For sale on Ebay this week

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38ft Sparkman & Stephens aluminum hull Lightnin’ for sale in California

1960 17ft Lysander for sale at Frinton

1957 GP14 sailing dinghy for sale in Conwy

1979 Leader sailing dinghy for sale in Essex

120ft ex-trawler for sale as houseboat on the Medway

1930 17ft De White runabout, partly restored, for sale in Berkshire

Larch on oak trawler yacht for sale

1949 55ft aluminium-built Laurent Giles cruiser-racer for sale at Gosport

1981 30ft ferrocement smack yacht for sale on the Medway

1981 Contessa 28 for sale in Nairn

1982 well equipped Alacrity

Share a 1910 half-decker on the Norfolk Broads

1965 Wayfarer for sale at Lymington

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Watertribe Everglades Challenge 2008

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Everglades Challenge start

Link to a video clip of the start of the EC 2008 race shot by Root

It’s that time of year again – the time when each year I stare at the pages of the Watertribe website, trying vainly to work out the meaning of the results from the Everglades Challenge, and to try to identify the entrants’ boats.

My family really has no idea why I do this, but I can explain it – it’s simply that a 300-mile race involving an assortment of kayaks and small sailing boats along the Florida coast seems to me to be a hugely challenging event. The fact that most of the entrants seem to be in middle age or beyond only adds to my admiration. These are people like me! And the winners arrive at the finish in just a few days or fewer – this year, the winners were sailing a Tornado catamaran (corrected thanks to Jamie’s comment below) and completed their run in less than two days.

Generally, I get the impression that the whole thing has become more professionalised, with lots of moulded plastic expedition boats, and so is less quaint than it has been in years gone by. Still, the lads who came second were sailing a plywood vee-bottomed sharpie-derived ketch that most home builders would have not trouble constructing for themselves, and the fourth home was the always astonishing Matt Layden in his self-designed and self-built 8ft pram dinghy with a lid, Sand Flea.

The positive side of the growing professionalism, I suspect, is that the entrants are taking greater care over their safety each year, which must be a good thing with so many small, vulnerable boats strung out along the Florida coastline.

But the rabbit punch is that some of these people will be going on to attempt the Ultimate Florida Challenge, a circumnavigation of Florida involving a portage across the northern part of the state.

So here are the relevant web links:

The Watertribe website.

Videos of the event hosted at YouTube.

A picture gallery by someone called JC.

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A Thames skiff at the NMM Cornwall

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Thames skiff at the National Maritime Museum Cornwall

1905 Thames skiff on show at the NMMC, Falmouth. Naturally, I’ve asked the
curator to let me know what the boats in the background are!

The National Maritime Museum Cornwall at Falmouth has added a clinker-built River Thames skiff to its collection for ‘flying boats’, which hang from the ceiling, and can be viewed from above and below. It will remain in place for the whole of 2008.

Skiffs have long been used on the Thames as pleasure boats around the turn of the last century. Many are still in use today and can be seen during Swan Upping, an annual ceremony where swans on the River Thames are rounded up, caught, marked, and then released.

The particularly skiff on display was built by Hammerton of Thames Ditton in 1905 and features all her original equipment including part of the original cane in the back seat. I’ve linked to an interesting set of skiff plans drawings at this intheboatshed.net post.

A similar boat famously featured in Jerome K Jerome’s much loved 1889 novel Three Men in a Boat, which tells the comic story of three friends taking a boating holiday on the Thames between Kingston and Oxford. The trip was recreated for the BBC some time agao by comedians Griff Rhys-Jones, Dara O’Briain and Rory McGrath. More recently the same trio appeared in another reality TV entertainment in which they raced on board Rhys-Jones beautiful Phil Rhodes-designed yacht Undina.

Visit the National Maritime Museum Cornwall website.

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Book a room in South-East England