Turks &   Caicos Islands sailing, a beautiful book, a new schooner   launched and  a model cross-masted cat 
                 
              
                
                    
                  
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              In the Turks and Caicos Islands at a   beach on Middle Island they periodically race model yachts in the shallow surf.   This first photograph (above) is almost like a painting and shows the skippers   running behind the sterns of their non-radio controlled craft, perhaps to keep   them on course, perhaps even to ensure that they don’t suddenly veer off and   sail away to another island. There are a few regattas every year and I guess it   pays to be fit !   Here is your Geography lesson (in case you have   never heard of these islands) They are 575 miles South-East of Miami and they   cover 193 square miles of the Atlantic ocean. By the way. the boats are carved   from large branches of the gum-elemi tree and each sloop has it’s weatherboard   in order to stabilize it in the ocean water. A simple form of model yachting at   little expense and as I have always been saying, yet another form of model   sailboating 
              
                
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              Someone I met many many years ago in   Plymouth, Montserrat in the Caribbean Leewards island group had a weird   cross-eyed cat that I clearly remember, but I have to admit that I had never   heard of a catamaran with a rig consisting of a mast on or closely situated to   each hull. That was until Auckland Ancient   Mariner, Alexander Bartlett produced this RC model version. Multihull   followers may well be aware of the concept. Alex, known for his fine    ketches and schooners wanted to build something `different’ and after   talking to well known kiwi yacht designer, Jim Young  he decided to base   the model on one of Jim’s `Typhoon’ hull designs, then go non-conventional with   regard to mast placement ie a mast on each   hull. 
              Hull construction was of 3mm marine   ply on 4mm ply frames, the length overall 1,160mm with a beam of 570mm. Alex   went for a mast height of 900mm which although it looked `right’ I tend to   favour slightly taller masts which with added sail area would possibly improve   the `get up and go’ of the model. He made the masts and spars out of model   aeroplane aerofoil shape aluminium. 
              The boat aptly named Duet which is a lovely name, however had   one disadvantage  noticed when the boat was first trialled, that being    the windward sail tended to blanket the leeward one.  Alex    worked on correcting that but eventually re-rigged the model as a   single-master and a better sailing model   resulted. 
              
                
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                  Photograph at left by Tim Carr   | 
                 
               
              Where Albatross and Dias died! To me there is   always a touch of sadness when a boat of any kind sinks at sea or goes down   completely or partially but permanently at her moorings, what is left of the   vessel then a reminder of once proud days and later abandonment to tides that   will eventually break her up.  This wonderful sadness-evoking photograph by   Tim Carr of Falmouth punt Curlew fame taken at Grytviken on South Georgia Island in the Antarctic,   shows the rusting remains of the 1906 trawler Dias and the 1921 whale catcher Albatross.  One of the very best   books I have ever seen, and one of my most prized possessions is Tim and Pauline   Carr-s book Antarctic Oasis published by Norton, the photograph usage courtesy of Tim and Pauline   Carr, the authors.  In my humble opinion,  if you only bought one more   book in your life this is it, for you owe it to yourself to read about and look   at truly stunning and rare photographs of the wildlife and the majestic scenery   of this still unspoilt part of the planet on which we   live. 
              
                
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              What an exciting  model yacht Club !  I   chanced upon the website of the Paderewski   Model Yacht Club in Plainville, Connecticut, USA and remained riveted   somewhat to it. Great scenic sailing water, some eight classes of boats from   Footy’s up to the Canterbury J’s as they have in Christchurch, New Zealand and a   well put together website that is both interesting and `exciting’ to say the   least. Maybe a bigger story later, time will tell. but meanwhile have a look at   both the Canterbury J paint job above, and the other photograph of a new   Canterbury J boat on the lakeside.  Membership of the club is made up of a   group of model yachting enthusiasts who gather on Saturdays and Wednesdays, to   sail during Spring, Summer and Fall and some really dedicated  and `hardy’   souls also sail during the Winter whenever the pond is clear of   ice. 
                
              `there is a very fine   line 
              between hobby 
              and mental   illness’ 
              `Loopy’ Ludwig (who didn’t quite make it   !) 
                 
               
              
              Ron Rule, an Auckland Ancient Mariner model sailor, started off   by drawing a triangle on a scrap of paper then this rather stunning little   Footy-sized model (above left) resulted. It goes well enough too but it is too   early to know how fast it may be.  A few weeks after I had seen it, I   received a release from Estrella   Damm, the Spanish Brewery, advising that their red dart-like IMOCA   Open 60 (seen above right) had won its first race on August 8th (The   Artemis Challenge) run as part of Skandia   Cowes Week. Each of seven boats were racing for a charity, Estrella Damm with a crew of seven for Africa Viva, a charity based in   Barcelona  working on development programmes in Western Africa. Now Ron’s   Footy is not disimilar the Open 60 in appearance is it? 
              
                
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              Andrew Charters of Meggett in South   Carolina, USA has added a fisherman’s staysail to his favourite among all his   schooners. Elizabeth Silsbee, the   new sail seen above drawing well. This leads me to show you in the second   photograph which he took, the new 150 ton, 140’ pilot schooner Spirit of South Carolina after she was   launched. The boat has got such beautiful lines I keep hinting to Andrew that   she would make a lovely RC model. The other two photographs show a fine display   model already built of the boat, one Bill Baum of Brevard, North Carolina, the   man who built the model, then the model itself. The South Carolina Maritime Heritage Foundation mission  is to offer a unique educational platform for students,   to encourage responsibility and teamwork, and other attributes to become future   leaders. 
              
                
                    
                    
                  `Don’t go to sea without money, for   if the 
                      ship were to go down you’d want to   have 
                      a   monetary offering if only for the fish to  
                       know that their dinner host was   a man of   
                    some wealth and generous to a   fault’. 
                   Aurelius BangBangdimus   1847-1899 
  (and please don’t   say you haven’t heard of him!) 
                   
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               Steve Levesque, now First Officer of   the Marine Modellers Club of New England and until the end of the last year, Commodore, is not only an   excellent craftsman, but a most energetic and enthusiastic and prolific model   builder. He is seen here with his ketch Jammon which is a John Storrow design, the   boat also shown photographed under sail by Bill Richards in the second   photograph. The club has no official home base or clubhouse and sails at a pond   in Medway, Massachusetts about 25 miles west of Boston. Bill tells me that the   club is about fifteen years old and was originally focused on member-built scale   model RC boats, but the range of interests covered has now broadened to help   compensate for declining membership. 
              
               Tobago   Quickie 
               Sudden as an errant   bug, wanderlust it gripped me, 
              and as I watched my   life flow by, like a fish temptation nipped me. 
              My hull was clothed   in barnacles, 
              auxilliary engine   old and tired, 
              decking worn and   sails all torn,  I so long retired. 
              So it would seem I   could only dream, put away the travel cases, 
              leave the seas to   other dreamers lured by distant places. 
              Then I heard the   call of the pond, (those islands aint so far), 
              batteries are   charged the sun is out and the schooner is in the   car. 
              Out on the water the   fun kicked in  
                and we shot down a wave and were   flying, 
                but when I got home,   yelled “BEEN TO TOBAGO”,  
              the wife instantly knew I was lying! 
            Mark   Steele 
               
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