihull sailing. I had friends in the 80s who refused to come on board my little tri and mono racing friends who thought I had joined a cult. As someone who likes to race monos and dinghies, and cruise cats it always makes me roll me eyes when someone trots out the old stalwart argument as a way of advancing the debate.
From my experience of the debate over 35 years, anyone who thinks that cats are bad or monos are bad is either a bad sailor or hasn't sailed on enough good designs of either type. The great sailors - the Slingsbys, Novaks, Outerridges, sail any good boat they can get their hands on, no matter the number of hulls. They learn to sail them differently because the boats are different, not better or worse.
G'day Kankama,
You think correctly. Respect sir, I would rather rip off my left arm rather than have to sand that behemoth. I agree re: THE debate, it seems a bit naff to generalise, they're all sailboats to me, I enjoy them all.
Funny Shotover story; we were doing a Gladstone and a pair of us were being interviewed by a Ch9 crew we had onboard. We were sitting right next to the spinnaker halyard winch when the turning block for the halyard at the bottom of the mast let go, it blew the winch completely off the deck in the blink of an eye, it sounded like a bomb going off. All you could see in the video was the pair of us launch ourselves out of the picture, haven't moved that fast in my life. Made for an entertaining video!
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Sectorsteve said..Kankama said..
Hey Shaggy - me thinks you are talking about Shotover. I heard the same thing from one of Lock's draughtsmen who said she was quite placid and didn't require quick reflexes. I had the job of sanding her for a paint job once, that took a while.
Thankfully we have come a long way since the early days of my multihull sailing. I had friends in the 80s who refused to come on board my little tri and mono racing friends who thought I had joined a cult. As someone who likes to race monos and dinghies, and cruise cats it always makes me roll me eyes when someone trots out the old stalwart argument as a way of advancing the debate.
From my experience of the debate over 35 years, anyone who thinks that cats are bad or monos are bad is either a bad sailor or hasn't sailed on enough good designs of either type. The great sailors - the Slingsbys, Novaks, Outerridges, sail any good boat they can get their hands on, no matter the number of hulls. They learn to sail them differently because the boats are different, not better or worse.
I met a guy with a trailerable tri on peel island. Had a nice covered open cabin/cockpit. Cooker. Furler. Light. Fast. And sat jn 30cm if water. I want one
In fact there are alot of tris up here and i know why. You just cant get shelter in alot of places in a deep keeler around here.
Hi Sector,
If you sail in Qld, yep, shallow water capability is a boon indeed, for mono's that means a lift/swing keel if you don't want the tippiness of a shoal draft keel (trailer sailors have a lot of good points). We pulled into Tangalooma recently when it was seriously packed. Navigating through the congestion looking for a spot, I had to drive through a narrow slot behind a catamaran parked no more than 10mtrs off the beach.
The poor guy on the cat and his mate on the beach were yelling at me not to be a fool, as we cheekily waved and motored straight on through. We often get funny looks in anchorages as we end up parked up next to the multis and the trailer sailors.