It's raining Badgers..

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  • 17 Dec 2013 11:39
    Reply # 1459604 on 1456707
    Beautifully written Graham.  Thank you. 
  • 16 Dec 2013 22:43
    Reply # 1459327 on 1456707
    Deleted user
    Ditto. I hope David Tyler prints it in our next magazine too! Come to think of it, it would make a good 'add on' to the site's Home Page. Hmm.
    Last modified: 16 Dec 2013 22:44 | Deleted user
  • 15 Dec 2013 23:40
    Reply # 1458720 on 1456707
    I hope that Graham's letter gets published and maybe starts some debate about JR.  Sad so many people are motoring around when if they had junk sails, they might be sailing :-0
  • 15 Dec 2013 23:10
    Reply # 1458714 on 1456707
    Deleted user
    Graham I think that is one of the best summaries of the benefits of a junk rig. that I have ever read.
  • 15 Dec 2013 22:04
    Reply # 1458668 on 1456707
    Just for interest, I have copied here the letter that I have sent to Cruising Helmsman re their December cover.

    As the sailor of a junk-rigged yacht and a member of the Junk Rig Association (www.junkrigassociation.org), I was delighted to see the cover of December's Cruising HelmsmanIsabella, the vessel depicted, is a dory-style yacht designed by Jay Benford, and a sistership to the famous Badger sailed by Annie Hill (see  her book, Voyaging on a Small Income).

    It is incorrect, however, to describe Isabella's rig as gaff-rigged, junk style.  it is 100% a junk rig.  Perhaps you were confused by the position of the yard which makes it look something like a gaff.  You can see, however, upon closer examination, that there is only one halyard, attached to the yard at the centre, unlike a gaff that has both a throat and a peak halyard.  You can also see another line that goes from the halyard attachment point around the mast and back (and then down to the deck).  This is the yard-hauling parrel which normally holds the centre of the yard in close to the mast when it is tensioned.  Isabella appears to be either reefing or hoisting sail in this photo which is why the yard hauling parrel is slack.

    I have included a few photos of my vessel, Arion, to assist in clarification.  Arion is a Tom Thumb 24 aboard which I have lived and cruised the east coast of Australia for the last 17 years.  In 2011 I converted the rig from bermudian cutter to junk sloop.  Isabella's sails appear to be flat cut in this photo, but you will note that Arion's sails have some camber in the panels.  This is the latest development in junk rig design and I am pleased to say that the result gives a rig that performs pretty much as well as the old bermudian rig did. 

    Off the wind the junk rig is far more powerful than the original bermudian main and jib combination.  It is more like setting a spinnaker - without, I might add, any of the work involved in setting and retrieving that sail.  Hoisting the junk sail is hard work, owing to the weight of yard and battens (this weight is offset by not having any standing rigging on the mast), but once the sail is up, handling the rig is almost effortless.  You can short tack through an anchorage without handling sheets, gybing, if done correctly, is a tame affair, reefing is just a matter of easing the halyard and adjusting the sheet, and running off merely requires the sheet to be eased,  Gone are the days of balancing on the foredeck wrestling with poled out headsails.  Finally, the entire rig is very lightly stressed, which makes for relaxed sailing.

    All rigs are a compromise - rather like life in general - but now that I am familiar with sailing under the junk rig, I'd be reluctant to go back to bermudian rig, or gaff for that matter!

    Fair winds,
    Graham Cox  
  • 15 Dec 2013 20:15
    Reply # 1458602 on 1456707
    When I sent my article to Cruising Helmsman I included a link to JRA. I've seen the photo and thought straight away it was a JR but then I read the blurb and believed it. Silly me.
  • 14 Dec 2013 20:45
    Reply # 1458269 on 1456707
    Deleted user
    Hi Gary. Having had more days off the site that planned (thanks Lesley for covering again) I thought, when I saw the title of this thread, that you'd noticed the two Badgers on the Members' Area page. It really is raining Badgers...
  • 14 Dec 2013 00:54
    Reply # 1457881 on 1456707
    Deleted user
    They were well respected once, but not since they started reviewing $500k boats, and the fact they dont know a junk rig from a gaff kind of confirms it.
  • 13 Dec 2013 21:10
    Reply # 1457789 on 1456707
    Good Idea Annie.  I had thought of it but was too slack.  I will send them a letter today and include a couple of photos of Arion for clarification.
  • 13 Dec 2013 20:25
    Reply # 1457742 on 1457282
    Graham Cox wrote: The notes on page 3 are also misleading, describing the boat as gaff-rigged, junk style, whatever that is supposed to mean.  I think they are confused by the fact that the yard hauling parrel is slack, allowing the yard to move well aft.  It would appear that they are in the process of either reefing or hoisting sail.                        

    It's quite astonishing that a well-respected magazine such as Cruising Helmsman should apparently have no-one on staff who knows what a junk rig is.  Perhaps, Gary or Graham, you would like to send a letter to the editor putting them right and suggesting the look up www.junkrigassociation.org and extend their knowledge a little!
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       " ...there is nothing - absolutely nothing - half so much worth doing as simply messing about in junk-rigged boats" 
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