The Waveneys of the Norfolk Broads

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Waveney One-Designs in action

Waveney One-Designs in action. Photo from Alan Davies
of the Museum of the Broads

Alan Davies of the Museum of the Broads has kindly agreed to allow us to republish a short article telling the story of the Waveney boats that he wrote for the museum’s newsletter. Many thanks Alan!

Waveney One Designs

Length 20ft, beam 6ft 2in, draft 2ft 11in, sail area 290sqft, gunter rig

Designer W S Parker

The Waveneys were designed in the early 1920s by William Parker of Oulton Broad, after the Waveney Sailing Club proposed to have a one-design boat. The first four or so boats were built along similar lines and developed into a consistent set of drawn plans in 1928.

The first seven were built before World War II and, instead of sail numbers, had the letters A-H in alphabetical order of build. This was later changed to numbers with a ‘W’, both in red. They are all named after wild marsh flowers.

The first six were built by the Evans Yard at Kirkley. Horace Jenner built Number 7 and Number 8 was built at Richards’s Shipyard. The rest were built by Tim Flower and his sons in a boat shed in their Lowestoft garden with exception of Number 24, which was built by Selwyn Watson.

WODs are occasionally mistaken for the more numerous Yare & Bure One Designs, but an easy way to tell them apart is the red sail numbers of the WODs and the fact they have two shrouds on each side as opposed to the Y&BODs’ single shroud. Another difference, only seen when the boat is out of the water, is that the keel is a ballasted metal plate rather than a ballasted wooden one.

By the early 1990s many of the 26 boats had already had to undergo major restoration and it was felt that as with the Y&BOD and the Broads One-Design the cost of building and maintaining new wooden boats would be too expensive. so local boat builder Jimmy Toplis decided to take a mould of his WOD, Penny Royal. By September 1994 the first GRP Waveney, Celandine (Number 27) was launched.

The new boat had to be assessed to make sure its performance was similar to the wooden boats, and once the weight was corrected the new boat’s performance was on a par with the older boats.

To date five more GRP boats have been built, taking the numbers to 32, with orders for two more. One of them has gone to Lake Windermere, and interest has been expressed in developing the hull as a small two-berth Broads cruiser, as has happened with the Thurne Class, which is based on the Y&BOD’s hull.

104 year-old Norfolk Broads racer Maidie gets a carbon mast

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Norfolk Broads racer Maidie gets a new carbon fibre mast

Maidie in action with her new mast

104 year-old Broads cruiser Maidie gets a new mast

Friends walk Maidie’s new mast across the marshes

Classic Norfolk Broads racing boat Maidie has been fitted with a new carbon fibre mast by her owner, Mike Barnes, managing director of the Norfolk Broads Yachting Company.

One of the unforgettable moments of a Broads hire boat holiday is when one of the area’s real racers flies past, and I don’t think any do it with more panache than the 104 year-old spoon-bowed beauty Maidie, which belongs to Mike Barnes, managing director of the Norfolk Broads Yachting Company.

Maidie lost her existing aluminium mast and rigging when she was hit by another vessel recently, and Barnes took the opportunity to replace it with a carbon fibre mast after a chance meeting with Mike Harris of Polar Composites, which is based at nearby Wymondham.

The raw material was shipped from Australia to Barnes’ workshop in Reedham where he constructed the mast himself. Polar Composites was brought in to make the joints for the spreaders and crane, as they needed to be strong enough to withstand the forces of the rigging.

From Polar Composites’ press release it seems, Barnes had no qualms about replacing Maidie’s aluminium rig with the even more modern material:

Maidie was built purely for racing, using the latest techniques and materials available 100 years ago. The original mast was made of wooden veneer rolled around a mandrel, very like the way a carbon fibre mast is made now. It was a new breakthrough at the time, valued for its strength and lightweight property, and was used on the Americas Cup boats of the day.

‘I think it is fitting to choose carbon fibre for the new mast today, as it will give Maidie the cutting edge material she deserves and I’m confident that, had her Edwardian builders had the material available back then, they would have been using it!’ he said.

It took 15 friends to manhandle the mast over the marsh at Reedham, carry it by hand to the water’s edge and manually lift it into place just in time for bank holiday weekend. Maidie’s first outing was at her home club on Wroxham Broad the next day and Mike was delighted with her performance.

‘It has been everything I hoped it would be. The black, shining mast looks fantastic fully rigged and Maidie is sailing well so we look forward to an exciting season,’ he said.

I’m planning to take my kids up to the Broads in a few days, and doubtless the boat we’ve hired will be safe and steady – so as usual I’m looking forward to seeing Maidie and her sisters fly by under their huge rigs adapted for inland sailing. You can be sure I’ll be taking my camera and will try to catch what I can!

For more intheboatshed.net posts about the Norfolk Broads, click here.

A well-travelled skiff

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Venus the well-travelled skiff in Victoria

Venus, a well-travelled Thames-style skiff spotted in Australia by Jeff Cole

Lest we get too doomy, and serious I’ve decided to post this photo of an 1880s single-scull Thames-style skiff hanging in a country nursery at Victoria, Australia. Jeff Cole, who spotted and photographed Venus for us, says the story is that she was imported from Scotland, and was built by the nursery owner’s great-grandfather.

It’s clearly very well-travelled for a small river boat. I wonder what the rest of the story may be – did a River Thames boatbuilder move to Scotland? Did a Scot learn boatbuilding on the banks of the Thames? Or was great-grandfather an amateur who worked from a book? Or were skiffs of this kind far more widespread in the last 19th century than we tend to think?

Whatever the answer, the boat in the photo looks very much like the one shown in this earlier intheboatshed.net post.

Once again, my thanks go to Jeff Cole. To see some earlier material he has sent us, including some mouthwatering shots of early 20th century racing yachts, click here.

For some photos of later skiffs with rather more sheer at Ruswarp on the River Esk in Yorkshire, click here.

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