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Gypsy Boat Test
From-Multihull International, September 1998
By Tom Hammon
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| I'D READ THE BROCHURES, absorbed the blurbs and previously sailed
in several designs from the Woods drawing board. Now it was time
get afloat. I expected a fairly spartan, bucket and chuck it kind
of craft, an overgrown Strider with a box on top and none of the
luxury of her bigger sisters. I was sceptical of the cuddy
concept and the liveaboard, ocean capability claims. Whilst I know
that people do live and travel great distances in boats much smaller
than the 28 foot Gypsy I sometimes doubt their sanity and hygiene
standards! I hoped that the coming boat test would serve to dispel
my concerns. Saltash Sailing Club sits almost beneath two of the
Tamar's most famous bridges, one the modern road suspension bridge,
the second, the solid, near ancient monument that Isembard Kingdom
BruneI designed to carry the railway into Cornwall. Both are designed
solely to carry land traffic over water and are great engineering
feats of their time. The catamaran designer and builder is also
a bridge builder who must unite two hulls, allow movement between
them and attach one or more moving forces that can be comfortably
and safely controlled and directed on the water. This also is no
small engineering task. |

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| Somehow it seemed appropriate to be collected from the Saltash Club's
pontoon by Richard Woods in his latest Catamaran, the Gypsy 28.
Now three years old Gypsy has steadily evolved and been completed
whilst covering nearly 3,000 miles under Richard's experienced hand.
I was on the pontoon early enough to watch Gypsy's approach from
Millbrook and was struck immediately by her high sides and the unusual
appearance of two hull cabins separated by another on the bridgedeck.
The latter was the box or cuddy which I suspected would be cramped
and airless. Beneath it the offset nacelle dipped down towards but
well above the water. Designed as a liveaboard, long distance cruiser
I wondered if Gypsy's engineering was as thorough as that of the
bridges above. In spite of the high sides I had no difficulty in
swinging a heavy bag onboard as I climbed onto the hull which brushed
alongside the pontoon. Similarly embarkation would be easy from
an inflatable. A boarding ladder is planned for swimmers who have
to struggle onboard using the rudder housing. We set off downriver
at a steady five knots courtesy of the very quiet l0 hp four-stroke
outboard installed in the port aft corner of the cockpit. In order
to improve quietness further, noise reducing material has been fitted
to the outside of the engine cover and the inside of the deck
box above. Gypsy's engine achieves l2 miles per gallon and enough
fuel is carried for 100 miles. When under power and to assist manoeuvring
the engine is linked to the tillers by simple tackles that are slackened
when the engine is raised for sailing. This does much to conteract
the engine's port offset bias. |
I
had boarded for'd and reached the cockpit via a narrow walkway between
the hull cabins and the cuddy. It felt very safe as opposed to what
is usually a scramble over all too often slippery cabin tops. No
need for guardrails here they are built in! The next surprise came
as I dumped my bag in the cuddy for this was not the expected cell
but a roomy saloon galley combination with ample space for seven
large adults to sit and for the cooker, fridge, large sink, 12 square
feet of work surface and capacious stowage space. There was more
besides including the switchboard, battery compartment, one water
tank, a secret safe-space and, glory of glories, full standing headroom
and all round visibility. The innovative, offset nacelle permits
six footers to stand erect and is vee shaped underneath to discourage
slamming. It is offset to starboard to provide cavernous stowage
space behind the port settee. The forward slope of the cuddy
provides yet more space partially taken up by a huge shelf for books,
CDs etc. The table and settees convert easily to a spacious 6ft
6" x 4ft 6" double berth. Ventilation is as little or as much as
required via opening hatches and the stable door entrance. I was
beginning to see the sound sense behind Gypsy's somewhat chunky
appearance. She is not pretty, not a sleek racy looking production
line cruiser and no pocket racer but she does feel airy and light
inside that capacious cuddy. Next move was to go down into the hulls.
I have spent enough time in cramped hulls that have kept me bent
and bruised on long passages and expected little better from a boat
that is after all not much longer than a Strider. Here the difference
is enormous. Once down the easily negotiated steps I again found
myself erect, all six foot of me! Gypsy's hulls each consist of
three main compartments; forward and aft bunk spaces with stowage
beneath and a real room between. In the port hull this is utilised
as the bathroom and has room for an internal shower as well as the
already fitted loo and large basin. To starboard the central space
is used as the nav-centre where a chart table and stowage folds
up to allow chartwork from a seated position. The separation of
the cuddy from the two hulls thus provides room for privacy, all
too often an impossibility in small boats. Whilst each for'd bunk
could claim the honour of being a honeymoon double the smaller single
bunks aft have plenty of room for comfort. This then is a boat which
can easily accommodate six people for short cruises or for a couple
to live aboard. In the latter case at least two of the bunk spaces
would disappear, perhaps for his workshop and her larder!
Gypsy's build time (mostly in a 4.6m x 4.6m garage) was 980 hours
by which time she was ready to sail though not complete. Richard
feels that he has probably spent as much time fitting her out in
the three years he has been sailing her since the launch. The build
was achieved within the amazing budget of £5,000 which reflects
his experience and skill, (and probably a come-in useful store built
up over a lifetime of sailing!). Planning ahead he was able to get
excellent fittings at ridiculous prices. One example is the rig
(including roller-reefing) which except for the sails cost £200
and is likely to see the boat's life out! What it shows is that
you can still build an excellent yacht remarkably cheaply given
time, planning, effort and a little luck. About 20 sets of plans
for Gypsy have now been sold and for the less experienced £10 -
£15,000 seems a more realistic price bracket depending on building
ability, finish and fittings.
On deck, simplicity is the rule to enable short-handed sailing or
single-handing with a small auto-pilot. The fractional rig consists
of a small jib and large fully battened main with almost all
controls led back to the cockpit. Again layout is a matter of personal
preference and more could be led aft. In Gypsy two small winches
on the cabin roof and an Easimatic mainsheet are all that are needed
to sail-trim and reef. They might be more effective if self-tailing
and one or two more on the aft beam might ease spinnaker trimming.
There are two winches on the mast but only because they came in
the job lot. One winch is now used for the jib halyard but both
would have been removed had Richard been able to free them. The
various elements of the boat each have a function of their own but
now was the time to discover how well they combine via the bridge
and the sailing rig to become an entity,that multipurpose thing
called a yacht. |
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I
took over the helm just before the sails went up and found Gypsy
light and responsive under power even with the offset engine. (Marina
handling would be easier with two engines but the option is really
a matter of preference, skill and confidence.) Pointing into the
wind fairly approximately the main went up easily, courtesy of good
and frequently greased slides and with no need of the winch. A cunningham,
adjusted at the mast, tensioned the luff and that was that. The
jib was unrolled, the engine lifted and we were in sailing mode
beating towards Plymouth's eastern breakwater entrance at a healthy
5.5-6 knots in a SE force 3 wind. She could have gone faster. More
tweaking string, new sails etc would doubtless do much to enhance
Gypsy's performance hard on the wind. What did impress me was how
close she was and for the cruising sailor that is important, i.e.
When you have to do it do it efficiently and for as little time
as possible. We were able to tack effortlessly through little more
than 100 degrees and with enough forward power to avoid any
indication of need to back the main.
Again light on the helm it was always easy to avoid the many boats
in the Sound and once outside in a slightly freshening south easterly
- and eight-eighths sun we fairly skipped along and easily parallelled
a Moody 31. In the distance a similar size cat was rapidly
dropping off to leeward. We aimed to sail close to compare speed
and pointing but as she tacked to cross us the sail was promptly
furled and she motored. As a cruising boat and for build simplicity
Gypsy's flat panels form single chined, flat bottomed hulls aft
with LAR keels midships. For'd the vee cross-section helps to prevent
slamming. With the optional daggerboards and round, cedar-strip
built bottoms the ride and performance would improve. The slight
seas that we sailed into suggested that the hulls might slam a little
in extreme conditions but with the for'd trampoline and high bridgedeck
clearance there was no sign of spray reaching the undersides let
alone a solid wave. The welcome sun and warmth notwithstanding I
found helming a pleasure! The cockpit is spacious and sheltered.
Two easily reached tiller extensions mean you can stand anywhere,
lean against the cuddy or sit in the lee of the dodger. Last but
not least you can sit up on the dodger rail. It is about 4" wide
and remarkably comfortable and my coffee sat there unaided too !
Guardrails across the after part of the cockpit leave it fully enclosed
and thus very safe. There is room for a wheel if that is preferred.
The small jib, high angled boom and loose-footed sail all contribute
to real all round visibility. Altogether and as all cruisers should,
she gave a comfortable and steady ride ideal for the novice and/or
more timid. |
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Had the wind freshened more we could have taken one to three reefs
in the main and rolled the jib as necessary. The reefing lines were
big, easily handled and led through top quality blocks back to the
cockpit. No fancy boom fittings here, the blocks and lazy jacks
ensure quick, safe reefing by one or two people. Gypsy is designed
to carry full rig up to force 6 and to date the third reef has only
been taken for practice.
Lunchtime saw us hove to in a briefly easing wind and slight residual
swell. Very quiet and stable, we drifted slowly to leeward. There
was time to reflect on what I'd seen so far. Putting myself back
into building mode I was pleased that there were so many options
in hull outline and interior layout. No dire threats of disaster
for the slightest deviation from the plans. The builder is free
to customise in the best sense of the word. My Gypsy would be slightly
different from this; heads layout slightly altered, more creature
comforts in the starboard hull................ It was perhaps as
well that I was dragged from my dreams to start beating back to
the eastern entrance.
Back inside the breakwater everything was in our favour, downwind
on a flood tide. Moving onto a beam reach we hovered between 7 and
8 knots without effort in about 10 knots of wind. To be fair Gypsy
was not loaded and in full cruising mode speeds are unlikely to
be so good but there is no reason why trade wind sailing passages
shouldn't approach 200 miles a day.
Those familiar with Plymouth will know that tides through the narrows
can cause difficult eddies. Many yachts tend to motor upriver for
fear of 'losing it' amongst the ferries and pleasure boats and the
bevies of tugs and police escorts on the move each time a warship
enters or leaves harbour. The zigzag route in further complicates
the matter but we hoisted the spinnaker and enjoyed the trip and
views. Her minimal draught, .7m, allowed us to stray outside the
marked channel with impunity and away from the crowding keel and
power boats. In the eddies she was easy to correct and the 'stretched'
Strider spinnaker maintained plenty of steerage way whether running
or reaching. In areas where the wind funnelled stronger we occasionally
hit 10 knots and I wished for the force 6 and no reefs! A friend
once water ski'd behind my ancient Val 31 and in suitable conditions
he would also be able to behind Gypsy!
Gybing the spinnaker with ease we were soon close to Saltash again.
The peace was only disturbed by an unsilenced workboat that struggled
to overtake us and a speeding powerboat full of people that I can
only imagine didn't know they were breaking a speed limit strongly
enforced by the Queen's Harbourmaster. They can't have for they
all waved as I photographed the evidence! We hovered beneath the
twin bridges as Richard recovered the spinnaker and lowered the
main. Almost as quickly I found myself back on the pontoon some
51/2, very good hours after leaving it.
Although I would have liked stronger winds for some of the test
I was convinced already that Gypsy is a solid, safe yet remarkably
nippy and budget conscious cruiser. Pretty she is not but she has
an attractive purposeful look to her. She is an effective engineering
solution to all the questions asked by any small boat that ventures
out on the oceans and I'd be more than happy to go there with
her.
Who knows? This is one dream at least that doesn't need a lottery
win. |
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BOAT TEST
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