The old ways… make do and mend, rinse and return, make haste not hurry… might have been rebranded as life-hacking, recycling and mindfulness, but there’s no doubt, as most in traditional sailing will recognise, that the future was really written quite a long time ago. The age of unrecyclable, plastic yachts is nigh, and one day, the great container ships will almost certainly enter the second great age of sail.
It’s no exaggeration that we’re at the dawn of a new age in consumerism, but at first sight, Spirit’s new yacht, the 44CRE, embodies nothing of all this. Its look is pure 1930s – sawn-off transom stern, nice sheer, spoon bow, a good dollop of overhang and elegance all round. The CR moniker means ‘cruiser racer’, a category Spirit introduced in 2015, and which has been proving popular. The CR range sits between the original Classic range (the most elegant, with low topsides, low-profile cabin trunk, a whiff of the Skerry Cruiser and standing room for a bottle of gin) and the sturdier deckhouse range, bluewater cruising yachts typically used for long, comfortable cruises. So the CR is a compromise: most of the elegance of the Classic, with the ability to put your trousers on below decks. So far, so good.
It’s the ‘E’ where the clue lies. The ‘E’ stands, of course, for electric, and it’s Spirit’s first fully-electric yacht, with sufficient generative capability to be infinitely autonomous: no back-up generator here, unless you count the wind and sun. Nigel Stuart, Spirit MD (see page 58) was on board to give the tour, and it seems that he was as excited about this boat as the one sat beside it on the dock – the Spirit 111, the longest wooden yacht built in Britain since the J-Class Shamrock V in 1930.
Denne historien er fra November 2020-utgaven av Classic Boat.
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Denne historien er fra November 2020-utgaven av Classic Boat.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
The Need For Speed
Saving lives at sea has always been bound to the speed of rescue, from the first rowing boats to the 60-knot, all-weather motorboats of today
ROW YOUR BOAT
There has been a steady rise in recreational rowing over the past few years, and the choice can be bewildering. What’s the right boat for you?
Traditional Tool
JOINER’S NAME STAMP
Classic misuse of a word
Real classic ownership involves rot, rust and reward
SCUD MISSILE
Herreshoff’s newly-restored Bar Harbor 31 Scud lit up the classic racing scene in the Med in 2020 with a double win at Cannes and Saint-Tropez
BOSUN'S BAG
PRACTICAL TIPS FOR THE TRADITIONAL BOATER
DOUG LEEN - Tugboat man
Vietnam vet, park ranger, dentist, small-craft conservator and tugboat skipper.... meet Ranger Doug!
CHANCE TO SAVE AN Albert Strange yawl
Chances at Albert Strange ownership don’t come up often, and Sheila II is the quintessential Strange – and one with a great history, too
AFFORDABLE CLASSIC Salcombe Yawls
A friend and I once decided that walking might make a change from sailing. So we set forth to walk from Branscombe to Bigbury, a 100-mile stretch of the south-west coastal path marked by knackering climbs and knee-wrenching descents.
Cardiff, Wales - Save The Elena Maria Barbara!
A rare, 18th-century schooner replica, restored to the tune of around £1 million, could be abandoned if a buyer is not found soon.