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Anyone ever sail an old Hughes 25?

Started by Frank, November 03, 2009, 05:21:20 PM

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Quote Northstar went on to build Hughes' boats, but many owners believe that quality suffered somewhat as a result of the transition.

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Review of Hughes 25

Basic specs..

The hull is made of fibreglass. Generally, a hull made of fibreglass requires only a minimum of maintenance during the sailing season. And outside the sailing season, just bottom cleaning and perhaps anti-fouling painting once a year - a few hours of work, that's all.

The Hughes 25 is equipped with a fin keel. A boat with a fin keel is more manoeuvrable but has less directional stability than a similar boat with a full keel.

The boat can enter even shallow marinas as the draft is just about 0.98 - 1.08 meter (3.22 - 3.52 ft) dependent on the load. See immersion rate below.

Sailing characteristics

This section covers widely used rules of thumb to describe the sailing characteristics. Please note that even though the calculations are correct, the interpretation of the results might not be valid for extreme boats.

What is Capsize Screening Formula (CSF)?

The capsize screening value for Hughes 25 is 1.84, indicating that this boat could - if evaluated by this formula alone - be accepted to participate in ocean races.

What is Theoretical Maximum Hull Speed?

The theoretical maximal speed of a displacement boat of this length is 5.8 knots. The term "Theoretical Maximum Hull Speed" is widely used even though a boat can sail faster. The term shall be interpreted as above the theoretical speed a great additional power is necessary for a small gain in speed.

The immersion rate is defined as the weight required to sink the boat a certain level. The immersion rate for Hughes 25 is about 85 kg/cm, alternatively 478 lbs/inch. Meaning: if you load 85 kg cargo on the boat then it will sink 1 cm. Alternatively, if you load 478 lbs cargo on the boat it will sink 1 inch.

Sailing statistics

This section is statistical comparison with similar boats of the same category. The basis of the following statistical computations is our unique database with more than 26,000 different boat types and 350,000 data points.

What is Motion Comfort Ratio (MCR)?

What is L/B (Length Beam Ratio)?

What is a Ballast Ratio?

What is Displacement Length Ratio?

What is SA/D (Sail Area Displacement ratio)?

Maintenance

When buying anti-fouling bottom paint, it's nice to know how much to buy. The surface of the wet bottom is about 14m 2 (150 ft 2 ). Based on this, your favourite maritime shop can tell you the quantity you need.

Are your sails worn out? You might find your next sail here: Sails for Sale

If you need to renew parts of your running rig and is not quite sure of the dimensions, you may find the estimates computed below useful.

UsageLengthDiameter
Mainsail halyard 22.9 m(75.0 feet)8 mm(5/16 inch)
Jib/genoa halyard22.9 m(75.0 feet)8 mm(5/16 inch)
Spinnaker halyard22.9 m(75.0 feet)8 mm(5/16 inch)
Jib sheet 7.6 m(25.0 feet)10 mm(3/8 inch)
Genoa sheet7.6 m(25.0 feet)10 mm(3/8 inch)
Mainsheet 19.1 m(62.5 feet)10 mm(3/8 inch)
Spinnaker sheet16.8 m(55.0 feet)10 mm(3/8 inch)
Cunningham3.0 m(10.0 feet)8 mm(5/16 inch)
Kickingstrap6.1 m(20.0 feet)8 mm(5/16 inch)
Clew-outhaul6.1 m(20.0 feet)8 mm(5/16 inch)

This section is reserved boat owner's modifications, improvements, etc. Here you might find (or contribute with) inspiration for your boat.

Do you have changes/improvements you would like to share? Upload a photo and describe what you have done.

We are always looking for new photos. If you can contribute with photos for Hughes 25 it would be a great help.

If you have any comments to the review, improvement suggestions, or the like, feel free to contact us . Criticism helps us to improve.

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  • Sailboat Guide

Hughes Boat Works

Hughes Boat Works was founded by brothers, Howard and Peter Hughes and first located at Willowdale, Ontario, Canada, (near Toronto) where they built small dinghies. In 1965 the company moved to Scarborough, Ontario, and from 1965 to 1967 they built the HUGHES 24 (using tooling purchased from Tanzer Industries Ltd.), the HUGHES 27 (designed by Howard Hughes), and the HUGHES 38 (Sparkman & Stevens design #1903). In 1968 the company moved to Centralia, Ontario. The HUGHES 22, 25, and 29 (designed by Howard Hughes) went into production in 1968, as did the HUGHES 38 and HUGHES 48 (designed by Sparkman & Stevens in conjunction with Hughes). In 1969 the company was sold to US Steel. Both Hughes brothers stayed with the company until 1971. The name of the company was changed to Northstar Yachts Ltd. The Northstar line of sailboats were built to plans commissioned by Hughes Boat Works, most drawn by Sparkman and Stevens. From 1971 to 1974 the company built the NORTHSTAR 22, NORTHSTAR 500(S&S design #2135 ), NORTHSTAR 1000 (S&S design #2098-C6), NORTHSTAR 1500 (S&S design #2166), NORTHSTAR 38, and NORTHSTAR 80/20 (S&S design #2134). The 24 ft NS727 and the 30 ft N900 (both designed by Bruce Farr) were introduced in 1973. In 1977 Howard Hughes purchased Northstar Yachts and changed the name to Hughes Boatworks Inc. The NORTHSTAR 600 was modified and named the HUGHES 26. A new model called the HUGHES 27 was introduced. The NORTHSTAR 1000 was stretched (by extending the stern) and fattened and renamed the H31. The NORTHSTAR 1500 was renamed the HUGHES 35, the NORTHSTAR 38 was fitted with a new interior design and called the HUGHES 38-2, and the NORTHSTAR 80/20 was renamed the H40. A variant of the HORTHSTAR 35 was built by Coronado Yachts and called the CORONADO 36. In 1979 Hughes purchased Columbia Yachts and began building Columbia boats in Canada at the Huron Park factory under the name Hughes-Columbia. New models called the HUGHES-COLUMBIA 36, 8.3, 8.7 (motor sailer), 10.7, 11.8, 42, 48 (formerly SEAFARER 48) were introduced, while at the same time production of the HUGHES 26, 31, 35, 38, 40 (ketch) continued. All models were available fully finished or in kit form. In 1980 Hughes went into receivership and the factory was closed. Hughes sold Columbia Yachts to Aura Yachts, which was also based in Huron Park. Aura built their own versions of HUGHES 35, 40, COLUMBIA 7.6, 8.7 and 10.7 under the AURA name. A version of the HUGHES 35/AURA H35 was also built by South Hants Engineering in Great Britain (called the S.H.E. 36). South Hants Engineering may have also built some North Star 1500 variants, as the S.H.E. 1500. In 1986 Hughes bought his company back once again. (Orangeville, Ontario). A model called the HUGHES 41 was built (or at least advertised) during this period. A fire destroyed the factory in 1991, and no Hughes boats (or Columbia’s) have been built since that time. Hughes Boat Works Ltd. was the largest sailboat manufacturer in Canada for several years.

Associations

  • Quarter Ton Class
  • Half Ton Class
  • Hughes 38 Site
  • Hughes 29 Site
  • Howard Hughes
  • Sparkman & Stephens
  • William H. Tripp Jr.
  • William Shaw

29 sailboats built by Hughes Boat Works

hughes 25 sailboat

Columbia 8.7

hughes 25 sailboat

Columbia 8.3

hughes 25 sailboat

Hinckley 38

hughes 25 sailboat

North Star 1500/35

hughes 25 sailboat

Hughes 38-2

North star 48.

hughes 25 sailboat

Hughes 38-3

hughes 25 sailboat

North Star 1000

hughes 25 sailboat

North Star 80/20

hughes 25 sailboat

Hughes 38-1

hughes 25 sailboat

Hughes-Columbia 36

hughes 25 sailboat

North Star 500

Hughes-columbia 27.

hughes 25 sailboat

North Star 22

hughes 25 sailboat

Hughes North Star 38

hughes 25 sailboat

PJ-30 1/2 Ton

hughes 25 sailboat

North Star 600

hughes 25 sailboat

Columbia 7.6

hughes 25 sailboat

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Hughes Sailboats

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Has anyone heard of a Hughes sailboat. We have seen one listed in our local paper, a Hughes 38. Any help?  

I owned a Hughes quarter tonner back in the 1970''s and I am reasonably familiar with Hughes as a company. Hughes was a small Canadian boat builder started in the 1960''s. They originally produced a line of boat designed by founder Howard Hughes (not that Howard Hughes) Later they were bought by US Steel and the linbe was retooled as Hughes Northstar. The Hughes Northstar boats were designed by Sparkman and Stevens and included a whole line of interesting and reasonably well built boats. I thought the boats were nicely detailed and well thought out. Most of the Northstar boats were designed to be early IOR era racer cruisers which had both good and bad design features but being biased toward being race boats they became obsolete pretty quickly. At some point US Steel left the company and the boats were retooled toward a more cruising oriented bias. This also was a mixed blessing as the weights of the boats went up and sailing abilities went down. There were several boats that might be listed as Hughes 38''s so it is hard to comment on the specific boat that you are looking at other than to say that in general Hughes built substantially better constructed boats than was the average. One of the Hughes 38 models actually shared the hull design with the Hinckley Competition 38 and the glass and gelcoat work was so good at Hughes that Hinckley chose to have Hughes actually so the hull and deck laminations. Good luck, Jeff  

I Have been living and sailing solo aboard my hughes 31''. I have travelled the great lakes, East coast and bahamas in almost every weather condition imaginable and couldn''t be happier with the boats design. before purchasing her last year I looked at several of these boats, there is an ongoing abundance of them in southern Ontario.one area to look at before purchasing one of these is the cabin top as many have a plywood core wich often become soft due to deck leaks. An article on the refit of a Hughes 31'' can also be found in a recent cruising world magazine, I think March,april or may. also "Fatty Goodlander" who cruises his hughes31 wrights regularily for cruising world magazine.Hope this information is of some help  

please pardon my eror, both the article in cruising world and fattie''s boat are hughes 38''s not hughes 31''s.  

I own a Hughes 38 aka NorthStar 38 And I love it. I use it for coastal cruising. Great for 2-12 people depending on the day. I have 7 years of experience with the boat. Reply if you have specific questions.  

hughes 25 sailboat

Pub911 said: And I love it. I use it for coastal cruising. Great for 2-12 people depending on the day. I have 7 years of experience with the boat. Reply if you have specific questions. Click to expand...

hughes 25 sailboat

The Dog is gonna bite your head off!  

hughes 25 sailboat

Who can read those initial posts through all the cobwebs anyway?????  

Yikes, didn't see the date. My humblest apologies to the powers that be. Suffer the newbe.  

Hughes 31 and 38 I own a Hughes 31 and have sailed her for the past six years. This is a solid boat and has pulled me through difficult sailing conditions. My wife and I sail her in just about any codition and that is saying a lot since neither she or I are long time sailors. Our boat has a OMC saildrive, a much discussed topic on pros and cons of this type of motor, and has never let us down when we needed it. When I bought this boat a marine mechanic said " its a two stoke what can possibley go wrong with it". He was right. The Hughes 31 impressed us so much that we are now planning on buying a Hughes 38. Our grandchildren are getting bigger and we need more room. We had the 38 surveyed and and the result was very positive. The boat is in need of some cosmetic clean up in the interior but is otherwise sound and solid. It has a Volvo Penta diesel saidrive. I like the saidrive system due to its simplicity. No long shafts to bend and seals to leak. The Hughes line of boats appear to be a good buy. They are solidly built and are affordable. The Hughes 31 we own (for sale now) and 38 we are buying are both 1980 vitage but in many respects are sturdier then some of the new boats.  

Anybody know anything about a Hughes 29.5 foot sailboat?  

hughes 25 sailboat

Roy- You're really better off starting a separate thread on the boat you're asking about.  

Hugh's sail shape This is our second year with a 31 foot hugh's and starting racing for the first time last year. The sail shape is lousy. It seems to "bag and wrinkle" and no amount of adjusting flattens it out. Does anyone have any suggestions? We would like to come in another position other thean dead last every race.  

hughes 25 sailboat

Get new sails sounds like step one.... But other than that there were several Hughes that were 31 feet. The IOR derived is marginally suited to racing under PHRF, the 31 footer that was previously produced by Columbia would be pretty hard boat to race competatively. Jeff  

Set your sails up for heavy breeze(Halyard,outhaul and vang on pretty good) if you cant flatten your sail with your controls on.. the sail is cooked. It is possible that it may not even be the right sail for the boat, someone may have just found a deal on a sail that was close to the right size and slapped it on. Also if you like the Hughes you should check out a Hughes 38. You can get some nice ones for a very reasonable price.The boat was Sparkman Stevens designed and would make a much better racing boat than the 31.  

hughes 25 sailboat

I don't get all the posts from #6 through #10. I'm looking at a Hughes 38 in 2011 and would have been interested in any post or info, even if posted back in 2000. What do I not understand?  

hughes 25 sailboat

did you ever buy the hughes 38?  

there is a Hughes 38 for sale in Sackets Harbor in NY. Ive noticed some interesting details in the description. "Additional Information Trim Tab with control at Wheel" AND "Sails & Rigging Rod Rigging" i thot that only the Hinckley version had the trim tab. Perhaps some Hughes 38s had them as well? Or perhaps this is a trim tab on the rudder? Anyone hear of a Hughes 38 with ROD rigging? jon  

hughes 25 sailboat

thats the boat thanks jon  

here is a photo of the Hinckley Competition 38. the trim tab can be seen just forward of the jack stand in the last photo. 1970 Hinckley 38 Sail Boat For Sale - www.yachtworld.com  

hughes 25 sailboat

I have a pretty good opinion of Hughes boats but Yowza! none of them, even heavily customized, ever looked remotely like that. P.S. keel trim tabs are a stupid complexity for little more than a theoretical benefit. Banning them or penalizing them out of existence was a very wise move on the part of the powers that be (or were).  

My first boat was a Hughes 25 -a pretty decent classic style little boat. I traded it, along with you much money for a newer style boat with "wheel" steeering, interior teak, and poor quality. When the new smell wore off, I was at once in want of my old Hughes -tiller and all! Cheers  

Yeah, but isn't that one of the ones built on Hughes mouldings?  

yessiree  

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Hughes 25 - Sailboat Data, Parts & Rigging

Hughes 25 - Mainsail Covers

Sailboat data, rig dimensions and recommended sail areas for Hughes 25 sailboat. Tech info about rigging, halyards, sheets, mainsail covers and more.

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I am the new owner of a 1974 Hughes 25 and am looking for a manual for it. Also would like pics of interior modifications.  

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1967 Hughes 25


1967 Hughes 25



Hughes Boat North Star



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hughes 25 sailboat

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Used Hughes 25 Sailboat in Rockcliffe, Ontario for sale

Used Hughes 25 Sailboat

1971 Hughes 25 foot sailboat Sleeps 4 Boat has been lightly used these last few years but always launched. Nice solid boat on the water, large cockpit, Comes with: Reliable 5 Hp Johnson and fuel tank Main Sail and 5 head sails Assorted life vests, and other safety equipment BBQ portable toilet Cradle for winter storage etc.

PRICE REDUCED BY $2,000 AND WORTH THE DRIVE TO VIEW.

The Odyssey Expedition Logo

Days 1,490-1,493: The Last Leg

  • Post author: Graham Hughes
  • Post published: 31 January 2013
  • Post category: Epilogue / Russia / The Odyssey Expedition
  • Post comments: 0 Comments

Mon 29.01.13 – Thu 01.02.13:

Monday morning saw Casey and I silently creep out of Lindsey’s place around 7am. I was in an epic rush to get to the coach station for 8am so I said my farewells to my better half on the Bakerloo Line before changing at Oxford Circus for the line to Victoria.

I had to run like a bag-wielding maniac down the road from the Underground to the bus terminal, arriving BANG ON 8am, sweaty and dishevelled. The bus to Gdansk, Poland was just about to pull out of the station… I waved and shouted and clambered on board.

Had I missed the bus I would have been snookered. My Russian visa is waiting for me on the border. It has to be picked up at a certain time on a certain day. That day is tomorrow and that time is 12 noon.

Well then, this is it, I’m back on the road. My hat is on, my WaterAid toilet seat is strapped to my backpack, my GPS logger is blinking away and I’m staring out the window missing my girlfriend like a crazy man misses his giant invisible rabbit friend. One last mini-adventure before I can blow this thing and come home.

I half-slumbered down to Dover, where we headed over to the ferry terminal to pick up some more passengers before hilariously turning our backs on the whole ferry shebangalang and proceeding FULL TILT! towards the Channel Tunnel, or the Chunnel, if you want to make it sound like somebody’s been sick in a perfume bottle.

If you’ve never been through the Channel Tunnel, it is quite a crazy little setup they have. Instead of driving through the tunnel (France, cars and tunnels bring back bad memories for us Brits) you have to plonk your vehicle on a train. Every twenty minutes one of these trains filled with a single lane of traffic zooms through the tunnel. It’s quite simply one of the least efficient set-ups known to man – but if it was a road tunnel, you’d have fumes to get rid of, breakdowns to sort out and, well, the general anarchy that is driving anywhere in the world – that being that everyone driving slower than you is a jerk and anyone driving faster ins a maniac.

But when we get electric Google cars that can drive themselves, it may be time to tarmac over the tracks. You never know: it might help cut down that £3,000,000,000 mountain of debt that Eurotunnel still has to climb before any real profit can be made…

Personally, I would have designed the two main tunnels to have a road deck above and a rail deck below. If you’re going to bother building a bloody big tunnel, you may as well do it properly.

Queensway Tunnel, Liverpool c.1920s

Before long we were disembarking on the froggie side of the street, switching to the right hand side of the road and thundering on up to Belgium and thereafter Germany in a kind of reverse Blitzkrieg. I read the Independent cover to cover, my laptop ran out of batteries and crikey hell I was bored. And hungry. Really, really hungry. For some reason, the bus didn’t stop for food. Like, literally DID. NOT. STOP.

The bus hit Berlin just after midnight. Time to swap buses. I was starvin’ Marvin. I had just 10 minutes to jump off the bus, find an ATM, get out some Euros, find a change machine (top tip: always check the toilets) and buy myself a Twix and a can of Coke from the vending machine.

30 seconds later and I was on bus number 2 heading to the Polish border, much in the manner of the German army in September 1939. The next few hours were spent drifting in and out of sleep and wondering why on Earth I had chosen to leave my beautiful girlfriend back in Blighty and sit on this damn coach for 26 hours. Happily, there was one English-speaker onboard (not the driver, mind) – a guy called Mike who came from the Polish town of Elblag.

In the morning, Mike and I travelled to Elblag together as it’s about halfway to the Russian border from Gdansk. That’s when I got a call from Timur, the Russian Visa Guy, asking me where the hell I was. I looked at my watch. It was 10.30am – plenty of time to get to the border before 12noon.

Ah, yeah… that would be the case, had it been 10.30am in Kaliningrad. Unfortunately for me, Kaliningrad runs on Moscow time aka GMT+3… two hours ahead of Poland. It was 12.30pm. I should have picked up my visa half an hour ago.

I may have a Pond of my own, but I obviously still haven’t got to grips with this time-travel malarkey.

From Elblag I hopped a local bus to the bordertown of Braniewo and from there took a taxi the short distance to the border. I got out of Poland without too much trouble – they seemed slightly unconvinced that I would be picking up my Russian visa on the border, but they let me cross nonetheless (no doubt expecting to see me again in 20 minutes time).

I reached the Russian side and stood in the bitter snowy cold while they took my passport off me and disappeared with it for a good quarter of an hour. And then – a minor miracle –  my passport returned with the visa stuck into the last page and I was stamped in!

I should point out that if I had applied for a full Russian visa I would have had to buy a new passport – I only had one blank page left in both of my current passports and you need at least two blank pages free. Notso on the border with Kaliningrad though! Happy days.

I ended up cadging a lift to the city of Kaliningrad, as I would be returning to the border the same way I entered it didn’t make much of a muchness. It was there I discovered that the hotel I booked in order to get the visa was not actually in the city of Kaliningrad, but in the sea-side town of Pionerski, 45 minutes drive away. So on I plodded to this sleepy snowy hamlet on the Baltic Sea, convinced that I had already paid for the room using booking.com. But no, I hadn’t.

The town was all but deserted, freezing cold, lonely, and NOBODY spoke English. I wandered around looking for something that looked Russian enough to convince the world I was here. All I found was an Anna Karenina poster written in Cyrillic. That’d do, yeah?

Graham Hughes in Russia

Urgh… I possibly should have stayed in Kaliningrad city.

But the hostel I stayed in (The Cruise Hostel, Pionersky) had free internet so I got to chat with Casey which made me feel a bit less lonely. I was pretty much the only guest. This is not high season.

After finding out that everything – including the local eateries – closed at 5pm, I got an early night and dreamt of food.

The next morning I was up at 6am – again – to get the first train back to Kaliningrad city. It arrived around 7.30 and I – stupidly – got off at the wrong station, the one without the adjacent coach station. A crosstown taxi ride later and I was ready to hop a bus the 3 hours back to Gdansk. I had be be back at 3pm that day. Only one slight hitch: there are only two buses to Gdansk a day. One at 6am (missed that!) and one at (get this!) 3pm. Seriously?

Ygads! Well, it was a bit early, and since Kaliningrad is time-shifted in a crazy direction I thought I would potter around the city until the sun came up – something that would happen around 10am (the ‘Moscow Time’ policy only really works in, you know, Moscow).

Kaliningrad used to be a part of Germany, well, Prussia actually. It was known for hundreds of years as Königsberg, the place where numerous Germanic kings had a shiny metal hat plonked on their heads like it was their Super Sweet Sixteen. Not much left of the old town now – much of the city was destroyed by the British bomb raids in World War II, the rest was mopped up by those cheerful chaps from Russia who moved in, forcibly pushing the tens of thousands of Germans who lived here the hell out. In classic Soviet style, they lovingly restored the glorious old buildings that had been destroyed in the war back to their original glorious old status HA FUCK NO they just put up a load of bulky, brutal, ugly, totalitarian concrete shite instead… since that’s all humanity deserves (according to every architecture graduate since 1958).

I ambled down to the (frozen) river and took a few pics of myself outside the old cathedral – one of the few buildings to survive the aesthetical carnage that was the twentieth century. It was lonely, I was miserable, all I wanted to do was come the hell home. I’m sick of this shit.

Graham Hughes in Kaliningrad

I got back to the bus station around 10am, and bought myself a ticket to Mamonovo – the nearest town to the Polish border. It took about 40 minutes to get there on the bus and when I arrived it was sleeting. The nice stern Russian bus conductor woman ordered me off the bus in the warm friendly manner we’ve all come to expect from our Eastern European counterparts. I obliged and headed for the safety of the nearby supermarket for shelter. There I met another nice lady who was wearing a padded camo jacket and pants and a lovely Russian hat with a rather splendid Russian Army badge affixed to the front. She wanted to see my ‘papers’. I haven’t heard somebody call my passport that since Central Africa.

This isn’t going to end well is it?

Presumably unhappy with my passport picture (or the colour of my hair) Russian Army Lady told (ordered?) me to follow her. We walked for a mile through the snow and slush and sleet and cold and FUCKING MISERY before arriving cold, wet and shivering at an army base. I was taken into a nice big gloomy office that had maps on the wall which were hidden behind curtains. There I was told in broken English by two army dudes (presumably press ganged into talking to me as they had a smattering of English between them) that the entire town of Mamonovo is a frikkin gigantic army base (one without signs, a fence or a bus that informs its passengers that we’re entering a restricted zone) and so my presence there was about as welcome as a drunken David Irving gatecrashing a Holocaust Remembrance Service.

Well thanks for letting me know guys! I’ll just be leaving… the country… and never coming back!

Ah no, the army guys wanted to take me to the airport – you know, if you’re going to deport somebody for stumbling off a public bus into a supermarket, you might as well do it PROPERLY eh?

I explained that I had a bus ticket back home from Gdansk and if they wouldn’t mind I would just like to go to the border, you know, that thing that was like 2km away – and leave. They discussed this strange proposal for a bit before bundling me into a car and driving me to the frontier. A friendly ‘GET OUT’ on the Russian side of passport control and I found myself at the side of the road desperately trying to get a lift to the boom gates (you’re not allowed to walk across) while the weather conspired to crush any remaining joy or love left in the black cold stone that used to be my heart.

I’m done with this shit. I just want to go home.

I guess it’s only fitting that I exit the final country of The Odyssey Expedition under military escort.

Stamped out of Russia, I re-entered the EU and got as far as the first town on the Polish side of matters. From there I hopped a bus to Elblag, and then another to Gdansk, arriving just in time to be told I couldn’t get on the F—ING BUS TO LONDON because I didn’t have a printed ticket. The pdf on my laptop didn’t mean squat. I didn’t have a printed ticket because the cockmonkeys on the bus when I was coming to Gdansk on Monday took my original printout off me. After much gesticulating I managed to get a second copy printed from the coach agent’s office and made the 3pm bus with (as per usual) seconds to spare.

The return journey was every bit as tedious, horrible and exhausting as the outward journey. Again, we stopped for food less often than a 9/11 Truther stops and uses their goddamn brain. Well, we stopped all the time, but nowhere that food was readily available. With the big rush to get on the bus I didn’t have a chance to stock up on supplies (or even change my Russian Roubles into something useful) so I just sat there, going crazy with boredom and hunger, trying to go to sleep so time would go quicker. As we left the slate-grey skies of Gdansk I was told off for putting my feet up on the back seat. All the announcements (like where we were, how long we were stopping for etc.) were in Polish. This whole episode felt like I was, at the age of 33, having already been to every country in the world, being forced to re-sit my A-Levels. GodDAMN it.

I slept fitfully throughout the night. The temperature on board swung from toasty warm when we were moving to bollock-shatteringly cold whenever we stopped and the driver left the doors open so we could be obnoxiously whipped by the frigid winds blowing down from the Arctic Circle.

The next day I arrived in London Victoria Coach station around 5.30pm. The rubber-stamped end of my four year journey. Nobody was there to greet me this time. Might as well have been on a business trip. At least it wasn’t raining this time. I took the train to Islington to meet Casey from work. We reunited on Upper Street. We then headed over to Casey’s parent’s house in Hounslow to pick up some stuff before driving the length of the North Circular over to Gants Hill – our new residence. A room between us in a big house of 10 people. It’s not much, but at least we get to be together. I’m fed up of all this gallivanting. I need a break.

The Odyssey Expedition is over, over, over . Now I need to get a proper job. I just hope to hell that one of the various Travel/Video/Film/Book projects I’m trying to get off the ground comes to fruition. And does so soon. For the first time in over 4 years, I have rent to pay.

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Graham Hughes

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The Hughes 25 is a 25.17ft masthead sloop designed by Howard Hughes and built in fiberglass by Hughes Boat Works since 1968.

The Hughes 25 is a moderate weight sailboat which is a good performer. It is very stable / stiff and has a good righting capability if capsized. It is best suited as a day-boat.

Hughes 25 sailboat under sail

Hughes 25 for sale elsewhere on the web:

hughes 25 sailboat

Main features

Model Hughes 25
Length 25.17 ft
Beam 7.50 ft
Draft 3.25 ft
Country Canada (North America)
Estimated price $ 0 ??

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hughes 25 sailboat

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Sail area / displ. 18.79
Ballast / displ. 45.71 %
Displ. / length 227.80
Comfort ratio 17.71
Capsize 1.98
Hull type Monohull fin keel with spade rudder
Construction Fiberglass
Waterline length 19 ft
Maximum draft 3.25 ft
Displacement 3500 lbs
Ballast 1600 lbs
Hull speed 5.84 knots

hughes 25 sailboat

We help you build your own hydraulic steering system - Lecomble & Schmitt

Rigging Masthead Sloop
Sail area (100%) 270 sq.ft
Air draft 0 ft ??
Sail area fore 131.20 sq.ft
Sail area main 138.35 sq.ft
I 31.50 ft
J 8.33 ft
P 27.67 ft
E 10 ft
Nb engines 1
Total power 0 HP
Fuel capacity 0 gals

Accommodations

Water capacity 0 gals
Headroom 0 ft
Nb of cabins 0
Nb of berths 0
Nb heads 0

Builder data

Builder Hughes Boat Works
Designer Howard Hughes
First built 1968
Last built 0 ??
Number built 0 ??

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hughes 25 sailboat

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New Evidence Shows Russia Has Deployed Powerful Missiles To Kaliningrad Coast

Russia is locked in increased tensions with nato, primarily as a result of the invasion of ukraine. the strategically relevant exclave of kaliningrad on the baltic may be another flashpoint. now russia has deployed advanced anti-ship missiles to firing positions on the coast..

H I Sutton 29 Jun 2022

A small parcel of land on the southeast corner of the Baltic, the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad is suddenly in the spotlight. Cut off from Russia, its overland supply lines have always been fragile. They principally run through the EU and NATO state of Lithuania. Now Lithuania is implementing EU sanctions which restrict this route . It is a potential flashpoint for a Russia-NATO conflict.

Analysis of satellite imagery shows that Russia has now positioned advanced anti-ship missiles on the Kaliningrad coast.

The systems are deployed to the Mys Taran headland, a prominent landmark mid-way along the exclave’s short coastline.

Terrible Twins: Bal & Bastion

The missile systems are two types which are often deployed together. The first, 3K60 Bal system (NATO: SSC-6 Sennight), is loosely equivalent to the Harpoon. It shoots the Kh-35 missile, known by the NATO reporting name SS-N-25 Switchblade. This is the same missile that Ukraine’s Neptune system is based on. Each Bal TEL (transporter erector launcher, read ‘launch truck’) can carry 8 missiles. This is more than most other comparable coastal defense systems.

Bal has an effective range of around 70 nautical miles, with an improved version increasing this to 160 nautical miles.

The Bal system is a subsonic sea-skimming missile. Although the sinking of Russia’s Black Sea flagship, Moskva , by Neptune missiles is proof of the usefulness of this category of system, in Kaliningrad it is complemented by something even ore deadly: Bastion-P.

The K-300P Bastion-P (NATO: SSC-5 Stooge) is the land-based variant of the P-800 Oniks (NATO: SS-N-26 Strobile). This system has a longer range than Bal, around 190 nautical miles, and flies at Mach 2.5. A top-tier weapon of the post Cold War era, it is considered a serious threat to any surface vessel.

Bastion-P also has a land attack cruise missile capability. This is how it has been used in the Ukraine War. Being large and expensive it is however less optimal than the main Russian cruise missile, Kalibr. That system is carried by several of Russia’s Baltic Fleet warships.

Bastion-P and Bal are often seen deployed together in Kaliningrad, sharing the same Monolith-B target acquisition radar. On paper the various elements of the system could be well dispersed to increase survivability. But in practice they are observed close together in a somewhat traditional arrangement.

Strategic Context

The range of these missiles, particularly Bastion-P, reaches all the way to the Swedish coast on the other side of the Baltic. Long range engagements would depend on suitable targeting information.

Although there is no secret that Russia has these systems in Kaliningrad, they are being deployed during a time of heightened tensions.

Defense analyst Benjamin Pittet believes that Russia is using it more than ever as a means of pressure on the West. “We saw this with the deployment of Kinzhal ballistic missiles a few days before the invasion of Ukraine.” He added that the current deployment may be to influence Lithuania which is implementing sanctions.

Political rhetoric on the Russian side has promised retaliation against Lithuania. Nikolai Patrushev, secretary of Russia’s Security Council, said that measures would be implemented . “…will certainly respond to such hostile actions” . He was quoted as saying. “Their consequences will have a serious negative impact on the population of Lithuania.”

Anti-ship missiles are unlikely to be the primary response to Lithuania. The tiny Baltic state is a member of NATO, so any attack would be a major escalation. But their positioning paints a picture, and is typical of Russia’s posturing in the exclave.

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IMAGES

  1. Hughes 25

    hughes 25 sailboat

  2. 1971 Hughes Hughes 25 sailboat for sale in Massachusetts

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  3. SailboatData.com

    hughes 25 sailboat

  4. Used Hughes 25 Sailboat for sale in Rockcliffe, Ontario Classifieds

    hughes 25 sailboat

  5. solid 1972, 25' hughes sailboat for sale, cheap! $1200 without outboard

    hughes 25 sailboat

  6. Hughes 25

    hughes 25 sailboat

VIDEO

  1. Wicked Salty Sailing Merit 25

  2. NorthCoast 255 HT Boat Test The Fisherman Magazine

  3. Zachary Hughes (25) Smithville Jamboree Inclusive Clogging Contest Virtual Entry 2024

  4. Waterski behind sailingboat

  5. Powering Through: Windy Yacht Conquers Haulover Inlet with Incredible Speed and Precision at Dusk

  6. HUNTER 25-2 Boat Tour

COMMENTS

  1. HUGHES 25

    It is thought that this boat derived from the NUTMEG 24, designed by William Shaw (1964). Despite the reverse transom, fin keel with spade rudder, the basic hull shape seems strikingly similar. At about this time, Hughes Boatworks acquired the tooling from Tanzer Industries, the original builder of NUTMEG 24. Little notice has been made […]

  2. Hughes 25

    The Hughes 25 is a Canadian trailerable sailboat that was designed by Howard Hughes as a cruiser and first built in 1968. The Hughes 25 is most likely a development of William Shaw's Nutmeg 24 design. Production. The Hughes 25 was ...

  3. 1972 Hughes 25'

    Done a little research on these boats. (none of this is certain) The Hughes 25 is an update of the Hughes 24 which, in turn, is very similar to the Nutmeg 24, designed by William Shaw (of Pearson fame) The modifications to the 24 included a different deck and coach roof, a fixed keel and spade rudder. (the 24 had a centerboard).

  4. Hughes 25

    Hughes 25 is a 25′ 1″ / 7.7 m monohull sailboat designed by Howard Hughes and built by Hughes Boat Works starting in 1968. Great choice! Your favorites are temporarily saved for this session.

  5. Anyone ever sail an old Hughes 25?

    There were at least 141 of the Hughes 25 built, hull 141 is sailed out of Halifax in Nova Scotia. I know of 8 other 25's still sailing within 100 miles of my location. From experience I can say the boat is very tender to 15-19 degrees after which she stiffens up.

  6. Review of Hughes 25

    The Hughes 25 is equipped with a fin keel. A boat with a fin keel is more manoeuvrable but has less directional stability than a similar boat with a full keel. The boat can enter even shallow marinas as the draft is just about 0.98 - 1.08 meter (3.22 - 3.52 ft) dependent on the load.

  7. Hughes Boat Works

    Hughes Boat Works was a Canadian sailboat builder that produced the Northstar 500 from 1973 to 1974. The Northstar 500 was a Sparkman & Stevens design with a fiberglass hull, a keel-centerboard configuration, and a fractional rig.

  8. Hughes 25

    The Hughes 25 is a 25.17ft masthead sloop designed by Howard Hughes and built in fiberglass by Hughes Boat Works since 1968. The Hughes 25 is a moderate weight sailboat which is a good performer. It is very stable / stiff and has a good righting capability if capsized. It is best suited as a day-boat. This boat is not a good fit for your usage.

  9. Hughes Boat Works

    The HUGHES 22, 25, and 29 (designed by Howard Hughes) went into production in 1968, as did the HUGHES 38 and HUGHES 48 (designed by Sparkman & Stevens in conjunction with Hughes). ... Hughes Boat Works Ltd. was the largest sailboat manufacturer in Canada for several years. Years in Business: 1963 - 1991.

  10. Hughes Sailboats

    Unknown member. #2 · Jul 11, 2001. I owned a Hughes quarter tonner back in the 1970''s and I am reasonably familiar with Hughes as a company. Hughes was a small Canadian boat builder started in the 1960''s. They originally produced a line of boat designed by founder Howard Hughes (not that Howard Hughes) Later they were bought by US Steel and ...

  11. Hughes sailboats for sale by owner.

    Hughes preowned sailboats for sale by owner. Hughes used sailboats for sale by owner. Home. Register & Post. View All Sailboats. Search. Avoid Fraud. ... 25' Catalina 25' Rocky Fork Lake East Shore Marina, Ohio Asking $7,500. 24' Pacific Seacraft Dana 24 Erie, Pennsylvania Asking $45,000. 34' O'Day 34

  12. 1971 Hughes Hughes 25 sailboat for sale in Massachusetts

    Massachusetts. $5,800. Description: Fiberglass hull; cruising sloop. Full enclosed keel. Excellent for day/weekend cruising. Very stable craft, handles well. Built in Canada to standards not seen in more "modern" construction. Traditional classic lines after Sparkman & Stevens design.

  13. Hughes 25

    Sailboat data, rig dimensions and recommended sail areas for Hughes 25 sailboat. Tech info about rigging, halyards, sheets, mainsail covers and more. Sailboat Data directory for over 8,000 sailboat designs and manufacturers. Direct access to halyards lengths, recommended sail areas, mainsail cover styles, standing rigging fittings, and lots ...

  14. Hughes 25

    Sunday Sailor. . Jul 30, 2013. 56. Hughes 25 Burlington. May 21, 2014. #1. I am the new owner of a 1974 Hughes 25 and am looking for a manual for it. Also would like pics of interior modifications.

  15. 1967 Hughes 25 sailboat for sale

    1967 Hughes 25 for sale, Hartwell, Georgia, $2,800. 7/27/06, 1967 Hughes 25, Hartwell, Georgia, $2,800, price reduced 9/13/06 to $2,200, sold 10/4/06 ... Sails: Scam Warnings: Texas Lakes: Advertise with us: Contact: Free Sailboat Ad: Go to Sailing Texas classifieds for current sailboats for sale . 1967 Hughes 25 project boat All rotten wood ...

  16. 1972 Hughes Boat North Star sailboat for sale in Florida

    1972 25' Hughes Boat North Star sailboat for sale in Julington Creek Florida

  17. Hughes boats for sale

    Some of the best-known Hughes models currently listed include: 34 Trimaran, 38 MKIII, 40, 40-46 Tri and Northstar 1500. Various Hughes models are currently offered for sale by specialized yacht brokers, dealers and brokerages on YachtWorld, with listings ranging from 1975 year models up to 2019. Find Hughes boats for sale in your area & across ...

  18. Used Hughes 25 Sailboat in Rockcliffe, Ontario for sale

    1971 Hughes 25 foot sailboat Sleeps 4 Boat has been lightly used these last few years but always launched. Nice solid boat on the water, large cockpit, Comes with: Reliable 5 Hp Johnson and fuel tank Main Sail and 5 head sails Assorted life vests, and other safety equipment BBQ portable toilet Cradle for winter storage etc.

  19. Ropucha-class landing ship

    Ropucha-class landing ship is a class of Soviet-built ships for beach landings and cargo transport. They have been used by the Russian Navy in various conflicts and operations, and some were seized by Russia from Ukraine in 2014.

  20. Days 1,490-1,493: The Last Leg

    Mon 29.01.13 - Thu 01.02.13: Monday morning saw Casey and I silently creep out of Lindsey's place around 7am. I was in an epic rush to get to the coach station for 8am so I said my farewells to my better half on the Bakerloo Line before changing at Oxford Circus for the line to […]

  21. Kaliningrad (Baltiysk) Ferry

    Kaliningrad Ferries Ticket Prices & Reservations. Book ferry tickets to and from the Kaliningrad ferry port of Baltiysk to St Petersburg, Copenhagen, Riga and Kiel online in advance to enjoy the cheapest available ferry ticket price.. The price you see is the price you pay.There are no hidden extras or surprises such as added fuel surcharges or booking fees and we do not charge you anything ...

  22. Hughes 25

    The Hughes 25 is a 25.17ft masthead sloop designed by Howard Hughes and built in fiberglass by Hughes Boat Works since 1968. The Hughes 25 is a moderate weight sailboat which is a good performer. It is very stable / stiff and has a good righting capability if capsized. It is best suited as a day-boat.

  23. New Evidence Shows Russia Has Deployed Powerful Missiles To Kaliningrad

    Satellite imagery shows that Russia has positioned two types of advanced anti-ship missiles on the coast of its exclave in the Baltic Sea. The 3K60 Bal system (NATO: SSC-6 Sennight) can shoot the Kh-35 missile with a range of 70-160 nautical miles.