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![]() Oz1 wrote: Would the outboard push you to windward in those conditions? ;- On which topic: a fascinating small book which you may be able to get out of a larger library is Ron Thiele (1987) "Ketch hand: the twilight of sail in South Australian waters" Main'sle Books, PO Box 316 Portland, Victoria 3305 (Australia) ISBN 0-7316-1551-4 One of the interesting facets is that quite a proportion of the remaining mosquito fleet of coastal ketches and schooners after 1945 were lost, because they were bought, cheap, by non-sailors just back from the war planning shark fisheries or tourist ventures or just wandering. On the SA lee coasts, hit by westerly changes (always on delivery/pickup voyages) they forgot that they were sailing a sailing ship and relied not on the sails but on the auxiliary motors, which being crank, or ancient, or simply inadequate, lost their small ships. If they'd sailed them, they'd mostly have survived. In neither of my admittedly iconoclastic craft has the motor ever been the device to rely on in times of trouble. Many tell me that this is _not_ the case in a _proper_ sailboat, where the auxiliary is _always_ to be depneded on, and indeed started at the first sign of trouble. But somehow, I fail to be convinced. PS. I must say, the ancient 9.9 Honda renders the miseries of the more ancient Tadpole seagull to distant memory. But there is always a sail up, except in the marina where they won't allow it, and in there, there's always an anchor for that happy day when the motor dies unexpectedly. And no: the 9.9 would be totally inadequate to push to windward directly in that chop. It wouldn't be in the water long enough...I did use it as a sail assist at one stage though. Flying Tadpole |
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