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    Home / Reviews

    Reviews

    Sub Categories:Boat ReviewsMonohullMultihullBook ReviewsProduct Reviews
    • Book Reviews
    • Dogwatch

    Lionheart: Book Review

    On October 31, 1999, Australian teenager Jesse Martin became the youngest sailor ever to voyage solo, non-stop and unassisted around the world. With simple language and meticulous detail, Jesse’...

    Zoltan Gyurko
    May 1, 2002
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    • Book Reviews
    • Dogwatch

    Boat Logic, A Nautical Music CD: Review

    What could be more illogical than a love of boats, of sailing, and of the sea? No one knows this better than Bruce Myers, a Chesapeake Bay sailor and the owner of a 1978 Cal 2-27, named Getting There....

    Karen Larson
    March 1, 2002
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    • Book Reviews
    • Dogwatch

    Boat-Building and Boating: Book Review

    Don’t you ever go out in that thing again!” So screeched my mother that spring day in 1949 when I first paddled my recently constructed “umbrella canoe” and returned soaked and...

    Merrill Hall
    March 1, 2002
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    • Book Reviews
    • Dogwatch

    Make Your Own Courtesy and Signal Flags: Book Review

    Are you a sew-it-yourself boater considering a cruise through the Caribbean? Or have you always wanted a complete set of international signal flags but haven’t the money to buy them or the energ...

    Theresa Fort
    March 1, 2002
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    • Book Reviews
    • Dogwatch

    Nautical Almanac 2002 Commercial Edition: Book Review

    This is the yearly presentation of data used for astronomical navigation at sea. Except for 27 pages of ads, it contains the same data and format as the edition produced by Her Majesty’s Nautica...

    Merrill Hall
    March 1, 2002
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    • Book Reviews
    • Dogwatch

    Navigation Rules International-Inland: Book Review

    Everyone talks about the rules, but nobody does anything about them. If you’re about to head to sea and you haven’t memorized all the rules, lights, sound signals, and dayshapes, you may b...

    Merrill Hall
    March 1, 2002
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    • Book Reviews
    • Dogwatch

    The Steel Hull: Book Review

    “Do you really want to build that first metal boat . . . or buy a used one and repair it?” Roger McAfee gives the would-be first-time owner, boatbuilder, or repairer of a metal boat an ins...

    Lynn King
    March 1, 2002
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    • Book Reviews
    • Dogwatch

    Offshore Sailing: 200 Essential Passagemaking Tips: Book Review

    Part of the joy of sailing is messing about with our boats — all those little improvements that make sailing and living aboard easier, safer, and more fun. Having read a number of books containi...

    Steve Christensen
    March 1, 2002
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    • Book Reviews
    • Dogwatch

    The Northwest Passage on Ten Dollars a Day: Book Review

    “Life is either a daring adventure or nothing at all.” This is a famous Helen Keller quote and also the “why” behind George Hone’s story of how he and two other men in a ...

    George Hone
    January 1, 2002
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    • Book Reviews
    • Dogwatch

    If the Shoe Fits (The Adventure of a Reluctant Boatfrau): Book Review

    “I enjoy adventure and new experiences on a sailboat in the Caribbean.” This mantra, or variations on it, are what keep the author going in this frank but funny recounting of a neophyte sa...

    Frederick Street
    January 1, 2002
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    • Book Reviews
    • Dogwatch

    In Shackleton’s Wake: Book Review

    Is it cynical to place yourself voluntarily in the position of desperate men whose only thought was of reaching home safely?” An interesting question. Author Arved Fuchs asks this question sever...

    Guy Wray
    January 1, 2002
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    • Book Reviews
    • Dogwatch

    Weather Wise: Book Review

    This concise book generously explains the background of weather in a surprisingly compact format. Although not specifically aimed at boating, its coverage is more than adequate for those who venture o...

    Bob Wood
    December 1, 2001
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    • Book Reviews
    • Dogwatch

    A Voyage for Madmen: Book Review

    Between the summer of 1968 and the summer of 1969, while the first men orbited and landed on the moon, nine other men set out in nine ill-equipped little boats, determined to be the first to sail alon...

    Ray Crew
    November 1, 2001
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    • Book Reviews
    • Dogwatch

    New Plywood Boats: Book Review

    The perceived value of a thing changes as the technology to make it smoother and shinier changes. The author’s comparison of a hand-thrown coffee mug with a new plastic one is an example of stre...

    Bob Chambers
    November 1, 2001
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    • Book Reviews
    • Dogwatch

    The Essential Boat Maintenance Manual: Book Review

    Jeff Toghill has combined a lifetime of worldwide sailing (being an administrator and instructor at sailing and navigation schools) and vast experience as a maritime legal consultant to produce a comp...

    Kevin Hughes
    November 1, 2001
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    • Book Reviews
    • Dogwatch

    Kydd: Book Review

    I miss Patrick O’Brian. For years, I would find the latest book in his Aubrey/ Maturin series neatly wrapped as only my wife, Jane, can do. I have now read them all because he is not here to wri...

    Dave Olson
    September 1, 2001
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    • Book Reviews
    • Dogwatch

    Nigel Calder’s Cruising Handbook: Book review

    Ordinarily, I would not get too excited about another new cruising book, even one by as eminent an author as Nigel Calder, whose previous work, Boatowner’s Mechanical and Electrical Manual, has ...

    Ron Chappell
    September 1, 2001
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    • Book Reviews
    • Dogwatch

    Cruising in Seraffyn: Book Review

    Lin and Larry Pardey did not set out deliberately to circumnavigate the world twice, nor to become a pair of well-known and authoritative authors of books and articles on sailing, nor to live aboard, ...

    Karen Larson
    September 1, 2001
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    • Book Reviews
    • Dogwatch

    Practical Seamanship: Essential Skills for the Modern Sailor

    Now you can leave most of your other books on seamanship at home, perhaps even the dog-eared, lop-spined old Chapmans that takes most of your bulkhead bookshelf. Steve and Linda Dashew’s Practic...

    Sally Perreten
    September 1, 2001
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    • Book Reviews
    • Dogwatch

    Wake of the Green Storm: Book Review

    Big water doesn’t have to be salty to be worthy of respect. The Great Lakes are pretty big, and Lake Superior is the biggest and definitely the baddest. Marlin Bree was cruising Superior in the ...

    Steve Clark
    July 1, 2001
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    • Book Reviews
    • Dogwatch

    Summer Studies: Book Review

    For many of us, sailing is an introspective activity. This is certainly true for Ron Dwelle. In this book, Ron tells of cruising for 20 years on lakes Michigan and Huron . . . meandering from port to ...

    Karen Larson
    July 1, 2001
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    • Book Reviews
    • Dogwatch

    Sail On: Book Review

    With this new book, author Susan Sternkopf and illustrator Glenn Halak teach children (and their adult friends) the facts of life. But wait! This colorful book is not about reproduction – it&#82...

    Karen Larson
    July 1, 2001
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    • Book Reviews
    • Dogwatch

    Cruising Guide to the Florida Keys, With Florida West Coast Supplement: Book Review

    “We went sailing not to escape from life but to keep life from escaping us.” These opening words in Frank Papy’s latest edition of his Cruising Guide to the Florida Keys, with an acc...

    Roland Barth and Barbara Bauman
    July 1, 2001
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    • Book Reviews
    • Dogwatch

    The Warm Dry Boat: Book Review

    If you’re willing to dig a little, this book contains a wealth of practical knowledge on creating a comfortable boat. Its composition and structure are slightly different from the average non-fi...

    Bob Wood
    July 1, 2001
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    • Book Reviews
    • Dogwatch

    The Ship and The Storm: Book Review

    The loss of the schooner Fantome, in which 31 people died, is a tragedy that has become painted with passion and prejudice. It is hard to imagine that a book could be written that would not fall into ...

    Reese Palley
    July 1, 2001
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    • Book Reviews
    • Dogwatch

    Adventure: Book Review

    The dory fishing schooner, Adventure, was well named, for she had many. The book begins with the description of one that was a bit too scary. The “Old Lady,” in her 22nd year, was 50 miles...

    Sandy Larson
    May 1, 2001
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    • Book Reviews
    • Dogwatch

    Wooden Boats Volume II: Book Review

    I clearly recall the occasion that triggered my love of wooden boats. It was 1967, a time before locks and “No Admittance” signs. I was 13 years old, and the place was Seth Persson’s...

    Art Hall
    May 1, 2001
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    • Book Reviews
    • Dogwatch

    The DK Complete Sailing Manual: Book Review

    Steve Sleight, previously involved in creating another sailing manual, Bob Bond’s Handbook of Sailing, has now created his own version of a sailor’s how-to guide with his Complete Sailing ...

    Karen Larson
    May 1, 2001
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    • Book Reviews
    • Dogwatch

    Heavy Weather Tactics Using Sea Anchors & Drogues : Book Review

    Several years ago I circumnavigated Vancouver Island. An experienced friend urged me to cancel the trip: “Stay inside, behind the island,” he admonished. “Inside, you might lose your...

    Terry Thatcher
    May 1, 2001
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    • Book Reviews
    • Dogwatch

    The Shadow in the Sands: Book Review

    Reading Erskine Childers’ classic marine spy novel, The Riddle of the Sands, is not a prerequisite for enjoying Sam Llewellyn’s new sequel, The Shadow in the Sands, but it will enhance you...

    Homer Shannon
    May 1, 2001
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    Featured Posts

    1The remote control Darren ordered came as two components: the hand-held transmitter and a control box to mount beside the windlass controls, at top of page. Darren liked that this remote had a recessed on/off switch (red button) and an indicator light that shows it is on. The small control box for the remote fit neatly to the left of the larger windlass control box, at right. The yellow and white control wires that pair to the original green and white wires from the windlass control switch are easy to see.
    Anchor windlass remote
    April 28, 2026
    2Sailing downwind driven by her square sail, Britannia rules the waves, at top.
    Rollaway square sail
    April 28, 2026
    3Industrial sewing machines are made of metal and have few, if any, plastic parts, top of page. Leslie’s machine is fitted with a portable motor, cogged monster wheel and hand crank, and a strong wooden case. For sail work, it must be able to sew straight and zigzag stitches, above left. Different materials and fabric assemblies are best accommodated by a variety of presser feet, above right.
    Sail-repair essentials
    April 28, 2026
    4Even in her least favorite conditions, light air, Mug Up strikes an eye-catching stance in Gloucester Harbor, above. Give her some heavy air and sea room, Mark says, and she’s off like a thoroughbred. The name is appropriate to the hailing port, at right. “Mug up” was the Gloucester fishermen’s break for coffee — perhaps with a dollop of rum on cold days.
    Mug Up, a 46-foot Bowman yawl
    April 28, 2026
    5Speaker? What speaker? top left. Jim had already glued his cover over it and couldn’t take a “before” photo, but the founding editors have a similar protruding speaker back on their C&C 30, also in the head, above. Luckily for them, it’s in a locker and not in plain view on the bulkhead, and the unsightly speaker and wire that Jim so expertly covered on Sundew are less obvious.
    Disguising a speaker
    April 27, 2026
    6Picture of the Sport-brella
    Sport-Brella
    April 27, 2026
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