Ultimate Classic Yachts
Adlard Coles Nautical (Verlag)
978-1-4729-1812-3 (ISBN)
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They include:
Bona Fide - the original fin-keeler that was 70 years ahead of her time
Inward Bound - a 35ft cutter built in Argentina using salvaged timber from the General Belgrano
Madoc - a 24ft clinker yawl built on a Tasmanian beach by hand
Partridge - an 1885 cutter that took 18 years to restore
Solway Maid - the last surviving William Fife yacht
Timeless and magnificent, these yachts all have a story to tell, and they are captured with glorious full colour photography.
Nic Compton was brought up on boats until the age of 15. He worked as a shipwright, before becoming a full-time writer and photographer. He was Editor of Classic Boat magazine until 2000, and has written several books on nautical subjects, including most recently The Sea: A Photographic Celebration and Titanic on Trial, both published by Adlard Coles Nautical.
Introduction
PARTRIDGE (1885)
The 1885 Beavor-Webb cutter that set a new standard for classic yachts after one man’s 18-year restoration
MARIAN (1889)
The 1889 Bristol Channel pilot cutter owned by the laziest skipper in the Western Approaches
BONA FIDE (1899)
The original fin-keeler that was 70 years ahead of her time
STAVANGER (1901)
The last voyage of the most original Colin Archer rescue boat, before being preserved for posterity by the Norwegian national maritime museum
CORAL OF COWES (1902)
The Fred Shepherd yawl restored in South Africa and sailed back to the northern hemisphere for the first time in over 70 years
RAWENE (1908)
Owned by the same family for 90 years, the New Zealand kauri classic is a floating time capsule
THE LADY ANNE (1912)
The 15-Metre yacht was banned from racing in the Med because of carbon fibre in her topmast. She came back without it and won everything anyway
LULWORTH (1920)
The largest cutter in the world, built in Southampton in 1920 and recently restored in Italy
BRILLIANT (1932)
Olin Stephen’s Atlantic record-breaker, now used by Mystic Seaport for sail training 9,000 youngsters
STORMY WEATHER (1934)
The legendary S&S Fastnet winner which became Italy’s best-loved classic
BLOODHOUND (1936)
Built by the legendary Camper & Nicholson yard in Gosport, Bloodhound was one of the most successful racers of her day. She became a Royal Yacht in the 1960s when she was owned by Prince Philip and hosted the entire royal family
VANITY V (1936)
The exquisite Fife 12-metre meticulously restored by a pair of used car salesmen who showed the experts how it should done
SOLWAY MAID (1938) The ‘last Fife’ has survived remarkably intact, thanks to two periods of ‘suspended animation’
FANEROMENI (1945)
The classic yacht revival reaches Greece with the restoration of Aegean schooners such as this 1945 Perama caique
INWARD BOUND (1962)
A 35ft S&S cutter built in Argentina using salvaged timber from General Belgrano
BLUE SALUKI (1964)
Despite being built to Lloyds 100 A1 by a top boatyard, Blue Saluki was the last of a dying breed and was soundly beaten by modern multihulls in the first round Britain race. Unlike most of them, however, she’s still turning heads
MADOC (1990)
A 24ft American clinker yawl built by an Englishman on a beach in Tasmania using local timbers and no power tools
SAVANNAH (1997)
The ‘modern classic’ which combined the best of Fife with a fin keel, and took the Mediterranean classic boat circuit by storm
ELEONORA (2000)
Exact replica of Herreshoff schooner Westward, on which Captain Barr set an Atlantic record which remained unbroken for 100 years
INTEGRITY (2012)
A brand new Victorian cutter which holds her own against the ‘real’ 100-year-old Victorian cutters
Index
Acknowledgements
Erscheint lt. Verlag | 8.10.2015 |
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Zusatzinfo | Approximately 180 colour photographs and illustrations |
Verlagsort | London |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 230 x 310 mm |
Gewicht | 1130 g |
Themenwelt | Natur / Technik ► Fahrzeuge / Flugzeuge / Schiffe ► Schiffe |
Sachbuch/Ratgeber ► Sport ► Segeln / Tauchen / Wassersport | |
Geisteswissenschaften ► Geschichte | |
ISBN-10 | 1-4729-1812-6 / 1472918126 |
ISBN-13 | 978-1-4729-1812-3 / 9781472918123 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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