
Elaborating on my previous moths....in 1973 I built a plywood Stockholm Sprite. The job was so pitiful that when people saw the boat they inevitably asked, "What's that?" and I would reply, "It's my first try." So that became the name of the boat: 1st Try. I only have one photo of that boat, and it was published in the Daily Advance, the newspaper in Elizabeth City, NC (the "Home of the moth boat") as I was headed out to the annual regatta sponsored by the Pasquotank River Yacht Club. While the photo is grainy it does show the sleeve sail I used on my first three boats. My second moth was a Mistral, after I had read a page in the UK Yearbook that described the Mistral as a design suitable for helm weights of up to 14 stone (= 196 pounds or about 89 kg...by the way, why do the Brits sell gasoline by the liter but measure their highway speeds in miles per hour?)
Since I was about 180 pounds and sailing against folks quite a bit lighter, I thought this hull shape would suit me well. This boat I named "Try Too" extending the "try" naming theme from my first boat. Again, photos are hard to come by but I found one that graced the cover of the IMCA-US newsletter in the spring of '76. What's going on? I was wading the boat out into water deep enough to fit the fixed rudder when the bow got away from me and the boat started to take off down wind. I think I managed to grab the starboard shroud but not in enough time. A photographer on shore just happened to catch the result (this was way before photoshop, and no, the picture wasn't staged...)
My third boat was built over the winter of '76/'77. It was a Magnum 2 from a mold taken off of John Claridge's boat that he used at the '76 worlds and I named this boat "Try-Umph." I'll try to come up with a photo of it, but the boat was sold at Hayling Island after the worlds so I didn't have to ship it home (boy, maybe I should gone that route this year!) So, naturally when last year I started building the foiler, my fourth international moth, I would continue with the "Try" theme, hence "Try-Foil." It's interesting, to me anyway, that a "trefoil" is a mathematical knot that can be analyzing in knot theory. I put a trefoil graphic on my foredeck and I hope I may get to see it again in the near future....
2 comments:
Hint recieved....
Thanks! I hope I don't bore folks to death with "history..."
Joe
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