Jul 10 2008
Lido-14: Dinghy Sailing in Morro Bay–Inaugural Cruise
A couple of months ago, I bought a Lido-14 dinghy. I have been plagued with work lately (not a bad thing) and unble to find time to get the trailer wiring working properly. Yesterday afternoon, I finished an emergency wiring for the trailer, and we were off for an inaugural cruise of the little Lido-14.
Morro Bay is protected and attached to a beautiful estuary called Los Osos. There can be some stout winds, but there was a thick layer of fog over the area.
We stepped the mast in the parking lot, launched the Lido from the trailer at the public launch, and finished the rigging in the water.
Overall, we spend the day chasing wind (1 – 4 knts/hr) and fighting the ebb. Fighting is a poor choice of words because it is sailing, after all, and terribly fun. With an ebb of approximately 3 – 4 nm/hr, our little Lido did a bunch of side-stepping and wind-chasing to play in the bay.
De-rig and unstepping of the mast in the parking lot from the trailer, and a spray-down of fresh water for everything (me included) at home.
As far as an inaugural sail is concerned, the Lido-14 is a tank. Ours is hull number 216 (you can see the numbers on the hull through a small patch of fiberglass without any gel coat), with original sails, sheets and gear. The hull is built to a stout thickness, and has a solid feel to it. It is PERFECT for teaching people how to sail.
The sail did produce a small list of replacement items: new sails (one batten is permanently bent and a bit troublesome in light wind sailing), replacement of all the lines, sheets, and halyards, and replacing a majority of shackles, snatch blocks, and gear. Lastly, I have a tiny anchor for it, but it needs a rode . . . .
I love that little lido.