Try GOLD - Free
With boats, does beauty matter?
Yachting Monthly UK
|February 2025
A seagoing boat is not a toy. It is the most serious of vehicles, built to let humans brave an unpredictable, lethally dangerous element with efficient control and reasonable dispatch. Boat design and boatbuilding are therefore solemn endeavours, demanding utter trust from vulnerable human customers who will face peril miles away from help. Materials, rig and balance in design can make the difference between life and death.
With all that seriousness, does a boat's prettiness matter? Do you, should you, mind whether your boat is good to look at, not a frump but a smokin' hot babe or a timelessly elegant dowager?
You will, after all, be mainly on board when she is afloat, so it's other people's view you are enhancing or spoiling. Does beauty matter? Some will immediately cry that in their experience a good boat is a pretty boat, because elegant proportions mean sea-kindly behaviour and a pleasant ride. Certainly, it is true that some traditional shapes - sharp bow, long keel, elegant stern, quite low freeboard - have a timeless beauty and work well at sea. Our old Rummer yawl was so drop-dead gorgeous that she enhanced any anchorage, and sailing on some of the more elegant tall ships, I have seen other vessels alter course just to get pictures. Quite annoying when you're hard on the wind and think they're going to ram you.
This story is from the February 2025 edition of Yachting Monthly UK.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Yachting Monthly UK
Yachting Monthly UK
GET THE BEST FROM YOUR SAILS
High-tech laminate sails sound appealing but conventional woven sails remain a better all-round option for cruising – as long as you take care of them...
8 mins
December 2025
Yachting Monthly UK
Snoop around during winter layup
To stay on the safe side, many of us lay up our yachts during the winter.
1 min
December 2025
Yachting Monthly UK
Call to report unmarked pots and fishing gear entanglements
In a new drive to make coastal sailing safer, the RYA and the Cruising Association are calling on sailors navigating around Britain's coasts to report any entanglements with discarded fishing gear or unmarked lobster pots and other fishing creels.
2 mins
December 2025
Yachting Monthly UK
FIRST TEST DUFOUR 48
Can a boat this big and muscular be fun and even nimble to sail as well as comfortable to live aboard? Theo Stocker went to find out
9 mins
December 2025
Yachting Monthly UK
ADVENTURE FOREVER CHANGED
Anchored in a quiet loch on the west coast of Scotland, Katherine Knight discovered the seabed was barren mud. She raised a small community and set out to replant the underwater desert with life-giving seagrass
7 mins
December 2025
Yachting Monthly UK
Priced out of keeping a yacht
A few years ago we were at the Istanbul Boatshow giving a talk for the wonderful Gezgin Korsan.
2 mins
December 2025
Yachting Monthly UK
How to navigate Caribbean customs and immigration
The Caribbean islands manage their borders in a variety of ways, and all have their own idiosyncrasies. Simon Hardaker helps guide you through the many varied rules
6 mins
December 2025
Yachting Monthly UK
REPLACING A RAW WATER PUMP
Andrew Simpson explains the best way to complete a straightforward yet essential onboard maintenance job...
1 mins
December 2025
Yachting Monthly UK
ARC rally more connected than ever for its 40th edition
Around 900 participants from over 30 different countries are expected to set off from Las Palmas, Gran Canaria, for the 2025 Atlantic Rally for Cruisers's 40th edition.
1 min
December 2025
Yachting Monthly UK
How would you try to avoid this tidal marina collision?
Roscoff Marina is one of the few all-tide ports in North Brittany.
3 mins
December 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
