On the joys of traditional wooden sailboats

One of the things that I was involved in; a hobby really, was the design of numerous wooden sail boats. This occurred when I was in land-locked Indiana. It was hot, boring, corn as far as the eye can see, and I worked in a “real life” Office Space environment. My only escape was hope.

I well remember the day trip that I, as a young AOC at NAS, NASC Pensacola, Florida and my class 21-83, enjoyed. It was on a 53 foot (as I recall) ketch, and we spent the afternoon sailing in Pensacola bay.

I well remember the sun, the breeze and how all my troubles melted away as we enjoyed the day. We learned basic seamanship, watched dolphins sail along side. We practiced overboard drills, and watched our sails go luffing.

But Indiana was harsh, cold and barron. I worked as a drone in a cubicle mill for the mega-company General Motors in one of their divisions; Delco Electronics.

And in those days, the hope was to sail away to an interesting place at the other side of the world.  Here we will touch on some of the beauty of wooden sail craft. I had met numerous people who were building their own sailboats, mostly out of steel, and then hauling them to the great lakes and living their dream of freedom and escape. It appealed to me at that time, and I bought every book that I could get, and read them all voraciously.

I subscribed to magazines about sailing and adventure. I also equipped my home with a fine tool shop of wood and metal working tools, and bought the plans to construct a 53-foot ketch. I was that “into” the dream. There is really so much to cover in this venue, that I am just going to bounce around from here to there and let the pictures tell the story.

Sailboat Hull Types

Sailboats ride on different hulls, which differ in the total number of hulls and their shape. It’s really simple, actually.

Alden schooner plans.

The basic three hull types include:

  • Monohulls (one hull)
  • Catamarans (two hulls)
  • Trimarans (three hulls)

Monohulls Monohulls have one hull but that doesn’t make them all the same. Traditional monohulls may have full keels (heavy encapsulated ballast that runs along the bottom of the hull), cutaway keels (similar to full but the forefoot is cutaway allowing the boat greater maneuverability in tight quarters) or bolted on fin keels that may have a bulb at the bottom for extra ballast to keep the vessel stable.

Monohull.

Monohulls can also have a swing keel, daggerboard or centerboard that retracts up into an appendage in the hull itself.

With the keel or board up, the boat can enter shallow water and can travel faster downwind. With the keel down, the vessel tracks better upwind. Small monohulls like sailing dinghies, may also have shallow planing hulls that can surf off a wave.

Finally, monohulls can also foil on appendages (usually made of carbon fiber) with the actual hull out of the water when a minimum speed is reached.

Catamarans Catamarans (often nicknamed “cats”) have two hulls with a deck or trampoline in between. Large cats (35 feet and over) have become popular in charter use because they offer more interior and deck space and an easier motion to induce less seasickness. Small catamarans usually have just a trampoline in between the hulls and make fun daysailers.

Catamaran.

Because catamarans don’t have deep and heavy keels, they tend to sail faster off the wind.

Foiling catamarans were made popular by the America’s Cup races and are proliferating into general cruising use.

Trimarans Trimarans have three hulls: a main hull and two amas (side hulls used for stability). On some trimarans, the arms that hold the amas can fold inward, making the trimaran narrower and in some cases trailerable. Large cruising trimaranas are gaining popularity because they are stable and fast sailers.

Sailboat Rig Types

Sailboat rigging includes:

  • the mast(s);
  • boom(s);
  • and the shrouds or stays that hold up the mast.

A sailboat with one mast is usually a sloop with one mainsail and one headsail. A cutter rig usually has one mast but two or more headsails. This rig “cuts” the foretriangle between the head (forward) stay and the main mast. Multiple headsails allow for flexible sail combinations in variable wind conditions.

1897 William Fife Gaff Cutter.
A 40 foot gaff-rigged cutter.

Ketches and yawls have a secondary mast behind the main one. The ketch configuration places that mizzenmast behind the mainmast but ahead of the rudderpost while the yawl places it behind the post.

The second mast is shorter than the main mast. Both of these designs (split rigs) provide more sail area that isn’t reliant solely on the height of the mainmast and therefore can be easier to manage when sailing shorthanded.

A gaff-rigged ketch.
An Alden 56 Yawl.

Schooners also have multiple masts—two or more. However, the foremost mast is shorter than the main mast. Tall ship rigging is in its own category and can get quite complex.

Gaff rigged schooner.

Most Rigs are Marconi Rigs

Most of the rigs are known as Marconi rigs. Meaning that it’s just one sail to catch the wind. But my love is for the Gaff rigs. Here is there is a sail above it to catch the littlest wisps of air that lie above. It’s rarely seen today because it’s really a lot of work.

The top triangular sail is the top-sail on a gaff rig.

Sailboat Types by Primary Use

You can do many of the same things on all sailboats, but some types are more specialized.

Sailing dinghies: Small boats usually sailed by one or two people, sailing dinghies are often used to teach new sailors. That said, experts on high tech sailing dinghies compete in athletic racing up to Olympic level.

Day cruisers: Although any sailboat can be cruised for a day, day cruisers are often boats shorter than 30 feet that are designed to be sailed for an afternoon. They’re usually more Spartan in their outfitting and may or may not have a cabin with amenities.

Sailing cruisers: These sailboats can be monohulls or multihulls and are designed to cruise for weekends or longer. They usually have a berth (bed), a head (toilet) and a galley (kitchen). They can be sloop, cutter, ketch, yawl or schooner-rigged and vary in length (from 25-85 feet). Larger sailboats tend to fall into the crewed superyacht category.

Racing sailboats: Most offshore racers are larger boats crewed by multiple individuals while smaller racers can be single or double-handed. Racing boats are usually built lighter, have fin keels and laminate performance sails.

Racer/cruisers: These designs try to straddle the two above. They’re usually more lightly built cruisers with full amenities so they can be weekended. Some people will argue that these boats are a compromise for owners who want to primarily cruise but also race.

Bluewater cruising sailboats: These boats are designed to cross oceans or sail “blue waters.” They’re typically heavier in build with a stout rig and are fully equipped for extended offshore use.

Motorsailers: This term has fallen out of favor since it’s often pejorative. These sailboats may rely on the engine to sail in light wind conditions, especially due to their excessive weight.

Antique/classic sailboats: These are usually older restored vessels. They may be built of wood and have classic yawl rigs. These sailboats are often showcased in special events.

Sailboats occupy multiple segments and experienced sailors learn the finer points of design and use. Then, they never see two sailboats the same way again.

Just some pictures of beauty

We start with…

The 39m Schooner-rigged yacht VAGRANT from 1913.

And this…

Not a sailboat, but a wooden lovely never the less.

My love for these works of art has never diminished.

I love the lines, the craftsmanship and the quality.

And…

Nice weathered teak decking.

And…

A gaff-rigged catboat.

And…

Sailing day boat in a yawl configuration.

Some interiors

Let’s take a look what’s inside…

This is what you see when you step inside.

And…

Many sailboats have a pilot house inside so that you don’t need to get wet sailing in the rain. This is what it looks like.

And…

This is the interior of a motor-sailer. It has a sail, but relies on a motor to get from point A to point B.

And…

The pilot house in the aforementioned motor-sailer.

And…

Here’s what a berth looks like.

And…

Interiors can be quite cozy.

And why I Love it

video 53MB

Conclusion / The end of the story

I was laid off. I wasn’t given any notice. I was just told to hand in my badge and never come back.

For the remaining five months I laboriously tried to find work elsewhere, and then when I did, I had to sell off most of my tools, books, and abandon the framework of my dream sailboat.

It’s called life.

You would think that my manager and his manager, and his boss, and the boss above them would have the compassion to give someone who worked for them for five years the consideration of a month’s notice, or some severance pay. But they didn’t.

I was only an engineer, and a disposable one at that.

So I left Indiana, and moved on with my life. And two years later, my life was substantially better, nicer, and in every way a great improvement.

So don’t get all caught up in the negative aspects of the twisty and turny thing called life.

You adapt to the changes as they are and not pine away for what you wish them to be.

I still have and possess my love of sail, water, the ocean, boats and all the rest.

Years passed.

I obtained work in the South Pacific in American Samoia.

However, after living in Pago Pago and actually meeting the people who wrote those articles praising the lifestyle, I (and my wife) decided that we really didn’t want to have any part of it. Pago Pago was beautiful. It was lovely. But the sailing LIFESTYLE was not.

Not at all. It’s a life of hardship and not as glamorous as it was made out to be in all those magazines and books that I read.

Yet, here I am.

I am living a life of adventure and delicious food.

So when one dream collapses another materializes to take it’s place. That too is called life.

Embrace it.

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What happened to the Polish Navy when the Nazi Germans and the Soviet Russians invaded.

In September 1939, Hitler and his Nazi German army invaded Poland.

And did so in an embarrassingly short period of time.

The Germans (and the Soviets) destroyed the country and annexed it.

The solders, intellectuals, and leadership were all sent to the gulags, where they were later all killed.

Stalin’s order to shoot the Poles.
A map of the Katyn massacre site.
Katyn related books and videos.
Information about the photos used in this site.
Katyn photos which people have sent me.
1943 Nazi photos of exhumations in Katyn Forest.
Polish language Katyn Forest Massacre lesson from the Association of Polish Teachers Abroad.
The Anglo-Polish agreement of 25 August 1939.
Early German/Soviet co-operation: the Treaty of Rapallo.
The rebellion of Russian troops at Courtine in 1917.
Second Lieutenant Janina Dowbor Musnicki Lewandowska, the Polish woman pilot murdered at Katyn by the Soviets.
A copy of the “legalistic” pretext Tito’s “communists” used to murder Professor Doctor Ljudevit Jurak, on 10 June 1945.

It would be a half a decade before Poland reappeared out from the ashes of that most horrible September.

One of the mysteries is what happened to the Polish Navy. Well, here in this post we discuss that.

Dar Pomorza was one of the few Polish ships to escape initial destruction in September 1939.

Dar Pomorza was one of the few Polish ships to escape initial destruction in September 1939.

The butcher’s list in that month included:

  • Bałtyk, abandoned and captured by the Germans
  • The destroyer-sized minelayer ORP Gryf, lost on the third day of the war.
  • The French-built destroyer ORP Wicher.
  • All six Jaskółka-class minesweepers, each sunk or captured
  • The old Russian gunboats ORP Generał Haller and ORP Komendant Pilsudski, sunk.
  • The former German torpedo boat ORP Mazur, sent to the bottom
  • The entire Pinsk riverine flotilla of more than a dozen monitors and gunboats, scuttled or likewise captured

Dar Pomorza, along with other key maritime assets, were saved by design.

Adm. Unrug (who spent the rest of the war in German POW camps) crafted his “Peking Plan” that sent the new destroyers ORP Burza, ORP Błyskawica, and ORP Grom to British waters in late August 1939.  There,  they formed a new Free Polish Navy under the escaped Chief of Staff VADM Świrski after Warsaw fell.

Likewise, the wily former Great War U-boat skipper sent his five submarines abroad after their initial war patrol under his Worek Plan with orders to sail to England if possible, and otherwise to be interned in a neutral Swedish port.

ORP Wilk made it to England as did ORP Orzeł (after a narrow escape from Estonia) while ORP Sęp, ORP Ryś, and ORP Żbik sailed for Sweden.

The training ship ORP Iskra, on a Med cruise, sailed for Casablanca and spent the war as an MTB tender in Gibraltar.

Under the command of Capt. Konstanty “Cat” Kowalski, Dar Pomorza sortied from her Polish homeport in late August 1939 and made Stockholm, where the ship was interned.

Not to be kept from the war, Cat left the White Lady with seven volunteers commanded by the ship’s radioman and subsequently bugged out for England with the rest of her crew and 149 cadets, destined for Polish-flagged freighters and Free Polish naval ships.

Once there, he reformed the Polish merchant school in Southampton where its trained replacement sailors for the Gdynia-America Shipping Lines who sailed with Allied cargoes under the Polish flag during the conflict.

Polish merchant ships carried more than 5 million tons of cargo during the war and were part of every campaign in the ETO from Dunkirk to the liberation of Denmark.

Meanwhile, former cadets from Iskra and Dar Pomorza filtered out not only through the Polish vessels but also the Royal Navy proper—four such students went down with HMS Hood in 1941.

Once the war was over, Dar Pomorza sailed for home in October 1945, arriving there with a scratch crew.

As for Cat, eschewing a return to Soviet-occupied Poland, he elected to emigrate to the U.S. and became a merchant mariner there. He was not alone. VADM Świrski, the former Tsarist officer who led the Free Polish Navy, did not return to Poland and remained in London exile until his death.

Unrug, the fleets 1939 boss, likewise settled in France after his liberation from Oflag VII-A Murnau by the U.S. 12th Armored Division in 1945.
.
Regardless of the country’s location behind the Iron Curtain, Dar Pomorza remained Poland’s ambassador, taking part in regular merchant training cruises around Europe beginning again in 1946. Notably, Capt. Konstanty Matyjewicz-Maciejewicz, her former skipper during her round-the-world cruise, was head of the merchant marine academy at the time, having survived the war under occupation despite some rough handling from the Gestapo.

For more information

You can find a very detailed article and summary of the Polish Navy during World War II HERE. If you have any interest at all in this subject, you would find this article riveting.

Other links

  • https://sites.google.com/site/secondpolishrepublik/mis-articulos/chapter-09
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polish_Navy_order_of_battle_in_1939
  • http://hmscavalier.org.uk/G90/ About the ORP Orkan
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ORP_Burza
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grom-class_destroyer
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peking_Plan
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ORP_Wilk_(1929)

Conclusion

I find this very interesting. 

You see, when a nation collapses, and is destroyed in such a way that it no longer appears on any maps, what actually happens is that the survivors gather themselves and flee. Then, far and away, they survive. Some fight on, while others retire.

Poland was carved up by the invading forces and ceased to exist.

What ever happens in the future regarding the collapse of nations, you must realize that collapse is never total, complete and final. But rather the remnants flee and set up enclaves far away. Many times they simply interact with the local cultures and create cultural enclaves. Such as what happened with the Confederates that fled the United States during the loss of the American civil war.

And with this in mind, we can see that life goes on.

Sure Poland was devastated to a point where it was a land of rubble and destruction, but those that survived lived on elsewhere and merged their culture and understandings with the locals near their new settlements.

A word to the wise for anyone who is worrying about an unknown future.

Do you want more?

You can read more in my Happiness Index here…

Life & Happiness

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Master Index

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