Graham Cox wrote:
The open boats I have met cruising the Queensland coast were all modified with some watertight compartments or inflatable bouyancy bags (attached to a compressed air cylinder), so that they could not flood and sailed with one hand on the sheet at all times, especially with the wind forward of the beam. The junk rig will be excellent at this as you can throw off the sheet and the sail will not flog, just quietly feather into the wind while you decide what to do, to reef etc. Also, on the wind, reefing is incredibly easy and quick. Downwind you need little sail area to drive the ship as the junk rig is so efficient on that point of sailing, so you won't be driving hard. If the wind picks up, you can easily bring the boat beam on without touching the sheet and the sail will feather while you reef further. Hervey Bay offers fantastic cruising for a small shallow draft boat, and if you pick your weather it can be very placid. You can reach across to the glorious beaches of Platypus Bay on the northern end of Fraser Island, or go down into the Sandy Straits where you are in totally sheltered waters. It can get rough in the bay when the SE trades pump up, so caution and preparation is recommended. Sailing up to the Whitsundays would require a bit of experience but is achievable on your Hartley, if you modify it as suggested.
Good luck, and maybe one day we'll see each other up there!
Good advice re the floatation advice. I have built a couple of boats and have had mixed results with built in watertight compartments. Because boats tend to naturally flex small cracks will appear over time, and then the water will seep in. Sometimes you will not detect it until you hear water sloshing around in there. The easiest way to avoid this is to build the compartment as watertight as you can then fill it with styrofoam or some other closed cell foam. I think that's what I will be doing with mine.
If we do venture up there, with our boat or not, I'll look you up.
(edit:) The junk rig seems to have all the features of a sail like a Leg-o-mutton sprit, with the extra advantages of easy reefing and bigger sail area.
Cheers, Steve.