What a treat to get a tour of Dyksta's personal boat, and to sail it with him and his wife! Thanks for sharing some history of the boat, etc. Very impressive!
Good for you! What a treat that must have been going through Lammer and sailing with the designer!! I noticed how quiet the cabin was under sail. Great boat design albeit a tad “cold” without the contemporary wood furnishings… but hey you got a bit of the calvinistic experience right off the bat 😀. Welcome to The Netherlands 🇳🇱!
The gimbald table to the left of the stove was very cool. They must have been fixed together? The ability to shift the ballast as needed on a small sail boat must be considered quite a luxury. I would love to see what it does in heavy weather. It was a beautiful boat. Thank you for the brief tour. Looking forward to seeing more. 🤝🤝🤝😊
I've seen allot of your content over the years.... This is simply delightful. What a honor. Of course the boat is as cool as one would imagine. We are impressed, Cheers!
Many sports can be played to keep you young. Certainly terrific that we sailors can enjoy being on the water as boats become more and more short crew friendly.
what a a great boat designer, i didnt know who designed the black pearl till i seen this video, i love that vessel and the maltese falcon as well. dont think id want to be cleaning the bottom of either though :) thanks for the updates and showing us some well built vessels.
Since sailing is your life obviously you surely deserve your own custom design for comfort. Carbon rigging is fine sailing close to a yard, but repairs will not be easy in far locations. Regular aluminium is preferable in that case.
Great to follow your search for a new boat.what a privilege to sail such a wonderful boat with the designer!! can’t wait to see what shipyard you choose!! Good luck Fair winds ⛵️
Well, that was enjoyable! Very nice to see a legend is naval architecture still sailing one of his 'final' designs for 60,000 nm to boot! Personally, I do not enjoy the lines of the KM Yacht boats, although I do enjoy the very cool engineering that takes excellent advantage of weight distribution! I prefer the Alubat Cigale 16, or the Mark Lombard designed Gulliver 57 with it's Finot rear dining table!
OK so I had to check those out. The Cigale 16 in particular has a lot of practical and clever design ideas. I think a comparison with the Bestevaers is apples and oranges; more traditional thinking vs newer. Both have merits and probably appeal to very different people. Frankly I prefer the avant garde too.
Very cool boats, enjoyed that, although slightly disappointed not to see the water ballast in action. Best sofa ever on the 53. Old fashioned cabin but very cosy. Not the endless natural wood everywhere is a nice change. It must be great cruising while feeling safe with these boats. Interesting to think metal boats can still be light weight, never realized. (but please consider holding the shots a bit longer so we can take it all it in without pausing all the time)
That's one weird sculpture at 0:23. At 1:29 that's welds, baby! Mr. Dykstra knows the difference. This boat is a lesson to anyone who makes any useful thing.
Wow Mr Dykstra one of my favourite designers. I love Frers but for exploring aluminium yatchs , Dykstra n1. Love the Dixon's Moody as well but would be better in aluminium
Bestevaer was a nickname given to Michiel Adriaanszoon De Ruyter, one of the important Dutch admirals of the seventeenth century. The crew loved their captain and called him ‘Beste Vaeder’ (best father), which was then shortened to Bestevaer. The word Vaer also means sailor, seafarer. Thus, De Ruyter was not only the best father, but also the best seafarer.
Wow, what an impressive boat. I want one. Not for sailing cold weather or water places. I think I am allergic to that, but to bounce off any reef I hope i never encounter with the bottom or keel.
The suspect comes those water tight doors are to confine the water you already have inside the boat in case that something goes wrong in that crazy water ballast piping. And for the steering: that hull has a rudder higher then a tall man when you manoeuvre in reverse you simply cannot hold it. It swings abruptly left and right it can really hurt you badly. Once we called all this stuff design flaws.
Good morning from your fans from St. Petersburg! We have been watching your travels for many years - first on TV, and in recent years on RU-vid. A big request - add Russian language to your subtitles. Thanks! We love Paul & Cheryl and wish success to the Distant Shores!
Minnies in Newport beach CA has lots of mast parts. Also not being a wise ass but aluminum pipe is an easy way to make custom spreaders. My neighbor lost his stick and did a fine job making some. The bases are the had part but well within your skill set. If that carbon mast is otherwise good you should jump on it.
Let us know the design of your new boat, please. Also, what kind of features are included for cold water sailing? Insulation, heater, hull thickness, and such. How is the fresh water tank kept above 0° Celsius when sailing in arctic conditions? Is the bow modified a little to help with heavy ice? Sorry, I love such technical stuff.
On this boat, can you hand steer in the pilot house should the autopilot fail? Do you prefer a wheel a bit aft of the pilot house rather than a tiller at the stern? Thanks for your time. L…) Webhead STL
These boats are very well isolated and well ventilated and work as well in the high altitudes as in the tropics. But you surely would paint the decks white just to not burn your bare feet walking around.
@@harmseberhardharmseberhard9908 the ventilation could be better with hatches facing forward when open, opening windows on front of pilothouse house. theyre no danger if done correctly.hard bimini over cockpit for shade.the desgns more of a cold climate yacht which is ok, thats what theyre for. very well built.
@@simonhantler8062concerning bimini, whether hard or canvas, we obviously have diffent tastes. A bimini in the marina or at anchor is something usefull, a 'nice-to-have'. But when sailing, especially in harsh conditions, the windage is far too high. In storm conditions dangerously high, in breaking seas inacceptably dangerous. And the feel for the wind, the free view on the sails is compromised. And believe me, you will encounter severe storms in the carribean sea quite often, the Arafua Sea can look really angry and the area around Madagaskar is no better. A sailing buddy with a 47' aluminum sloop suffered a severe knock down on his way from the leeward islands to Panama. And Laura Dekker finally capsized in the strait of sicilly. Thanks to grib files you can avoid most storms. But not all of them.
But don't forget the Shards started with building their first little boat and sailed with it for years and years. This is the equivalant to us saving a lifetime and upgrading the house/flat.
@@tomriley5790 I was looking at the nice shiny welds, and wondering how long they would take to oxidize, and I was also thinking how cold the handrails might be at 75N. Purely academic, nothing I'm ever going to test.
@@timdunn2387 All Dutch teach their kids to not lick handrails while wintering over, frozen into ice, in the arctic..... More seriously: For most people, there are definitely good reasons to go the Allures way: The boat beaches like an alu centerboarder, yet has a more human-compatible composite deck. Pretty much a win-win, if you can stomach the in-your-face "Frenchness" of them. That sort of construction is not very practical for full custom builds. Doubly so for sailors as lock-limit knowledgeable and particular as Dijkstra himself. His personal boat would never be a mass produced boat. Once you start wanting high load attachments affixed hither and yonder, for reasons apparent only to you, a metal foundation is much preferable. People often end up drilling and screwing and backing and fitting and caulking and gasketing stuff to composite hulls as well, but it can virtually never be done as verifiably as a professionally done and tested metal weld. So it's not really an open and shut case either way.
Received a notice from DirecTV today that as of April 4 they will no longer carry the AWE channel 387. No more "Distant Shores" for me. I called to protest but got nowhere. that was the only channel on my DirecTV that carried the show. Where do YOU watch the TV program? We will be leaving DirecTV over this.
If you are looking for something new I'd say make it something out of the ordinary. Maybe a junk rig? Or a dutch sailing barge? I'm about to attend university to become a naval architect specializing in sailing ships, what i want to eventually have for myself is a boat inspired heavily by the hull of viking longships and the top deck closer to a dutch barge, probly with a twin/bilge keel. (Probly going to be cheaper than other boats because I don't care for all the fancy decorative stuff they out I'm most boats.
😂 No, definitly not. Ask all the professional seamen on commercial ships and fishing vessels or on Navi ships, whether their anthropogenic life force energy was ever deminished. Or ask me, who has been sailing on a steel sailingboat for more than 25 years, more than 30.000nm, have been living on a steel boat for 3 years full time and never felt more alife than during this time. Perhaps something with the antropogenic life force energy fields theory is wrong?
@@harmseberhardharmseberhard9908 What's your steel sailing vessel? Thnx. PS Already a large body of knowledge involved going back for as long as people have been writing. I can't spend any time in the north east corner of my house for example.
@@paulpaul9914 My ex-boat...I sold it one year ago. A 1984 Fruit de Mer, 37', centerboard (deriveur), internal ballast, 3.79m wide, lwl 9.40m, weight empty 10,5t; 4.5t internal lead ballast, galvanised round bilge steel hull, build by Form Ocean in Nantes (now out of business). Naval architect: Michel Joubert. Nice and robust woodwork by Garcia. Fast and able boat. Not bad to windward, but really fast on beam reach or off the wind in a blow. When surfing downwind in big seas up to 15 knots without feeling unsecure. Was very happy with this boat. But now too big, too much work for an old man. 😁
Feadship was called Amels in the 80s. It did a makeover of the Trump Princes I. I watched it leave in 1988, I think. The Donald later ordered for the building of the Princes II by Amels. But then he ran out of money…. What did he do? He bought the wharf, and let it go bankrupt, so didn’t have to pay for the super yacht he had ordered…. Some elements of the hull are still lying around there at the wharf….. So Makkum got to know Donald Trump back in the 80s already….By the way, beautiful ship, this Bestevaer. I sail at the IJsselmeer regularly myself.
With all the IMO Ballast Water regulations these days. You would now have to use your potable water supply, otherwise you have a boat you can't leave your country with.
That's a good observation Carl.. I am pretty sure Gerard will have done that correctly for any new builds with SALT water ballast. He also has 2 fresh water tanks so was also using potable water for ballast but much less weight with just 400-500 tanks I think he said.
@@JohnJohn-cu7nk Already, before entering NZ waters, you have to have a scrupulously clean hull, or face a very steep fine. I bet if they found you had Sea Water Ballast Tanks, and no treatment system, as the larger ships do!!! I do not wish to be in that captains shoes.🤦♂😱😱😱
Interesting point - I'm not sure the IMO regulations apply to this small a craft. Either way it's not really what they're aimed at - the Ballast water they're aiming at is the stuff used to replace the weight of Cargo/Oil on merchant ships and then transported half way around the world before being dischraged. On this boat you'd discharge your ballast water from the upwind ballast tank every time you tacked, plus the tanks themselves are obviously devoid of sunlight, which should mean no plant growth. The other alternative would be to fit a filter and UV system which would use power but should solve the problem, or chemically treat the water before dumping it.