Everything about Gipsy Moth Iv totally explained
Gipsy Moth IV is a 54 ft
ketch that
Sir Francis Chichester commissioned specifically to sail single-handed around the globe, racing against the times set by the
clipper ships of the 19th century.
Background and design
After being nursed back to health from a suspected lung abscess by his wife, Chichester became inspired while writing his book
Along the Clipper Way, which charts the voyage taken by
19th century wool clippers returning from
Australia. The clippers took an average of 123 days to make their passage, so Chichester set himself the target of making the passage in 100 days.
In
1962 Chichester commissioned
Gosport-based ship yard
Camper and Nicholsons to build the fourth boat in his series, all named
Gipsy Moth. The name originated from the
de Havilland Gipsy Moth aircraft in which Chichester completed pioneering work in aerial navigation techniques.
The maximum speed of a yacht is directly related to its wetted length:
Gipsy Moth IV is 53 feet overall, whereas a clipper ship such as the
Cutty Sark is 212 feet. Designed by John Illingworth and Angus Primrose, the boat incorporated the maximum amount of sail for the minimum amount of rigging, whilst employing
tiller based self-steering using design principles established by
Blondie Hasler that could enable steerage from the skipper's bunk, essential for solo sailing for a voyage of this length.
1966 voyage
Launched in March 1966, she's 38 ft 6 in (11.8 m) on the waterline and 53 ft (16 m) overall, with a hull constructed of cold-moulded
Honduras mahogany. Ketch rigged, she's a sail area of 854 sq ft (79.4 m²), extendable with a spinnaker to over .
Gipsy Moth IV set out from
Plymouth on
27 August 1966 with 64-year-old Sir Francis at the helm. This wasn't uneventful, and Chichester later recalled three moments where he noted that the trip was almost over. The first was when part of the frame holding the wind vane self-steering failed, when still 2,300 miles (3,680 km) from Sydney. Not wanting to put in to
Fremantle, Western Australia, Chichester spent three days balancing sails and experimenting with shock-cord lines on the tiller, once again getting the boat to hold a course to enable her to cover 160 miles (256 km) a day.
An exhausted Chichester entered
Sydney harbour for a stop over 107 days later. He enlisted the help of
America's Cup designer
Warwick Hood, who added a piece to the boat's
keel to provide
Gypsy Moth IV with better directional stability to stop her
broaching, but the modification did nothing to improve her stability. while Chichester commented: the restoration cost over £300,000.
Second voyage
Gipsy Moth IV set sail from Plymouth Sound on the first leg of the 2005-07
Blue Water Round the World Rally on
25 September 2005. She had a mixture of experienced crew and teams of disadvantaged youth on board, including:
Skipper: Richard Bagget
First mate: Dewi Thomas
Crew Leader: Paul Gelder (Editor of Yachting Monthly)
Crew: Matthew Pakes (Isle of Wight), Peter Heggie (Plymouth), Elaine Cadwell (Scotland)
The first leg took just over two weeks to reach Gibraltar, the official starting point for the Blue Water Round the World Rally. After crossing The Bay of Biscay to make landfall in Bayonna, Spain, where Paul Gelder left to return to the UK, there was a crew change at Villahamora, Portugal, and Tom Buggy join the yacht as Crew Leader for the rest of the leg. Yachting Monthly's Dick Durham sailed the next leg and crew leader to the Canary Islands, where James Jermain took over as Mate to Richard Baggett for the Atlantic crossing to Antigua. The yacht went through the Panama Canal in February 2006 and headed for the Galapagos islands and the Marquesas.
On April 29, 2006, after a navigational blunder, Gipsy Moth ran aground on a coral reef at Rangiroa, an atoll in the Tuomotus,known as The Dangerous Archipelago in thePacific Ocean. She was just 200 miles from her next landfall, Tahiti. The yacht was seriously damaged. After six days, a major salvage operation was undertaken with Smit, the Dutch big ship experts who were called in by the UKSA, with local help from Tahiti and Rangiroa. After a day-and-a-half spent patching up the holes in the hull with sheets of plywood, the yacht was successfully towed off the reef into deep water on a makeshift 'sledge'. She was towed to Tahiti and put on a cargo ship to be taken to New Zealand.In Auckland, Grant Dalton's America's Cup team donated help and premises at their HQ in Viaduct Harbour, and the yacht underwent a second restoration. After two weeks or so she was sailing again on 23 June, 2006.
Her return leg was via Cairns and Darwin, in Australia, Indonesia, Singapore, Phuket, Sri Lanka, The Red Sea, Suez Canal and the Mediterranean. She docked in Gibraltar for a crew change, with skipper John Jeffrey joined by British teenagers: Grant McCabe (Plymouth), Kerry Prideaux (Lynton, Devon), Glen Austin (Isle of Wight) - the last of 90 disadvantaged young people who had crewed the yacht on her 28,264-mile voyage round the world. She was accompanied into Plymouth by a flotilla of small craft, Gipsy Moth IV docked at West Hoe Pier on 28 May 2007, as she did exactly 40 years ago. She was welcomed home by Giles Chichester, son of Sir Francis.
After the voyage, a comprehensive new book covering the entire Gipsy Moth IV project was written by project founder Paul Gelder, with forewords by Princess Anne, Ellen MacArthur and Giles Chichester. Numerous colour photographs show in graphic detail the restoration, the shipwreck in French Polynesia and the salvage operation and rebuilding of the ketch in New Zealand.
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