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Roger ,, A Cape Horn! A fellow Bristol owner has just completed an
Atlantic crossing :: This is his boat .. and he has the Cape Horn. I got an email from John just after he arrived in Martinique. He said the Cape Horn steered the boat all the way. The following is his email message. "Just got into Martinique from single-handing from the Canary Islands. The Cape Horn did most of the steering for three thousand miles. I recommend it." =================== 'Kestrel' is a 1976 32-foot Bristol sloop, continuously improved over 28 years by owners, always with serious blue water work in mind. After a shakedown cruise from Chesapeake Bay to Bermuda and back in 2001, Kestrel was prepared for more ambitious plans. In the late Spring of 2005, she set sail for Ireland, which was the first leg of a 2 - year Atlantic circle. Since that trans-Atlantic passage, Kestrel toured Scotland (the lower Hebrides in June and July of 2006), then, after a brief return to Ireland, sailed to Spain (La Coruna). She then hopped down the Atlantic coast of Portugal, winding up in Lagos, where she left continental Europe to jump out to the Atlantic Islands, beginning with Porto Santo in the Madeira Group. In December, John single-handed Kestrel from the Canary Islands to Martinique, where wife Kathy came aboard. Kestrel is currently (winter, 2006-07) cruising the Antilles. Bristol 32 Specifications (1976) a.. LWL - 22' 0" b.. LOA - 32' 1" c.. Beam 9' 5" d.. Draft (keel) 4' 7.5" e.. Ballast 3900# f.. Displacement 10,800# g.. Sail Area (sloop) 464 sq. ft. h.. P=33.05' P2=38.5' B=13.48' J=12.58' ================================= I'd say that an Atlantic crossing in a 32' boat shows how well the Cape Horn works. I am leaning toward the Voyager vane. It isn't as much vane as the Cape Horn but I think it will work with my tiller a bit better. The Voyager is only $2500. I think that is a little less than the Cape Horn.. Will need to wait on the vane self steering though. Lots of projects to do. ==================== I may be able to help you out on the cruising spinnaker front. Send me your measurements. Luff, Leach, Foot.. etc. I have been looking around all fall and winter for sails. I have a line on a few. I will go through my sail contacts this week and see what I have. There are plenty for sale, finding them is the hard part. Bacon Assoc, in MD has lots of cruising spinnakers but they are all in the $700 ++ range. I spoke to the owner one day. He said that they take something like a 40% commission on sails. So.. an $800 sail? That means the owner of the sail is getting around $480. I have been looking on Ebay. Not much yet. The spring is still a month away for equipment sales. Anyhow,, I will check my inbox. And if I see something I will send it along. === "Roger Long" wrote in message ... I'm kind of short on sails for our E 32 but even shorter on space to put them. The working jib takes up most of the hanging locker so nothing can hang. The 130 roller Genoa probably won't fit in there so it isn't going to be a six berth boat when I want to put the working jib on. After seeing how well the boat goes with the smaller jib, I'm probably going to want to use it a lot. We have just the two jibs and the main. Two reefs in the main alone should handle a good deal of wind and the working jib can be rolled in a pinch although it doesn't have foam in the leading edge. I'm having leech doublings put on it so I can leave it up and rolled in the sun more often. The big Genoa is best as a downwind sail. I wish I'd gotten my hands on that cruising spinnaker before you did. If I can get one, I might just leave the Genoa home. One thing that's been keeping me from thinking about downwind kites is the difficulty of setting them shorthanded in a quick turning boat. I'm sending in a deposit on a Cape Horn steering gear tomorrow so that's going to change the equasion a lot. If something goes wrong getting a spinnaker up and down, my crew will be able to leave the wheel and help me deal with it. Let me know if you see another cruising spinnaker for a 32 foot boat under $500. -- Roger Long |
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