Dear friends of the JRA!
After 9 months of intensive refitting, Shui Jen has been launched and sailed again.
Shui Jen is a Kingfisher 20+ that belong to Vincent Reddish, she spent her last 15 years in the french alps. The last two she was not sailed and since 2021 belongs to me and my family.
Shui Jen has been loved by all her former owners but has not been updated in the last years. Her refitting was the perfect occasion for us to know each others better and to get started in the world of yachting.
The refitting included:
-a new sail made of Odissey III cloth;
-a new sail cover;
-new alloy battens and yard;
-new blocks and dyneema lines and parrels;
-a three part Euphore made of a Dyneema line and Burton rings;
-new wedges made of pine wood;
-new mast coat made of neoprene and PVC sewn together;
-new windows of Plexiglass with neoprene gaskets;
-new 12 volt electrical system including a 50w solar panel;
-painting the inside;
All these works were made on ourselves.
The works on hull and seacocks were made professionally because of lack of experience and time. These works were made by Viacheslav, a former cadet of the soviet navy that worked firstly as captain on cargo vessels around the world and now works as a skipper and boat builder in the harbor of Koper (Slovenia). The works included:
-removing the old layers of antifouling to the gel coat;
-removing the rust on the keels;
-sealing the two seacocks on the starboard side;
-replacing the aft seacock with a new one of bronze;
-epoxying all the little and big defects of hull, deck and keels;
-smoothing hull and keel with primer;
-painting deck and hull in a fresh snow white colour;
-new black antifoulig;
-installing a bilge pump;
Viacheslav found little signs of osmosis and a lot of cracks on the gel coat. The keels were rusty but solidly attached. As the seacocks were replaced, he was impressed by the thickness of the fiberglass. He found that the hull of our boat is thicker than that of a Nauticat 33, he had worked on. Accordingly, his comment on our boat was: „she is build like a tank and her hull is strong like a stone!“.
Shui Jen was lunched on July 2022. On her maiden voyage she was sailed from Portoroz (Slovenia) to Monfalcone (Italy) from a crew of two: Viacheslav and me. I think he accepted to come with me in this first sea trial, also because of curiosity on the Junk rig and on this little strange boat. In the time he worked on Shui Jen, I explained him all the advantages and peculiarities of the JR I’ve read about, but I’ve never sailed one. Hoisting the sail in the gentle wind from the NW was the moment of the truth: either the confirmation that what I told him about the JR was right, or the demonstration that all the theory I’ve talked about was false.
As all the 7 panels inflated and the sail start to pull the boat closed hauled on the starboard tack, I screamed „it works!“ and yelled out a woohoo of relief and happiness. A gentle pull on the throat hauling parrel eliminated almost all the diagonal creases off the panels and Shui Jen started to point a bit higher than the old bermudian sloop near us. After a while, we tacked and set our curse to N to reach Monfalcone. Because of sailing on the „bad tack“ we planned a couple of tacks more, but as the boat could point quite good, these were not necessary and we made the entire leg on this tack. We covered the 17 miles in 5 hours making and average speed of 3.5 knots in 8 to 9 knots of wind.
The boat is due to her weight and the two keels very stable. She is also quite sensible and the tiller is light. I think she has a little weather helm but more sailing is needed to confirm this first impression…
I’d like to thank Linda & Pete Hill for supporting me and encouraging us in doing this; Arne for sharing his knowledge in a way that enables beginners to realize such a miracle; my wife for supporting me and sharing with me a good amount of the work…
Buon vento a tutti
Mauro