52 Boating New Zealand
assessment of Korora. Her artfulness attracted
many admiring looks while her sensible design
meant sailing her was a dream.
The upper reaches of French Bay in Akaroa
Harbour greeted us with ideal conditions for the
review: 12 knots of southwest harbour draft. To
add to all that we were surrounded by the fleet
from the Akaroa Classic Yacht regatta so we
had plenty of traditional cruising dinghies for
comparison.
First impressions of Korora are of room and
lots of it. The beamy nature means there is a lot
of boat packed into her 14 feet. Even with three
of us aboard she didn’t feel crowded. The cockpit
layout offered multiple combinations of crew
placement without affecting the trim.
The bottom profile has a flat, dory-like form
bent into a fore and aft curve for strength.
This helps with the load-carrying capacity
and her sea kindly motion. With the addition
of a relatively high freeboard for her length
she a surprisingly dry in the short chop that
developed later in the afternoon.
She drove easily to windward with the
gunter-rigged mainsail opening the leech in the
puffs. Sail controls – including all throat and
peak halyards, jib furling line and sheets – are
all within reach of the helmsman which makes
single-handed sailing much easier.
Having the sail area down low and well-
spread meant the puffs drove her forward rather
than over on her ear. With plenty to tweak on
the yawl rig it was the equivalent of a 16-speed
gearbox with plenty of modes to match the
variations in wind strength.
In a short beat to windward I found two of
the useful gears. A little tweaking of the mizzen
allowed me to put her in a light helm ‘sail all
day’ mode, or with a little over sheeting, a high-
pointing racing mode.
Downwind the low aspect rig came into
its own. On a reach the venetian blind effect
of her yawl rig provided good speed and on
deeper angles the gunter rig provided plenty of
power. With the combined centre of effort kept
low, Korora remained upright, dry and light on
the helm.
This was dinghy cruising at its best; the
crew quietly discussed the problems of the
world, lounging in relaxed fashion around the
commodious cockpit while sliding downwind.
It was just the kind of conditions for pleasant
sailing and was also the kind of conditions in
which religions and cults are often formed. BNZ
DESIGNED BY
John Welsford
BUILT BY
Mick Fone of
Richard Walker
Boatbuilders
in Nelson
Navigator
loa 4.5m
Beam 1.8m
Weight 140kg
Sails 12.6m^2
SPECIFICATIONS