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Wherry Yacht Norada at Great Yarmouth
Norada is a 53ft Wherry Yacht built in 1912 by Ernest Collins. She was designed to be smaller and more sprightly than the working wherries to allow her to pass under some of the lower bridges within the Norfolk Broads.
www.wherryyachtcharter.org/trust.html
The Wherry is a shallow-draughted single-sailed boat indigenous to the Norfolk Broads. The hull of a wherry is generally clinker-built (overlapping planks) out of oak. Its rarity nowadays is attributed to the design; only in the unique calm and shallow broads were wherries produced and used. The remarkably low depth of the waterways requires the hull to be similarly shallow, and the single mast is tall, holding one edge of its vast pointed sail to catch the breeze above the trees. To enable the wherries to pass under tight bridges, the mast is counterweighted and can be gently lowered. No other sailing vessels like them can be found in the world, the closest being the colourful Dutch boats built to sail the dykes on the flat reclaimed land - these can be found on rare occasions on the Norfolk Broads themselves, brought over from the Netherlands. The wherry, however, is the only sailing vessel of its size or carrying capacity that can cover almost all the waterways on the Broads, including the odd secluded dyke.
Wherry Yacht Norada at Great Yarmouth
Norada is a 53ft Wherry Yacht built in 1912 by Ernest Collins. She was designed to be smaller and more sprightly than the working wherries to allow her to pass under some of the lower bridges within the Norfolk Broads.
www.wherryyachtcharter.org/trust.html
The Wherry is a shallow-draughted single-sailed boat indigenous to the Norfolk Broads. The hull of a wherry is generally clinker-built (overlapping planks) out of oak. Its rarity nowadays is attributed to the design; only in the unique calm and shallow broads were wherries produced and used. The remarkably low depth of the waterways requires the hull to be similarly shallow, and the single mast is tall, holding one edge of its vast pointed sail to catch the breeze above the trees. To enable the wherries to pass under tight bridges, the mast is counterweighted and can be gently lowered. No other sailing vessels like them can be found in the world, the closest being the colourful Dutch boats built to sail the dykes on the flat reclaimed land - these can be found on rare occasions on the Norfolk Broads themselves, brought over from the Netherlands. The wherry, however, is the only sailing vessel of its size or carrying capacity that can cover almost all the waterways on the Broads, including the odd secluded dyke.