Get XS Daily News  

Monthly archives for June, 2022

Bill Tripp’s first big win

Tuesday
Jun 14
2022
Posted by XS Editor

For every notable yacht designer, there is that one boat which launches their career. For Bill Tripp Jr, whose life was cut short in 1971 at age 51 due to an automobile accident with a drunk driver, that boat was an innovative yawl which Donald Street recalls in this report:


In 1956 I sailed the Vineyard race on Katingo, a very nice centreboard yawl of about 50-feet that Bill had designed for Captain Vatis, a Greek ship owner.

At that point, Bill was no longer working for S&S but was trying make it as an independent designer, though his income was still largely from Red Hand paint that he represented in some fashion.

I can’t remember the entire crew but there was Captain Vatis as owner and skipper, Bill as navigator along with Arthur Knapp, Rod Oakes (an old friend who in our teen age years was a star boarder at our house in Port Washington on Manhasset Bay), myself, and a couple of others.

The race started in fog, and for navigation we relied on Dead Reckoning, using a Kenyon speed gauge that was not too accurate and didn’t record total miles. We had basic Direction Finding, but our distance sailed was a guesstimate, and while there was a sextant on board, with the fog there was no sun to use.

After leaving Long Island Sound, passing south of Fishers Island and Watch Hill, on an inshore leg as we tacked I saw Weekapaug Inn. I went below and asked Bill where his DR put us, and he showed us on the chart as being ten miles out which was not surprising considering fog and the navigation equipment available in those days.

Having spotted the Inn through the fog, I pointed out where we were along the Rhode Island shoreline, certain of our location as the Street family had spent summers on that beach since 1936 (and parts of the Street family still do).

This gave Bill a good point of departure to work out our approach to Vineyard Sound Lightship which we found by homing in on the DF and picking up the fog horn. We rounded the lightship, and headed back to Plum Gut south of Block Island, on a fast shy spinnaker reach. – Read on

Read more on Scuttlebutt

Posted in Article



America’s Cup: Join the Spy Game

Tuesday
Jun 14
2022
Posted by XS Editor

Teams using spies armed with long lenses to get an insight into what design direction competitors are heading in, are a common sight. For the 37th America’s Cup, the spy game has been reinvented. Here’s your opportunity to be part of it…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



SailGP visits Chicago for the first time

Tuesday
Jun 14
2022
Posted by deleteme

On June 18 and 19, nine national SailGP teams will race in excess of 60mph – on Lake Michigan in front of the Chicago skyline…

Read more on Sail Web

Posted in Article



UK Moth Nationals – Hiscocks by a point

Monday
Jun 13
2022
Posted by deleteme

Simon Hiscocks took victory on the final day of the International Moth UK Nationals at WPNSA…

Read more on Sail Web

Posted in Article



American Magic training in Pensacola

Monday
Jun 13
2022
Posted by XS Editor

The City of Pensacola is welcoming New York Yacht Club American Magic back to the Port of Pensacola for training, marking the team’s third winter training on the Gulf Coast. PATRIOT, the team’s AC75 racing yacht, arrived in Pensacola after making the journey from New Zealand on June 11, 2022.

American Magic will spend the summer building out the team’s base in advance of winter training. The team will spend all winter in Pensacola training before relocating to Barcelona for the final push into the 37th America’s Cup…

Details: https://www.americascup.com/en/home

Source: NYYC American Magic media

Read more on Scuttlebutt

Posted in Article



Ready, set, R2AK

Monday
Jun 13
2022
Posted by XS Editor

We’re back. 829 days since the world was cancelled by the murder sneeze, Race to Alaska (R2AK) Central is shaking off the cobwebs and getting back in the saddle for a long delayed year of engineless hard charging to Alaska. Thank god.

Deep in R2AK’s command bunker we’re Rip Van Winkling our way out of forced hibernation. Our beards are a little longer, jumpsuits a little tighter than they were when we hung them up back in 2019. While R2AK Central is trying to remember where all the light switches are, both streets of Port Townsend are a sea of boat trailers, foul weather geared pedestrians, and R2AK t-shirted tourists and volunteers.

The marinas and boat launches are bumper to bumper with pedal-driven and paddle-wheeled weirdo craft, the movie theater is filled with the R2AK documentary. This is definitely happening, three years and finally since the last one.

With three years to prep, you’d think that teams would be dialed in and disciplined, fire-drilled and dojo-honed, executing a plan three calendars in the making. You’d be wrong, at least a conceptual “half” of the time…

Read more on Scuttlebutt

Posted in Article



Sailing In the Dark? Let Cyclops Be Your Eyes…

Monday
Jun 13
2022
Posted by XS Editor

The world’s elite offshore sailors have found an alternative to all those pre-race carrots you’ve been eating…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



SDYC hosts 2022 Snipe Nationals

Saturday
Jun 11
2022
Posted by XS Editor

San Diego Yacht Club is proud to host the 2022 Snipe National Championship this summer, July 11-15, 2022. Four full days of racing in what promises to be tight competition in the Snipe Fleet will be paired with five days of on-land festivities…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



SSL Gold Cup Qualifying Series Round 3 day 2

Saturday
Jun 11
2022
Posted by XS Editor

After unfavourable wind conditions forced abandonment of racing yesterday, Group 5 finally got underway today with three back-to-back races in an all-South American contest…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



Artemis Technologies’ all-electric foiling prototype

Friday
Jun 10
2022
Posted by deleteme

UK-based Artemis Technologies, headed by Olympic champion and America’s Cup skipper Iain Percy, has launched its 100% electric, high-speed foiling workboat prototype on Belfast Lough…

Read more on Sail Web

Posted in Article



Surfrider Foundation Europe joins Route du Rhum

Friday
Jun 10
2022
Posted by XS Editor

As it is shaping up as an all time record edition the 2022 La Route du Rhum – Destination Guadeloupe 2022 will muster the biggest fleet ever with 138 participants…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



AOSF enters the Ocean Globe Race challenge

Friday
Jun 10
2022
Posted by XS Editor

The crew will be composed of Military Vets and First-Responders with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, who are given an opportunity to heal at sea, using research-based methods of learning to live with trauma through Adventure Therapy…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



Leigh McMillan signs on for a third America’s Cup

Friday
Jun 10
2022
Posted by XS Editor

Having grown up on the Isle of Wight, Leigh McMillan knows a few things about the America’s Cup and it was a very quick decision to re-sign with INEOS Britannia, for his third consecutive America’s Cup with the British Challenger…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



SailGP has come of age

Thursday
Jun 09
2022
Posted by XS Editor

Bill Springer, Forbes.com, talks to Russell Coutts about how the adrenaline-fueled, environmentally conscious SailGP Racing League is coming of age at the next event of this season in Chicago.

When it comes to high-performance sailing, and high-profile high-performance sailing events, Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison and America’s Cup legend Russell Coutts have pretty much seen it all. Their Oracle Team USA syndicate came back from the brink of losing the America’s Cup to Emirates Team New Zealand (they were down 8 races-to-1) by winning 9 races in a row in historic fashion on San Francisco Bay in 2013.

And their 2017 Oracle Team USA squad was nearly swept when they lost the Cup to Emirates Team New Zealand (7-races-to-1) in Bermuda. But stories like these only scratch the surface of what these two passionate and powerful sailors have brought to the “sport of sailing” since Ellison started forming syndicates headed by Coutts to compete for the America’s Cup in the early 2000’s.

In fact, few have worked harder and invested more to turn the “sport of sailing”, that had been perceived to be a stereotypically slow and boring activity for eccentric billionaires, into a modern sport that has all the excitement, technology, sex appeal and drama (and sponsorship opportunities) of Formula 1 Grand Prix racing, than Ellison and Coutts…

Read more on Scuttlebutt

Posted in Article



The Honeys: Final hurrah aboard Illusion

Thursday
Jun 09
2022
Posted by XS Editor

Speaking with Sally and Stan Honey in the cabin of their Cal 40 Illusion, the conversation is as easy and breezy as the gorgeous day topsides in Portsmouth, R.I. The ocean-racing couple, who’ve racked up many victories racing from California to Hawaii, is preparing for the 52nd Newport Bermuda Race.

The Honeys, from Palo Alto, Calif., are well advanced in their preps. The crew is set: 1984 Olympic Gold medalist Carl Buchan (Seattle, Wash.), fellow Cal 40 owner Don Jesberg (Belvedere, Calif.) and the redoubtable Jonathan Livingston (Richmond, Calif.) are all experienced and legendary West Coast sailors in their own right.

The boat has been stripped of its cruising amenities: the dining table and floorboards are removed, the heavy anchor and chain are gone, and the heater has been disconnected and removed. The safety inspection has occurred…

Read more on Scuttlebutt

Posted in Article



Only two days to the 83rd Bol d’Or Mirabaud

Thursday
Jun 09
2022
Posted by XS Editor

This morning, the organizers of the 83rd Bol d’Or Mirabaud presented the final details of the world’s most important regatta held on a lake, which promises to be exceptional both on land and on the water…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



a shot in the dark

Thursday
Jun 09
2022
Posted by deleteme

AIS tracking partnership Global Fishing Watch has expanded its reach with what it believes to be the first ever publicly-available worldwide map of “undetected dark fleets” – vessels that do not broadcast AIS.

Using synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data from the European Space Agency’s Sentinel-1 satellites, coupled with machine learning algorithms, Global Fishing Watch has figured out how to automatically track vessels without the use of satellite AIS…

Read more on Sailing Anarchy

Posted in Article



dock walk talk

Thursday
Jun 09
2022
Posted by deleteme

Conrad Coleman takes you on a tour of the IMOCAs that will be sailing in the Vendée Arctique which starts this Sunday. Conrad will be sailing his boat, Imagine, a 2007 VPLP design  The course leaves Les Sables, goes around Iceland(!), and then finishes back at Les Sables.

Read more on Sailing Anarchy

Posted in Article



Clipper Race: Progress toward Bermuda

Wednesday
Jun 08
2022
Posted by XS Editor

(June 8, 2022) – Following a smooth Le Mans start, the Clipper Round the World Yacht Race fleet is making decent progress, despite the ever-changing winds, through the Caribbean Sea during the first stage of Race 12: Go To Bermuda. WTC Logistics is currently head of the pack and racing toward the first Scoring Gate, located north of the Turks and Caicos Islands. Having played a Joker during this race, the WTC Logistics team will want to maintain their position, but with the GoToBermuda team not far behind and also playing their Joker, it’s all to play for.

The race to the first virtual mark was close, with the whole fleet racing within 5nm of each other, trying to keep good boat speed toward Jamaica. However, the last 24-36 hours has been slow for the fleet, with prevalent wind holes causing the yachts to distance from each other and shake up the rankings, as the teams each navigate the patches of wind and try to pick up some short-lived breeze…

Read more on Scuttlebutt

Posted in Article



Eight Bells: Hayden Goodrick

Wednesday
Jun 08
2022
Posted by XS Editor

Professional sailor Hayden Goodrick, who had been living in Vail, Colorado with his young family, died after having chest pains during an event in Newport, Rhode Island. He was 38. A New Zealand-born sailor and father of two is being mourned all over the world after he died while competing.

Hayden’s early career started when his uncle gifted him lessons at the New Plymouth Yacht Club in New Zealand as a pre-teen. In 2000, Hayden left New Plymouth Boys High School and moved to Auckland, after being given the opportunity to sail in the Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron. “I decided, if I wanted to have a decent crack at sailing, I would have to put everything into it,” he said in 2003.

Goodrick, nicknamed “83”, had a drive for the sport that saw him chase his dream all over the globe, taking part in the America’s Cup, as a key member of BMW Oracle in 2007, and founding the US One Sailing team, driving it to success in 2013, and was beloved figure in the sport.

His mother, Denise Goodrick, said she’d need a whole day to sum up her son’s achievements. “Hayden was somebody who lived a lifetime in 38 years,” Denise said. While Hayden was known for his sailing, he had done so much else in the decades he spent overseas, and was renowned by so many organizations and people…

Read more on Scuttlebutt

Posted in Article



International 6mR teams ready for World Championship

Wednesday
Jun 08
2022
Posted by deleteme

The International Six Metre 2022 World Championship opens on the waters of the Pontevedra estuary in Galicia, at the northwest corner of Spain, from the 10 to 18 June…

Read more on Sail Web

Posted in Article



2022 ILCA 7 Masters Worlds – Podiums after final day racing

Wednesday
Jun 08
2022
Posted by deleteme

The final two races were completed Tuesday at the 2022 ILCA 7 Masters World Championship in Riviera Nayarit, Nueveo Vallarta, Mexico…

Read more on Sail Web

Posted in Article



britannia waives the rules

Wednesday
Jun 08
2022
Posted by deleteme

My colleague Shanghai Sailor is offended that anyone should have the temerity to describe the British monarchy as “antiquated and irrelevant”. Perhaps he’s been singing God Save the Queen so loudly he’s become deaf to both history and reality.

Like all hereditary monarchies, the House of Windsor (whose real surname was Battenberg) is an inbred collection of entitled spongers who’ve lived luxuriously off the public purse and their largely stolen private wealth. They are a high-end form of showbiz. In the UK they are the nation’s primary tourist attraction. They have no actual authority over anything other than their own pampered lives.

The whole notion of a hereditary monarchy is ridiculous. Installing someone as Head of State purely on the basis of who their parents happened to be is as nonsensical as accepting a hereditary brain surgeon…

Read more on Sailing Anarchy

Posted in Article



America’s Cup: Swiss name sailing and design teams

Wednesday
Jun 08
2022
Posted by XS Editor

Fourteen sailors have been selected to join the Alinghi Red Bull Racing crew and represent the Société Nautique de Genève during the 37th America’s Cup…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



Rules Committee for 37th America’s Cup

Wednesday
Jun 08
2022
Posted by XS Editor

The Rules Committee for the 37th America’s Cup has been announced with a trio of highly qualified members who will be in charge of maintaining the rules and regulations in relation to all AC37 race yachts. They are Stan Honey (USA), Mark Ellis (UK) and Marc Wintermantel (SUI).

According to the Protocol of the 37th America’s Cup the role of the Rules Committee is to be exclusively responsible for the interpretation of the AC75 and AC40 Class Rules and their rulings are final.

The Rules Committee is also responsible for the determination of whether or not any yacht constitutes a Surrogate Yacht, based on information provided by the Measurement Committee; and to resolve any other matter for which it is given jurisdiction under the Protocol and/or the Class Rules…

Read more on Scuttlebutt

Posted in Article



Sustainability: Focus of Bermuda Race

Tuesday
Jun 07
2022
Posted by XS Editor

The 2022 Bermuda Race Organizing Committee has made sustainability a focal point of the biennial race. The past three editions of the 635-nautical mile race (2014, ’16 and ’18) have been recognized by Sailors for the Sea as “clean” regattas, culminating with a Gold classification for the 2018 race for its effort to minimize the impact on the environment.

This year race organizers hope to achieve Platinum-level status, the highest level, and have laid out objectives to eliminate single-use plastic, maximize recycling and reuse, encourage thoughtful provisioning, and promote the use of environmentally friendly boat and dish-cleaning solvents that lack harsh chemicals, among a long list of suggestions…

Read more on Scuttlebutt

Posted in Article



British 12sqM Sharpie Nationals at Wells

Tuesday
Jun 07
2022
Posted by XS Editor

The Jubilee weekend provided the best available tides for the championships, unfortunately the wind and weather gods disagreed. Friday provided the best conditions overhead, but the freshening NE breeze made sea conditions increasingly difficult…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



DIY: Veneer

Tuesday
Jun 07
2022
Posted by deleteme

The finished product: you need to see the difference between the old sole material and the newer section

Part of the remodeling of the chart table area on my 45ft schooner Britannia involved making a new section of floorboarding or, to use its proper nautical term, cabin sole. The floor beneath was just rough plywood, unlike the remainder of the boat, which was beautiful teak with white-wood strips. It was perhaps just as well, because in order to reposition the electrical distribution board I had to cut this floor out completely to re-route the wires underneath.

I naturally wanted any new floor to match the boat’s existing sole and scoured the web and any sources of teak flooring with whitewood strips to match the existing floor pattern. Unfortunately, I was unable to locate the exact pattern anywhere. Britannia’s strips are 3/8in wide, and the nearest I could find were 1/4in wide and also spaced differently. I thought using a different pattern would look like a “botched job” and chose not to settle…

Read more on Sail Magazine

Posted in Article



11th Hour Racing Team arrive in Newport, RI

Tuesday
Jun 07
2022
Posted by XS Editor

The new IMOCA race boat Malama arrived in its home port of Newport, Rhode Island, this evening at sundown following a successful 10 day transatlantic training run from Concarneau, France…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



2022 Supernova Nationals Runners & Riders

Tuesday
Jun 07
2022
Posted by XS Editor

With just under a month to go until the Supernova National Championship, it is time to analyse the fleet and see who might be in the running to take the crown (odds are just for fun!)…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



ILCA 7 Masters Worlds in Mexico day 5

Tuesday
Jun 07
2022
Posted by XS Editor

Two races were completed today at the 2022 ILCA 7 Masters World Championship in Riviera Nayarit, Nueveo Vallarta, Mexico. The racing kicked off in about 8–10 knots, and the breeze picked up a little for the second race to 11–13 knots…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



Seven GP Zero boats for RORC IRC Nationals

Tuesday
Jun 07
2022
Posted by XS Editor

The Royal Ocean Racing Club’s RORC IRC National Championships will be the setting for Round Two of the new IRC Racing Class Grand Prix Zero (GP Zero) series. Seven ballistic speed machines are expected from the GP Zero Class…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



Abandoned Infiniti52 found and recovered

Tuesday
Jun 07
2022
Posted by XS Editor

The Infiniti52 Tulikettu, which was abandoned and believed to be lost at sea in mid-April, has been found and safely returned to shore…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



Global Solo Challenge – Do you qualify?

Monday
Jun 06
2022
Posted by XS Editor

There must be thousands of sailors worldwide who dream of sailing around the world, non-stop and alone. Just you and your boat overcoming the elements and achieving one of the pinnacles of yachting aspiration…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



The little boat that could

Monday
Jun 06
2022
Posted by XS Editor

All it took was a year of elbow grease and a little bit of TLC for Alex Simanis to get his newly restored Pt Bonita 27, Pell Mell, back into the water and titled a winner. The smallest boat on the course for the duration of the 2022 California Offshore Race Week (CORW) has proved that it is heart and skill that gets you first overall, not size.

The week-long journey down the California coast is broken into separate races: Spinnaker Cup (San Francisco to Monterey, 86 miles), Coastal Cup (Monterey to Santa Barbara, 204 miles), SoCal 300 (Santa Barbara to San Diego, 245 miles): June 2-4. Skippers and crews are encouraged to participate in the entirety of the CORW, but have the option to opt into any of the individual legs. In 2016, the SoCal 300 synced up with the Spinnaker Cup and the Coastal Cup, resulting in the California Offshore Race Week.

Simanis’ Pell Mell is the official winner of not just the SoCal 300, but the overall series winner of CORW. Originally built in the mid 80’s, the Point Bonita 27′ Pell Mell was designed to be more of a cruiser, with inspiration from the Dogpatch 26, without the hard chines below the waterline. Her ample room below decks makes things more comfortable for distance-racing. Simanis found the boat languishing in Poulsbo in the Pacific Northwest West, and spent an entire year bringing her into her potential, and this past October, she returned to the water and began collecting trophies…

Event Details – Entry Lists – Results – Tracker

Read more on Scuttlebutt

Posted in Article



Giorgio Armani Superyacht Regatta overall

Monday
Jun 06
2022
Posted by XS Editor

The Giorgio Armani Superyacht Regatta concluded with a win in the day’s racing and overall victory for the Wallycento Magic Carpet Cubed, owned by YCCS member Sir Lindsay Owen-Jones, assisted as always on tactics by Jochen Schuemann…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



Race to Alaska: the anti-yacht race

Monday
Jun 06
2022
Posted by XS Editor

Doug Kennedy has spent decades sailing the globe. He’s navigated Scandinavian waters like a viking, and once crossed the Atlantic from the coast of Morocco to the Caribbean over a three-week journey.

A trip north along British Columbia’s coast should, in theory, be easy for him. In practice, it will be anything but for Kennedy and a group of Nelson sailors looking to make history, if they can finish the journey that is. “It’s as challenging a place to sail as anywhere in the world,” says Kennedy.

The Kootenay Pedalwheelers, a team of six including Kennedy, Jay Blackmore, Mike Bowick, Roger Hassol, Todd Kettner and Mike Sagal, are set to compete in the 2022 Race to Alaska beginning June 13. The event is a 1,200-kilometer endurance race from Port Townsend, Wash., to Ketchikan, Alaska. The 38 teams taking part are bound by two rules: no motors and no outside help…

Race details – 2019 Results – Facebook – Instagram

Read more on Scuttlebutt

Posted in Article



Foiling Golds at World Cup Amsterdam

Monday
Jun 06
2022
Posted by XS Editor

Amsterdam, The Netherlands (June 5, 2022) – Light winds today for the participants of the Hempel World Cup Series Allianz Regatta for 2022, enough for kiting but not quite for iQFOiL. The boat classes completed their medal races yesterday, and today it was the finale in Lelystad for the four Olympic board classes. Annelous Lammerts felt the heat from Israel but won the Formula Kite Women while Benoit Gomez defies logic to win Formula Kite Men with a small kite. The tiebreak went in favor of Peru in iQFOiL Women and HJ Tak and Dutch teammates dominated iQFOiL Men. – Full report

Read more on Scuttlebutt

Posted in Article



Classic dinghies at Llangorse

Monday
Jun 06
2022
Posted by XS Editor

Gusts colliding from opposing directions – sometimes from above – ensured the Classic and Vintage Dinghy Racing Association enjoyed a fittingly classic sailing experience at Llangorse…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



lost and found

Monday
Jun 06
2022
Posted by deleteme

There is a fair bit of chatter about the abandonment of the brand new Infinity 52 Tulikettu. here is the end result of it all…

Tulikettu was sailing from Cascais, Portugal, back to the team base in Gosport, England across the Bay of Biscay. She was sailing with her foil fully retracted when the hull struck an unidentified floating object on Monday, April 18th. There was an uncontrolled leak in the boat, the cause of which was unknown. The crew triggered the EPIRB emergency transmitter on Wednesday, April 20, after midnight.

The four-person crew worked diligently to stop the inflow of water. Two of the crew were also experienced boatbuilders. After 10 hours, and within the arrival of the rescue ship they were able to make some temporary repairs to ensure the vessel would not sink. The team was approximately 300 nautical miles offshore, very likely beyond the range of helicopter rescue.

When the rescue ship was on approach, there was a lot of water in the boat. Not knowing whether the last repairs would work, the person in charge had two choices; to wait and see if the repairs worked, or to abandon the boat. The weather conditions were worsening, with high waves. The difficult decision was made to evacuate onto the oil tanker, ensuring the safety of the crew onboard as the logistics company had ordered the tanker to leave the area as soon as possible due to worsening sea state. No one was injured in the accident. The search for Tulikettu was stopped on Saturday, April 30.

Tulikettu was abandoned off the coast of Portugal. The boat was to take part in the world’s largest offshore sailing competitions. It was unknown whether the crews’ efforts worked. A new sighting of the boat was obtained on Monday, May 23rd. The boat was spotted by passing yacht and the crew reached out to the Tulikettu Social Media Channel via private message. When the tip proved to be reliable, the rescue operation was immediately restarted…

Read more on Sailing Anarchy

Posted in Article



« More XS Stories

Newer XS Stories »

Follow Us!

Follow Us on FacebookFollow Us on TwitterFollow Us on E-mail

World News click here

Enter the Border Run

XS Chat

XS Poll

RSS Sailing World

  • The All-Purpose Storm 18
  • P Class Sails from Past to Present
  • Lucky’s Caribbean 600 Victory: A Record-Smashing Sprint

RSS SA Forums

  • Fair Winds, Uncle Bob (M24 racer Bob Clark, Michigan)
  • soft shackle design ("two stage" shackle)
  • 56m luxury sailing yacht sinks off Sicily, 7 missing
  • Laminate vs Dacron
  • Looking for "Katsou' and "propaganda" pics

Sponsors

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org

Archives

  • June 2025 (4)
  • May 2025 (8)
  • April 2025 (17)
  • March 2025 (25)
  • February 2025 (26)
  • January 2025 (33)
  • December 2024 (30)
  • November 2024 (29)
  • October 2024 (28)
  • September 2024 (43)
  • August 2024 (82)
  • July 2024 (29)
  • June 2024 (22)
  • May 2024 (18)
  • April 2024 (34)
  • March 2024 (5)
  • February 2024 (32)
  • January 2024 (43)
  • December 2023 (48)
  • November 2023 (82)
  • October 2023 (105)
  • September 2023 (55)
  • August 2023 (58)
  • July 2023 (80)
  • June 2023 (59)
  • May 2023 (97)
  • April 2023 (80)
  • March 2023 (120)
  • February 2023 (95)
  • January 2023 (85)
  • December 2022 (94)
  • November 2022 (134)
  • October 2022 (124)
  • September 2022 (69)
  • August 2022 (122)
  • July 2022 (140)
  • June 2022 (154)
  • May 2022 (160)
  • April 2022 (196)
  • March 2022 (160)
  • February 2022 (108)
  • January 2022 (101)
  • December 2021 (141)
  • November 2021 (183)
  • October 2021 (122)
  • September 2021 (129)
  • August 2021 (175)
  • July 2021 (154)
  • June 2021 (194)
  • May 2021 (178)
  • April 2021 (210)
  • March 2021 (47)
Free Web Counter
Website Hit Counters

EvoLve theme by Theme4Press  •  Powered by WordPress XS Sailing