THE HISTORY OF THE DONG NAI 
                by Hoot Gibson 
              The sturdy, fast and elegant Dong Nai class gaff-rigged sloop  
                was conceived in the Mekong Delta in Southern Vietnam and perfected 
                along the war-torn coast of Nicaragua. Developed for use by Third 
                World subsistence fishermen, this hybrid of Asian and Western 
                nautical design is now being built, sailed and raced on the Chesapeake 
                Bay. 
                
                Dong Nai-class vessels in action in Nicaragua 
                -- 
                the craft to starboard is powered by Diesel, rather than the regulation 
                gaff rig.  
              Bob Means, a Southern 
                California native, is a lifelong, avid sailor. Bob also has an 
                avid interest in helping others. After combat service in Vietnam 
                as a United States Marine in  1967 and 1968, Bob 
                traveled to Central America under the auspices of his church to 
                build medical facilities and housing. There, he met Juliet, a 
                British nurse who became his wife. 
              Bob and Juliet formed  "Vets With a Mission,"  dedicated 
                to helping the Vietnamese rebuild their country. Juliet and Bob 
                moved to a houseboat on the Dong Nai River in the Mekong Delta 
                in southern Viet Nam and, with other returned vets, worked with 
                the Vietnamese at building hospitals, homes and better lives for 
                those suffering the aftereffects of the bitter, destructive war. 
              Bob noticed that the local fishermen were severely limited by 
                their equipment -- sampan-style boats  propelled 
                bicycle-style by pedals attached to paddles. Faster boats, able 
                to cover larger areas of water, would dramatically improve the 
                lot of the local fishermen, Bob felt. Working with a local sampan 
                craftsman, and using an illustration from the cover of the British 
                magazine Classic Boat as a guide to the sails and rigging, Means 
                went to work. After much trial and error, the Dong Nai prototype 
                was launched. 
              Much to the surprise of the locals, 
                this first effort -- christened Gecko -- performed 
                beyond anyone's wildest expectations. It headed up to wind smartly 
                and held steady at all points of sail. It was also extremely fast, 
                easy and cheap to build and operate.  
              Bob and Juliet left Vietnam to return 
                Nicaragua to help rebuild after the Sandinista/Contra  struggle. Bob saw that Nicaraguan fishermen, like their counterparts 
                in Vietnam, were in need of cheap, reliable boats. Bob launched 
                the Dong Nai Fishing Boat Project in Nicaragua and, with the help 
                of aid funds from many nations, outfitted local fishermen with 
                his design, enabling them to increase their range and productivity. 
              Bob and Juliet have since relocated to the hamlet of Remlik, 
                Virginia, near Urbanna, 
                on the Rappahannock river. There, at the Remlik Marina, Bob builds 
                and teaches other to build and sail the Dong Nai. The design is 
                proving to be as attractive to recreational sailors as it is to 
                the subsistence fishermen of Viet Nam and Nicaragua. 
                
                Heeled over in San Juan del Sur, on the 
                southern Pacific coast of Nicaragua. 
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