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Sail Number of the Day

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    Posted: 01 Feb 14 at 5:12pm

Taken in 1969 - I still have the boat
Mk IV Osprey 1314 Think Again

Kielder Water Sailing Club
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Post Options Post Options   Quote patj Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 02 Feb 14 at 7:49am
N12 33 at Roadford Lake June 2013
 
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Post Options Post Options   Quote winging it Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 02 Feb 14 at 9:28pm
So pretty!
the same, but different...

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Post Options Post Options   Quote JimC Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 04 Feb 14 at 12:05am

International Canoe Summer meeting 1948.
35 is Storm Petrel, the first of 3 Uffa Fox Canoes built that year - the first since the war. 35 was apparently the only one that could be persuaded to measure without measurement bumps! She won two races in the New York Canoe Club trophy that year. Storm Petrel was recorded still in existence in 1980, I have heard nothing later.


Bit out of sequence, but I forgot a couple of days ago. This is Wake, a very famous Canoe built in 1937, but fitted with the fully battened mainsail in 1946. This was the first modern style fully battened mainsail on a Canoe in the UK (and probably one of the first two or three full stop), inspired by Manfred Curry's books. Wake is believed to be in a Swedish Museum.

Photos and information from Andrew Eastwood's UK Canoe History "From the Rob Roy to the International Ten Square Metre Canoe".

Edited by JimC - 04 Feb 14 at 12:15am
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Post Options Post Options   Quote rogerd Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 04 Feb 14 at 6:36pm
Originally posted by JimC


International Canoe Summer meeting 1948.
35 is Storm Petrel, the first of 3 Uffa Fox Canoes built that year - the first since the war. 35 was apparently the only one that could be persuaded to measure without measurement bumps! She won two races in the New York Canoe Club trophy that year. Storm Petrel was recorded still in existence in 1980, I have heard nothing later.


Bit out of sequence, but I forgot a couple of days ago. This is Wake, a very famous Canoe built in 1937, but fitted with the fully battened mainsail in 1946. This was the first modern style fully battened mainsail on a Canoe in the UK (and probably one of the first two or three full stop), inspired by Manfred Curry's books. Wake is believed to be in a Swedish Museum.

Photos and information from Andrew Eastwood's UK Canoe History "From the Rob Roy to the International Ten Square Metre Canoe".


Lovely pictures and if they are still around it would be amazing to see them on the water. A bit later on in this thread we will see Rannoch. If PatJ doesn't get there first I will post the pics.
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Post Options Post Options   Quote patj Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 04 Feb 14 at 6:48pm
Roger - I'll leave you to do Rannoch if I can do Terrapin tomorrow ;-)
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Post Options Post Options   Quote rogerd Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 04 Feb 14 at 9:17pm
I only have the one picture of Terrapin sailing as 36 and as its sail numbers that count she may show up later on. You are welcome Pat
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Post Options Post Options   Quote patj Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 05 Feb 14 at 6:37am
As promised Terrapin - Merlin 36, another boat with history, as it was Ian Proctor's first Merlin and he was third at the very first Merlin Nationals, behind Jack Holt in Gently (see no 16). Ian obviously disliked the big wooden mast as he went on to experiment with alloy masts and start Proctor masts, now Selden.
 
The narrow early Merlins have rolled side decks and this shot taken at Clywedog in 2006 shows just how far you can go without capsizing - at that angle you'd never recover in a modern "flying saucer" shaped Merlin Rocket but 36 did!
 
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Post Options Post Options   Quote rogerd Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 05 Feb 14 at 7:06am


36 (honest) before rescue
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Post Options Post Options   Quote JimC Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 05 Feb 14 at 3:38pm


A couple more early 50s Canoe shots, of 36, Mederka, again from Andrew Eastwood's book. Again I haven't seen any records of this one since 1980. Interesting that, even with an early cut and the wholly inadequate kickers of the early 50s, you can see how the lower leech stands up better on 31s fully battened sail than on the soft sails of the other boats.


Edited by JimC - 05 Feb 14 at 3:40pm
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