Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2010/04/14
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]The breadth of interest of Luggers continues to amaze me. Westerly twin keel sailboats are a comparative rarity in the USA but at least two Luggers have owned, or wanted to own one. Westerlys are not the Leicas of sailboats, more like the Mack trucks. Strongly built, almost indestructible, but slow and not overly responsive. As part of our personal navy we own a Westerly Nomad, an English twin keel auxiliary sailboat. We named it "Quark" since the Irishman we bought it from was named Finnegan. James Joyce fans will know the derivation of the name. It was extremely seaworthy and had full headroom, provided you were shorter than 5'10". It slept 4 and had an enclosed head and a small galley. The twin keels and skeg protecting the prop and rudder permitted it to sit upright on the bottom if the tide ran out. It could be towed on a flatbed trailer without any supports or bracing. We sailed it all along the Northeast US coast from Maryland to Maine, up the Hudson and the Erie Canal, and trailed it to Florida for a couple of months of boating in the Keys. We used the boat every summer and a few sabbatical winters from 1969 through 1996. When I retired from the university, I took my unused accrued sick leave pay and bought a larger offshore type motorsailer in Florida. We sailed up theIntracoastal Waterway and used until the end of last summer. Now that my kids have moved away and started families of their own, it was too big for two geriatric sailors to handle. And expensive too. In boating you pay by the foot. Besides it was overkill for sailing in the relatively placid waters of the Hudson Valley and Long Island Sound. We still have the older Quark although it is under wraps and parked on its trailer next to our garage. Right now I am refurbishing it for next season. It has had a long, well deserved rest. Here is a photo of Westerly Nomad "Quark" http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/Larry+Z/Quark+in+water.jpg.html It is the boat just left of center in our local harbor. http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/Larry+Z/Senesqua+harbor.jpg.html A main advantage of twin keel boats is that they trail easily without supports. http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/Larry+Z/Trailing+Quark.jpg.html A page from the Westerly 1964 catalog. http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/Larry+Z/img002.jpg.html Twin keel yachts have been popular in Britain for more than fifty years. They have a number of practical advantages and a notable disadvantage. The twin keels and the rudder skeg provide a stable tripod-like support if the yacht takes the mud in areas where the mooring dries out at low tide. The yacht stays level and does not flop over on the side as would a single keel yacht. This stability when grounded permits the owner to intentionally beach the yacht to clean the bottom at low tide. The yacht does not require a cradle when stored for the winter and, if small enough, can be towed easily on a flat bed trailer. The relatively shallow draft makes launching easier. The disadvantage is, of course, poorer performance under sail.significantly hampered. For a given lateral plane, twin keels have greater wetted area than a single keel. The greater frictional resistance simply makes the twin keel designs slightly slower on all points of sailing. Larry Z