Mingming II & the Islands of the Ice
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Roger D. Taylor
Roger D. Taylor has been sailing tiny self-built yachts to outlandish places for more than forty years. He is the recipient of the Ocean Cruising Club’s Jester Medal for ‘an outstanding contribution to the art of single-handed ocean sailing’ and the Royal Cruising Club’s Medal for Seamanship, for ‘exploits of legendary proportions.’
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Mingming II & the Islands of the Ice - Roger D. Taylor
Mayen
1
We had sailed twenty thousand miles in northern seas and now Mingming was tired. Her mainsail was a patchwork; her mast, thirty years old, was scored with the stigmata of storm and calm. Heading back home from 80˚North in 2011, I began to feel that I had asked enough of her. Lightly built and always willing, she had skipped her way across everything the ocean could throw at her. She had been a marvellous companion, but now needed either rest or a total re-fit.
Something else was gnawing away at me: the need to create another boat. It was nearly forty years since I had built my first little ocean cruiser Roc, but the compulsion was still there. What better adventure is there for a man than to hammer together a tiny craft and to sail it across the wide world? The idea still burned as strongly as it did in my boyhood. Now, though, it was overlaid with the guile of age and with the knowledge hard-won from many thousands of hours at sea.
Mingming had taught me a lot, and my head was swimming with ideas for an improved version. I felt that I had one more boat in me. The challenge was irresistible: to create the ideal small and simple ocean cruiser; my final word on the matter.
My drawing pads were, as ever, filled with preliminary sketches and plans. For a while I considered building a complete boat from scratch. It would take too long, though. I wanted to be sailing rather than boat-building. In a world over-laden with unused and neglected yachts, it seemed impertinent to be adding yet another hull to the pile. It would be quicker and less wasteful to find an old and unloved yacht, to strip it down to the bare hull and deck, and to rebuild it to my own specifications.
For half a year I drove around the country looking at older yachts in obscure coastal corners, examining the detritus of a thousand dreams. Gradually the choices narrowed until I knew exactly what I wanted: a triple-keeled Achilles 24. This was the design that came closest to a slightly scaled-up Corribee; a bigger and more robust Mingming. Fine-lined and with low freeboard, it was designed by Oliver Lee of Burnham-on-Crouch, and was therefore related to the redoubtable Squib racing keelboat. I talked to many past and present Achilles owners; every one of them praised its sailing abilities. About six hundred were built, and well built too. Chris Butler, who produced the yachts in his South Wales factory, had won his class in the Observer Singlehanded Transatlantic Race. As the starting point for creating Mingming II, the Achilles seemed ideal.
I found the one I wanted tucked away in a broker’s yard in Neyland, South Wales. At first glance it was in a disastrous state, with its rotting rubbing strake, bilges full of water, filthy and chaotic interior, worn-out fittings and corroded electrics. The hull and deck were sound, though, and that was all that mattered. Given that I was going to tear the boat apart, there was no point paying for a smart interior or fancy gadgetry.
By February 2012 I had the new boat back at my base at Rice and Cole’s yard at Burnham-on-Crouch, lined up alongside Mingming. Although she was just three feet longer overall – 23’ 9" as opposed to Mingming’s 20’ 9" – she seemed enormous by comparison. At this stage too there was little to suggest sisterly likeness, apart from some similarity in their lines. Over the next two years that was to change.
I quickly sold on Mingming II’s Bermudan rig: mast, rigging and sails. One of the central tasks of the rebuild was to convert her to a junk rig. I had long since concluded that this was by far the easiest and most versatile rig for small-boat singlehanded sailing. This was, too, one of the principal areas where I felt I could make huge improvements.
With the mast gone and the decks cleared I set to work.
The rebuild took nearly two and a half years to complete, working at weekends and for three months full-time during two summers. The boat was transformed inside and out, following the principles I had developed over many years. The central keel was removed and re-bedded, and the thirty year-old studs replaced. Every single deck fitting was taken off and every resultant hole plugged. The few fittings I retained were re-bedded. Every skin fitting was removed and its holes sealed. Foam-filled compartments were created fore and aft behind watertight bulkheads. An immensely strong mast step was built forward to take the new mast. I strengthened the foredeck and built a massive flange and partners for the mast to pass through. The forward hatch area was remodelled to take a proper watertight hatch. The long and unsightly acrylic windows were replaced with strong plywood cabin-sides and small portholes, identical in diameter to those of Mingming.
The main structural changes were made at the after end of the cabin. There I first built a raised dog-house. This was designed to give me an area of full standing headroom, but more importantly to give me full all-round vision from inside the boat. I called it my observation pod. The central hatch was fitted in its roof. Much of the after end of the cabin and the forward part of the cockpit was then cut out, enabling me to extend the cabin aft. This gave me more room inside, better access to the aft internal stowage areas, and reduced the size of the cockpit. The main working hatch was built into this section, along with its protective side coamings and folding spray hood.
I sealed the cockpit locker lids with fibreglass, so that Mingming II was by then totally watertight above and below the waterline. A new rudder was built and the stainless steel rudder tube replaced with solid stainless steel bar. I made a longer and more robust tiller that could be reached easily from the working hatch.
As the work progressed Mingming II’s livery was gradually changed. I painted her topsides black and finished off the decks and cabin in Mingming Grey. By now she was starting to look the part.
It is a necessary rite of passage for every yacht I own to scrape off, by hand, every inch of anti-fouling, bringing the hull below the waterline back to the gelcoat, or to bare wood. It is a long and in many ways soulless task, but it serves several useful purposes. It forces you to examine the hull and to familiarise yourself with every subtlety of its curvature. It helps you develop strong shoulder muscles and infinite patience. There is something satisfying, too, about starting a-fresh with a clean and smooth hull.
I bought a municipal lamp post. This was a magnificent tapered aluminium tube forty-five feet long. I cut off the bottom sixteen feet to give me exactly what I wanted: a robust mast twenty-nine feet long, eight inches in diameter at the base and three inches at the top. I painted it with nine coats of epoxy paint and added a stainless steel masthead fitting welded up by a local agricultural engineer.
I needed a particularly strong mast because I had designed and made what some may consider an over-size sail. This was to cope with the extremely light winds typical of the high Arctic in summer. In any case, the junk rig is so easily reefed that it seemed better to have too much sail rather than too little.
I sewed the sail on the dining room table during the week after Christmas 2012. It was constructed of seven panels. The top four panels were joined as per a normal sail, but the bottom three panels were all separate entities. The sail was therefore in four parts. This was for several reasons. Firstly the sewing machine and space I had could not have coped with an entire sail. Secondly I liked the idea of having some separate panels that could be taken off and repaired easily, or even interchanged.
The principal reason, though, was to do with the design of the sail. Whereas Mingming’s sail was cut completely flat, in the traditional junk style, I wanted to try out the more powerful modern system of cambered panels. There are various ways that this camber can be achieved. For the top four panels I used the normal sail-makers’ method of broad-seaming: joining pieces of cloth already cut to the appropriate curves. For the bottom three individual panels I invented a system that uses cloth hinges to attach the flat panel to the sail battens. The aerodynamic curve is built into the hinge system.
The sail was so crazy that I felt it deserved an appropriate title. I christened it the Triple H sail: the horizontally hinged hybrid. From an aesthetic and engineering point of view, the proper number of panels was probably six. I began to view the additional seventh panel as the sail’s turbo-charger for very light airs, giving rise eventually to the sail’s full title: the Triple H TB.
I built the yard and boom from ordinary ‘yellow’ pine from the local DIY store, laminated for strength and stability. In fact throughout the rebuild I used either recycled timber and plywood, or else standard quality lumber and ply. I was very careful, though, to epoxy all end grains, and where possible to give a protective coat of fibreglass.
By the end of the summer of 2013 most of the main structural work was complete. The interior was by no means finished, but I decided that it was time to go sailing. I needed to try out the new rig. In particular I wanted to see how it balanced. I wanted too to get an idea of how all the changes had affected the trim of the boat. I still had to make decisions about how I would distribute the heavy stowage – food, water, anchors and so on – and felt that some sailing trials would help me in this.
2
On a wet September Monday Mingming II, on her trailer, was hitched to the yard tractor and pulled the short distance to the launching crane. The slings were attached and within a few minutes she was raised high in the air to be swung out over the Burnham-on-Crouch sea wall and into the water. As she moved slowly seawards forty feet in the air I could really appreciate, for the first time, the sweetness of her lines.
I was, of course, a little apprehensive. How would she float? Would she be down by the nose? Her keels kissed the water then disappeared. The slings started to slacken, dropped further and there she was, floating free and as sweetly as a swan. Michael, the yard foreman, and not a man to be easily impressed, let out a loud ‘Don’t she float nice!’. She certainly did, almost perfectly trimmed and sitting light and easily in the water. It was a moment of some relief, and I knew there and then that she was going to be a good’un.
For the best part of two months I sailed her on the River Crouch and had the most tremendous fun. For a start it was a welcome change to be away from sawdust and epoxy and sore knees. It was a delight to feel Mingming II come alive for the first time. More than anything, though, I had a riotous time because she sailed so absurdly well.
The junk rig is a supple and supremely practical rig. With the wind free it is very powerful; to windward it can sometimes struggle. Many junk rigs have been put on yachts with indifferent sailing qualities, very often using less efficient split rigs for ease of handling, and very often using conservative sail areas. The sailors of Bermudan-rigged yachts have no expectation, as a result, that their performance is ever going to be challenged by that of a junk.
It was a joy, then, to be at the helm of an inherently fast yacht with a huge and powerful rig. As Mingming II was largely unfinished inside she was very light too, to the point of tenderness. This did not bother me at all. I knew that once she was in full cruising trim she would stiffen up.
I was pleased too that it took very little adjustment to get Mingming II’s sail more or less crease-free and performing as well as I ever could have hoped. On Mingming I had introduced headsails to help windward performance, particularly in light airs, and I was now glad to be rid of them. With just one sail for all conditions, handling the yacht was simple and easy. Mingming II had no engine, of course, but leaving and picking up her mooring was generally straightforward. I still had to careful, though: the ebb tide could sweep through at three knots or more.
In a normal breeze Mingming II could just about hold her own to windward with comparable Bermudan-rigged yachts. She had good speed, although not the extreme pointing ability of many modern Bermudan yachts. With the wind free she was anybody’s match.
Where she really excelled, though, was in light airs. With so much sail area high on the rig, she could keep tracking smoothly in the faintest of breezes. In these conditions she regularly outpaced yachts considerably bigger. I remained outwardly impassive as we overtook shiny king-sized monsters here and there, causing looks of surprise, puzzlement and sometimes dismay. Inside, though, I glowed with the most appalling smugness.
In general I am not much concerned about speed; there are many more important factors that contribute to making a good ocean cruiser. Mingming II’s rig had been designed, though, to perform well in calm weather. That, too, was the main reason for choosing a yacht with a longer waterline than her predecessor. I had sewn the sail myself. Perhaps I was entitled to the occasional self-congratulatory moment.
The sailing trials firmed up my ideas about how I would finish off Mingming II’s interior, and at the end of October she was craned out for the final six months of boatbuilding.
The installation of watertight compartments at the bow meant that, as on Mingming, the forward V-berths had been reduced to stowage space only. This area was divided from the main cabin by half bulkheads port and starboard. Aft of this to starboard was the main berth. To port was the compact galley, nothing more than an Origo single burner alcohol stove, as on Mingming. Below the stove was an un-insulated locker that served as the boat’s fridge. Above it was the chart table that hinged upwards when the stove was in use. Aft of the galley and chart table was the port berth. Having berths to port and starboard was perhaps the main difference inside between Mingming II and Mingming. It gave what was already a considerably bigger cabin an even more spacious feel, and it would, of course, transform life at sea. I bought foam and material, and with some help from Brenda made the bunk cushions at home.
The whole of the hull and the coach roof was insulated with one-inch Plastazote foam covered with carpet. The observation pod had been built from massive timbers and thick layers of laminated ply, and I suspected that it would not need insulation, so I left it bare.
I installed the only electrical circuit on board, connecting the solar panel to the battery, switches and LED navigation lights. The huge bilge pump that I had bought new from a friend was installed under the bottom step of the companionway. I take the view that the smaller the yacht, the bigger the pump you need, on the basis that a much smaller amount of water can do a lot more damage much more quickly than on a big boat. I created lots of strong attachment points for the stowage of food and water canisters. I built a whole series of made-to-measure boxes to serve as shelves here and here, and sewed covers for them to keep the contents in.
The interior was painted out with a darkish grey matte paint. With three hatches acting as skylights, and the observation pod and portholes as well, Mingming II was well served inside with natural light. I am not keen on glary, over-bright interiors, so was happy to tone it down with a more sombre colour. The upholstery was all in a deep and relaxing green that contrasted well with the grey.
The final exterior job, the construction of bins and covers for the Jordan series drogue, was completed. These were put on the aft end of each cockpit seat, leaving enough room for me to sit there if required.
By the end of May 2014 the new boat was pretty much ready for sea, and after nearly three years ashore, so was I. It was time for some real sailing.
3
The creation of Mingming II had absorbed most of my physical and mental energy, leaving little to spare to think about our first voyage together. It would be