Ted, that’s a great photo. You’re right...if that Stonehorse was just a little better framed between the mainsheet fall it would be a Sail magazine cover shot. That’s impressive lighting. Has some kind of magical glow to it. Thanks for posting it.FarrellTed wrote:My sister took this photo of a Stone Horse back in 2014, just off West Falmouth harbor. We were sailing my 1970s era Widgeon. Would have been nice to get her perfectly framed by the mainsheet and traveller but I still like the shot.
Interesting Boats
Moderator: Jim Walsh
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Re: Interesting Boats
- wikakaru
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Re: Interesting Boats
The schooner Victory Chimes sails through Fox Islands Thorofare, September, 2018. The only 3-masted schooner in the Maine charter fleet, she is easily recognizable even from a distance. Notice the yawl boat rigged in case she needs to get out of trouble quickly in the winding Thorofare. (She has no inboard engine.)
Alas, the Maine schooner fleet is effectively shut down this year, so it's not likely I will get many photos like this in 2020.
Jim
Alas, the Maine schooner fleet is effectively shut down this year, so it's not likely I will get many photos like this in 2020.
Jim
- wikakaru
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Re: Interesting Boats
Since you guys seem to like Stone Horses, here's one of my mooring neighbor's boat taken a few days ago.
--Jim
--Jim
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Re: Interesting Boats
Great photos. Never heard of the Victory Chimes so that's a treat. Very cool. Engineless. That is neat she can have a Coast Guard certification. Look at the flags atop every mast. Timeless.
By all accounts the Stone Horse is a fine sailing boat. This one has a wishbone style club boom for the stays’l. Interesting. I have never seen one on a Stone Horse.
Very nice photos. Every time I have been to Maine, and the Maritimes, (summer) the light is great and colors are crisp.
By all accounts the Stone Horse is a fine sailing boat. This one has a wishbone style club boom for the stays’l. Interesting. I have never seen one on a Stone Horse.
Very nice photos. Every time I have been to Maine, and the Maritimes, (summer) the light is great and colors are crisp.
- Steve Laume
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Re: Interesting Boats
I find the boom angles on the three masts to be very interesting. Everyone is different and they get progressively tighter as they go forward. I don't know sail trim on these boast but is that intentional?
Maine is a fantastic place to see beautiful and interesting boats, Steve.
Maine is a fantastic place to see beautiful and interesting boats, Steve.
- wikakaru
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Re: Interesting Boats
Good eye. With the wind abaft the beam it may be that each successive sail bends the wind a bit, making each one need to be trimmedSteve Laume wrote:I find the boom angles on the three masts to be very interesting. Everyone is different and they get progressively tighter as they go forward. I don't know sail trim on these boast but is that intentional?
Maine is a fantastic place to see beautiful and interesting boats, Steve.
a bit more than the previous one as the wind moves forward.
- wikakaru
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Re: Interesting Boats
The gaff cutter Vela sails in Fox Islands Thorofare, August, 2018. You don't see many gaff cutters with a topsail these days. She's listed for sale on Off Center Harbor if you want to see more photos.
--Jim
--Jim
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Re: Interesting Boats
wikakaru wrote:The gaff cutter Vela sails in Fox Islands Thorofare, August, 2018. You don't see many gaff cutters with a topsail these days. She's listed for sale on Off Center Harbor if you want to see more photos.
--Jim
That's a great picture. There is something about the interplay between the light and the water unique to Maine. I have seen a couple videos on OCH featuring Vela as well as Havilah Hawkins. A very neat boat with gorgeous powerful lines. Super simple. With only a few easy mods she'd be perfect for a family boat with kids. I could easily see her globe trotting if the skipper and his family embraced a philosophy where sailing, timeless seamanship, and simplicity were the centerpiece.
Thanks for posting.
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Re: Interesting Boats
In lieu of a photo, I've got some video. This is from four summers ago. I'm beating upwind in some good-size (for a Typhoon) waves. The schooner Manitou (a 114 foot steel schooner that does day-sail charters in Grand Traverse Bay) makes a picturesque appearance at the end.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ts0F6poVdxA
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ts0F6poVdxA
- wikakaru
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Re: Interesting Boats
The schooner Boyd N. Sheppard off Vinalhaven, July, 2018.
--Jim
--Jim
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Re: Interesting Boats
Another nice photo. You can just make out the slightest bit of fog/mist on the water. I think a leeward quartering photo almost always brings out the best in a boasts lines. Just a bit of skive in the booms. A little twist at the top of the main and fores’l as is the case for gaffers. Nice view of the jibs.
- wikakaru
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Re: Interesting Boats
Yep, I think leeward quarter and windward bow are the best angles.John Stone wrote:Another nice photo. You can just make out the slightest bit of fog/mist on the water. I think a leeward quartering photo almost always brings out the best in a boasts lines. Just a bit of skive in the booms. A little twist at the top of the main and fores’l as is the case for gaffers. Nice view of the jibs.
"Skive"? I don't know that word in this context.
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Re: Interesting Boats
Skive is the upward angle of the boom. You tend to see it more in on older boats with long booms. Keeps the end of the boom out of the water when reaching and running. It can also look lovely with a raked mast. For some good examples take a look at British pilot cutters and the Pride of Baltimore. Or just scroll up and take a look at the picture of Vela.wikakaru wrote:Yep, I think leeward quarter and windward bow are the best angles.John Stone wrote:Another nice photo. You can just make out the slightest bit of fog/mist on the water. I think a leeward quartering photo almost always brings out the best in a boasts lines. Just a bit of skive in the booms. A little twist at the top of the main and fores’l as is the case for gaffers. Nice view of the jibs.
"Skive"? I don't know that word in this context.
Re: Interesting Boats
Perhaps skive is a colloquial term.....when used in a nautical sense.John Stone wrote:Another nice photo. You can just make out the slightest bit of fog/mist on the water. I think a leeward quartering photo almost always brings out the best in a boasts lines. Just a bit of skive in the booms. A little twist at the top of the main and fores’l as is the case for gaffers. Nice view of the jibs.
Jim Walsh
Ex Vice Commodore
Ex Captain-Northeast Fleet
CD31 ORION
The currency of life is not money, it's time
Ex Vice Commodore
Ex Captain-Northeast Fleet
CD31 ORION
The currency of life is not money, it's time
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Re: Interesting Boats
Well...uhhh...I don’t know. I have used the term a long time. Don’t know where it came from. It’s possible I got it mixed up with “stive” over the years. But my curiosity is officially peaked. I checked all my traditional sail term sources—Cunliff, Chappell, Skene, etc Nothing on stive or skive. I put a few feelers out with some friends who are traditional sailors. I’ll let you know what I find out.Jim Walsh wrote:Perhaps skive is a colloquial term.....when used in a nautical sense.John Stone wrote:Another nice photo. You can just make out the slightest bit of fog/mist on the water. I think a leeward quartering photo almost always brings out the best in a boasts lines. Just a bit of skive in the booms. A little twist at the top of the main and fores’l as is the case for gaffers. Nice view of the jibs.
As my mother used to say, “I might have dreamed it, but I’m not making it up.” LOL.