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DSK wrote:
Frank Maier wrote: But to address the issue, unlike Jax's imaginary friend who sails upwind under bare poles and motors for months on a gallon of gas, I have crossed the Atlantic on a Folkboat clone. I recommend against it. What would you say were the main plusses and minusses of the boat? What rout did you take and what season was it? Sounds like a cool trip, and obviously you survived ![]() Hi, Doug, Our trip originated in England. We started right after New Year's from the Canaries to Barbados. Two 21-year-old college graduates venturing out onto the deep blue. Oh yeah! Look out, world! Twentieth century argonauts loose on the Panthalassa. Our previous experiences included racing and cruising from New Orleans to Florida, the Yucatan, the Bahamas, and parts of the Caribbean. My friend had been living in England for the past four years while going to school, getting in some local daysailing and racing. He bought the boat the summer before our trip (summer of '68). In retrospect, that year I wish I'd stayed in New Orleans and crewed on one of the boats Charlie and Ginny sailed from New Orleans to Tortola to start a charter company they decided to call "The Moorings." Wonder how different my life would've been? Folkboat: Pluses: It crossed the Atlantic without sinking; but then, so did Thor Heyerdahl on a boat built of marsh reeds tied into bundles. The Ra, or at least Ra 2, may have leaked less than the Folkboat. And I think they were about as fast. Minuses: Everything else. Oh, you wanted more detail? Ok, some commentary: I've never been to jail. Well, ok, let me be more precise (honest). I've never spent more than one night in a holding cell; but I'm certain that a regular two-person cell would be roomier and more comfortable than a Folkboat. What's the old quote? It's either Boswell himself or him quoting Johnson saying something like, "Anyone smart enough to get into jail will do so rather than go sailing because sailing is like being in jail with a chance of drowning. And the company is better." Anyway, that's the gist. And that's a pretty good description of an ocean passage on a Folkboat. A jail cell in the clutches of a maniacal giant paint-can shaker. My experiences with that boat, and others, helped me decide that I was a "modern" sailor. The 60's were a time of great change in the sailing world as well as in the society around us. For me, the Cal 40, a "plastic" fin-keel sloop, vs. "traditional" designs was equivalent to Galileo telling the Papacy that the Earth goes around the sun, not vice versa, and y'all just better damned well get used to it. It was Darwin looking objectively at the reality around him and accepting that species evolve; they were not created directly by God as-is and intended by Him to remain as-is forever. Of course, there are still religious traditionalists, like sailing traditionalists, IMHO, who ignore reality in favor of their chosen philosophy. De gustibus... , I guess. So, you're perfectly welcome to go to sea in a Folkboat, or a Westsail 32, or any other "retro design" boat with a D/L ratio over 350. God bless you. Have fun. I'd be happy to buy you a rum punch if we meet in some island bar. We can savor our drinks and while away the evening arguing tracking, acceleration, comfort-motion, politics, religion, .... whatever. grin But me, since the early 70's, I've been essentially an anti-traditionalist. Mind you, I can walk the docks and admire the aesthetics of 'em; but when it comes time to actually go sailing, gimme a fiberglass fin-keel sloop. And please keep the D/L ratio under 250! YMMV, Frank |
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