search ybw.com
 
Cowes Week 2005Cowes Week 2005Cowes Week 2005Cowes Week 2005
Cowes Week 2005Cowes Week 2005
Home News Gallery Weather Solent wind guide SB3 Lake Garda Video About the event
     
Small fleet, big vision


Among the high profile race yachts and swarms of tiny keelboats at Skandia Cowes Week it's easy to overlook the cruiser-racers that make up a huge proportion of the fleet. It's even easier to miss the HOD 35s, which with only six boats attending the regatta tend to fade into the melée. But for Zarafa's owner and skipper Major Peter Scholfield the design offers exhilarating racing combined with seakeeping and practicality rare in a modern design.

The HOD 35 was conceived by Captain David Allen, who had a vision for a 35-foot cruiser-racer, not designed to rating rules but with good seakeeping and practical, seagoing accommodation. Scholfield, who knew Allen and his son, was consulted regarding the design from the beginning, and designer Rob Humphreys was commissioned to realise their dream.

The result was the prototype Havoc, with six sea-berths - rare in a modern 35-footer. Launched just in time for the 1996 Round the Island race, Havoc won several contests and attracted sufficient interest on the water for an impressed third party to volunteer to buy the next boat to use as a plug for future GRP reproduction. Zarafa was built in western red cedar with a GRP coachroof and deck, and was the model for a further 18 boats, bringing the class total to 20. Unfortunately, the demise of the Bowman and Westerly yards brought production to a premature end, leaving the HOD 35 as a small class, partly scattered in Holland and Ireland.

Asked about the future of the HOD 35 as a one-design, Scholfield was pessimistic: "We did once have a combined Prima/HOD 35 class at [Skandia] Cowes Week, but with so many new classes coming up there's little chance of a class revival. We could probably get 10-12 boats, but we'd be very hard pushed." Given Scholfield's anecdotes from the annual class championship, at which "bloody good fun racing" included one contest where four boats crossed the finish line within 10 seconds, spectators could be missing a treat.

As a result, says Scholfield "we do have our own little pecking order within the class, but we're most interested in IRC Class 4." Zarafa currently holds first place for the HOD 35s, but a respectable third place in the current IRC Class 4 results keeps him going for gold: "there's a very good French boat [Région Ile de France] with a very good rating, and of course the dreaded Jacobite. If it wasn't for those two we'd be right up there."

Scholfield's loyalty to the class is very evident, understandable given his input to the design. Asked about how the HOD 35 coped with the variable conditions this week, he responded: "You never go out and think 'it's not our weather'. She's pretty good round the clock. If she has any 'best' weather conditions it's when it's really blowing - she's very stable down wind."



   

Yachting World coverThe August 2005 edition of Yachting World contains essential tips for competing at Skandia Cowes Week and other Solent yacht races. You have until 11 August to buy your copy. Find your nearest UK newsagent by following this link.

Ensure you never miss a future copy - subscribe to Yachting World here.

   
More about the Touareg Download Touareg brochure Request Touareg test drive
VW TouaregVW TouaregVW Touareg
 

© IPC Media Ltd. All rights reserved. Terms & Conditions | Privacy Policy

Trust UK logo DMA logo