Showing posts with label Double. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Double. Show all posts
Thursday, 20 April 2017
The Hawaiian Double Canoe Hokulea

Hokule'a had her start around 1973, when Ben R. Finney, an anthropologist with an interest in the settlement of the Pacific islands, decided to scale up from a smaller, self-funded double canoe on which he had begun his investigations of the type. As described in his book Hokule'a: The Way to Tahiti

Somehow, the Polynesian Voyaging Society turned the situation around later, and Hokule'a has clocked more than 32,000 sea miles on a half a dozen voyages, visiting most areas of the Pacific, mostly on cultural missions. (A circumnavigation is apparently in the planning stages!) Finney's name is hard to find in any context on the PVS website: he doesn't appear to be currently associated with the PVS, and it wouldn't surprise me if he dropped out immediately following the first awful voyage and has been placed under a taboo by the organization. PVS seems to be almost exclusively concerned with using the boat as a way to champion cultural identify -- there is very little about serious science on their website.
(In addition to the PVS website, much information on Hokule'a may be found on Wikipedia, although the article appears to hew closely to the PVS orthodoxy and gives little credit to Finney.)

Her original rig was a very modest 540 square feet of sail area on two crab-claw (spritsail) masts, which gives her performance on the order of 3 or 4 knots upwind, and 5 or 6 downwind . She is capable of tacking to within 70 or 75 degrees of the wind -- comparable to the pointing ability of square-rigged ships -- which, based on the results of the first voyage, from Hawaii to Tahiti, was sufficient to have allowed double canoes to have indeed colonized Polynesia in an intentional effort of exploration and settlement.
(All images in this article from PVS website.)
Wednesday, 19 April 2017
35 Double Ender Design 1519
This pretty little sloop named Saraband is a rare canoe stern design. There are only a handful in the archives. She was built by the Norman H. Hodgdon, Jr. yard of Boothbay (predecessor to the current Hodgdon Yachts) and launched in 1960.
Note the nice little aft cabin and associated aft deckhouse in the General Arrangement plan shown below. This gave a nice sense of safety and security in the cockpit and provided a bit of privacy when cruising in a 35' boat.

Her stem, keel, deadwood and framing is of white oak. Her single planking is of mahogany.
Principal Dimensions
LOA 35'-0"
LWL 29'-0"
Beam 8'-6"
Draft 5'-3"
Displacement 14,350 lbs
LOA 35'-0"
LWL 29'-0"
Beam 8'-6"
Draft 5'-3"
Displacement 14,350 lbs
Monday, 3 April 2017
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Tuesday, 28 March 2017
Design 167 15 Double Ender

As a follow up to my posting of January 19 regarding Primrose, the nice little double-ender, here's an image I found in the files. If you look at the advertisement below it appears to be the photo that was used in the upper left hand position. I believe that's Aage Nielson at the tiller.

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