She sat on the water like a swan.

Miss Cindy is a Turtle Island, 16' minature catamaran designed for extensive coastal cruising and for offshore passage making in appropriate cruising seasons. She is primarily limited in her offshore capabilities by her payload capacity which is only about 500 lbs. A single crew with supplies for 6 weeks would be doable. With a crew of two the boat would have to carry significant extra weight unless the crew were very minimalist.

About Plans

For coastal work she can be taken in thru moderate surf and beached. She is also trailerable so would make a good boat for taking to the Sea of Cortez in the late fall for a cruise down the Central American coast.

She is intended for those who would be comfortable doing dingy cruising or kayaking, but has a few more ammenities, with a double berth, and sitting headroom in each hull by the bubble windows. Head would be a micro porta potti. 100 watts of solar panel provides ships power and a 2hp outboard provides propulsion for calms.

Construction is stitch and glue marine ply epoxy, with the masts out of wood. The rig is similar to that on Paradox. with a roller reefing lugsail except in a biplane configuration. Construction was completed in 480 man hours.

Construction Log

In 2008/9 cruised from Victoria to Mexico ( by road ) then coasted to San Juan del Sur Nicaragua, thence overland to Lake Nicaragua, then out the San Juan river to the Caribbean, Cayman Brac, Cuba......

Travels with Miss Cindy

2022 Renovations and Self-Steering vane

Miss Cindy in the press

September 2009 Lattitude 38

May 2010 Small Craft Advisor

July 2012 Multihulls World

2014 Search Magazine Sweden

Sailing Anarchy

Short video of model going upwind in waves.

Short video of model upwind into 5' wake (scale).

Short video of model on a reach with the leward sail reversed into clear air forward.

 

Becalmed.

Upwind in light air.

Upwind in breeze.

Beam reach with the lee sail sheeted to the forward bow to get clear air.

Beam reach with the lee sail sheeted to the forward bow, stern view.

Downwind with the sail acting as downwind twins with the sheets eased to form a V.

 

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Copyright © 2008, 2009, 2010 Tony Bigras.