Anonymous wrote:
Hi Jeremy - I look forward to seeing the rigs that you, David Thatcher and others develop for your minimalistic multihulls. I am going to try harder to find a buyer for Arion this year and would love to end my days aboard a small cat. I like the idea of retaining a junk mainsail, as I have got so used to the delight of a sail that does not flog when you spill the wind from it, that will feather quietly, and which you can reef effortlessly. I think the wide staying base of a cat will allow a three-point staying system with plenty of breathing space for the junk yard, while allowing headsails to be flown as well. I really want that lightweight battenless drifter. If the battened junk sail is slamming around in the swell, snatching hard on its gear, you can lower it and just fly the drifter.
Talking of Ernst Klaar, I met him in Darwin early in 1975. His boat was up on the hard being repaired after Cyclone Tracy. The boys, who grew up to be such wild spirits, were about 8 and 10, blonde-haired innocents! Ernst told me he was going to sail across the Indian Ocean, and I remember looking at his portholes, which were little bits of ply that slid in grooves, like kitchen cupboard doors. What I didn't realise is that traditional junks, with their good freeboard and buoyancy, combined with shallow draft, could not be compared to lead-mine western monohull yachts. Jung Jung was a similar type, and I think the rig you evolved is ideal for ocean voyaging. However, those days are over for me, hence my interest in minimalistic multihulls, which also have different design parameters to heavily ballasted monohulls. The use of light air canvas becomes much more rewarding in a boat capable of skimming across the water like a butterfly.
Hi Graham,
Before I get around to hands on development work on a Junk type shunting rig, the basic split sprit type one will have been tried and hopefully allowed some cruising time.....assuming plans work out - eg. my local sailmaker has agreed to make a start on the mains'l when he has the time, which should provide enough power (along with the OB motor) to get out and around coastal waters here, also to nearby islands.
Additional sails in the way of staysails and possibly asymmetric headsails scrounged from skiffs(maybe a 49er)should provide some more go.
Talking about a Junk main and 3point staying system on a tacking multi takes my mind back to the idea of a mast closer to one hull, rather than midway(between hulls), with the other hull being utilised as a trimaran or Atlantic proa Ama on one tack, or a windward proa ama on the other and having the Cabin structure extending out from each side of the hull that might be considered the vaca, hereby offering a similar accomodation layout to a trimaran, but with a less intrusive mast step, and 2 hulls rather than 3.
This was the idea being turned over when I made an attempt to speak with Pete Hil(about how sails worked on individual hulls)l and my mindset on asymmetry has since than been channeled towards shunters, to the exclusion of tacking multis.However, any monohull that I might ever build or own from now on will have to be tiny, although Junk rigged, and likely with a short forward raked mast in the bow.
On the difference between wooden Junks and "lead-mine keelers"...Ernst offered the following advice when speaking with him in Durban (after he had crossed the Indian Ocean from Darwin and then sailed to Europe a few times, also having salvaged the treasure from Bassas de India Reef )... he said about boatbuilding " you are only building a boat for sailing on the sea, its not like you are going to war in a bloody tank".
There is probably some similarity between a Wharram cat and a double ended Junk without a ballast keel, both structurally and in consideration of canvas carried.
Jung Jung did have a quick motion like a Wharram and in very light wind and lumpy water the mains'l really did slam around and snatch at the gear..This sure is reason to opt for rigging support, specially the mast is to be as tall as possible, and he able to carry some light unbattened cloth.