Wednesday, 3 June 2026

Building the Champagne A-Rater Social Media Presence

 


Building the Champagne A-Rater Social Media Presence

How do you give a classic racing boat a modern audience?

“Before Champagne even reaches the start line, she needs an audience.”



Buying a Thames A-Rater is one thing. Learning how to sail, restore, present and promote one is something else entirely.

Champagne is not just a boat. She is a project, a story, a challenge, a piece of Thames sailing heritage and, if I am honest, a rather large invitation to discover just how much I still have to learn. Long before she is fully restored, beautifully varnished and charging elegantly up the river, there is another job to do: building her social media presence.

In today’s world, even a historic racing boat benefits from being visible. If people are going to follow Champagne’s restoration, cheer on her progress and feel part of the adventure, they need somewhere to find her. That means creating a social media identity that is interesting, welcoming and consistent.

This is not just about promotion. It is about storytelling.


Why Champagne Needs a Social Media Presence

A boat like Champagne deserves more than a quiet existence under a cover in the boat park.

She has history, character and potential. She also has a future story waiting to unfold: restoration work, sailing trials, race preparation, inevitable setbacks, little victories and, hopefully, some glorious days back on the Thames. Social media gives that story a place to live in public.

There are several reasons for building an online presence for Champagne:

  • to document the restoration journey
  • to explain the Thames A-Rater to a wider audience
  • to connect with sailors, historians and supporters
  • to create interest before the boat is racing regularly
  • to build momentum for videos, blog posts and future projects
  • to make the project feel alive and shared rather than hidden away

There is something powerful about inviting people along at the beginning. If they see the first inspections, the rough edges, the varnish problems, the sail debates and the learning process, they become invested. By the time Champagne reaches the water in earnest, people are not just watching a boat — they are following a story they feel part of.


Choosing the Platforms: Where Should Champagne Live Online?

One of the first questions is simple: where should Champagne appear?

The obvious answer is “everywhere”, but that can quickly turn into chaos if there is no plan. Each platform has a slightly different role.

Facebook

Facebook is useful for building a community and keeping a running public record of updates. It works well for:

  • progress photos
  • short restoration updates
  • shared blog links
  • event announcements
  • historical posts
  • conversations with sailing enthusiasts

Facebook is often where people are willing to comment, share their memories and tag others who may be interested. For a project like Champagne, that matters.

Instagram

Instagram is the visual shop window. It is ideal for:

  • attractive photos of the boat
  • close-ups of fittings, sails, woodwork and details
  • short reels
  • behind-the-scenes workshop moments
  • branded graphics and quote posts

If Facebook is the club noticeboard, Instagram is the glossy display window.

YouTube

YouTube is where the deeper storytelling happens. This is the perfect home for:

  • restoration videos
  • “What is a Thames A-Rater?” explainers
  • race day films
  • behind-the-scenes boatyard work
  • short documentaries about the class and the river

Video brings the project to life in a way still images cannot. A boat has movement, sound and personality, and YouTube is where that really shows.

Blog

The blog gives room for detail. This is where the longer thoughts belong:

  • restoration decisions
  • historical background
  • racing ambitions
  • technical learning
  • reflections on the emotional side of the project

A blog allows depth and personality. It also helps with search visibility and gives everything a permanent home.

Patreon

Patreon is perhaps for later rather than immediately, but it is worth considering. If the project develops a strong following, Patreon could support:

  • exclusive restoration videos
  • early access to content
  • detailed project diaries
  • downloadable plans or behind-the-scenes notes
  • special supporter updates

That said, it only works if people feel a strong connection first. Social media has to build the relationship before Patreon can ask for support.


What Makes a Good First Post?

The first post matters because it sets the tone.

It does not need to be perfect. In fact, over-polished first posts can feel slightly lifeless. What it does need to do is invite people in.

A good first post for Champagne should do three things:

  1. Introduce the boat
  2. Explain why she matters
  3. Give people a reason to follow

For example, a strong first post might say that Champagne is a Thames A-Rater with a new future ahead of her, that the project will include restoration, sailing, videos and plenty of learning along the way, and that followers are invited to come along for the ride.

It should not read like a press release. It should sound human.

People do not follow accounts because the punctuation is perfect. They follow because there is a story, a personality and a sense that something interesting is about to happen.


Explaining the Thames A-Rater to Non-Sailors

One challenge is that outside the sailing world, very few people know what a Thames A-Rater is.

Even within sailing, they are not exactly mainstream. So one of the most important parts of Champagne’s social media identity is education.

If the account assumes everyone already understands the class, it risks becoming too narrow. Better to explain clearly and simply.

A useful approach is to create a short introductory post or video:

What is a Thames A-Rater?

  • A historic and elegant racing dinghy developed for the River Thames
  • Long, narrow and graceful, with a distinctive look
  • Built for performance in river conditions
  • Part of a fascinating tradition in Thames sailing history
  • A class with a mixture of beauty, technical interest and racing challenge

That explanation should avoid disappearing into jargon too quickly. There is plenty of time later for discussions about rig tuning, sail shape and restoration detail. First, people need to understand why the boat is special.

Short explainer videos could be especially useful here. A 30–60 second video with photographs, river shots and a simple voiceover could do far more than a block of text.


Telling the Story Before the Boat Races

This is perhaps the most important social media lesson of all.

People do not need to wait until the exciting part starts. The preparation is part of the exciting part.

It is tempting to think: “We should wait until Champagne looks better.” But in social media terms, the early, messy, uncertain phase is often the most engaging. That is when the story feels real.

Possible content before regular racing even begins includes:

  • arrival of the boat
  • first inspection
  • restoration to-do lists
  • old fittings and their mysteries
  • sail condition debates
  • varnish plans
  • cover problems
  • learning about the class
  • the search for the right branding
  • archive or historical posts about Thames A-Raters
  • short reflections on what the project means

These posts invite people into the process. They help followers feel that they are watching a proper journey rather than just being shown the end result.

Emotion matters here. If followers see not just the boat but the hopes, concerns, mistakes and progress around it, they become far more likely to care.


Short Videos, Restoration Updates and Historical Posts

A healthy social media presence usually needs a mixture of content rather than one repeated format.

For Champagne, there are three especially strong content types.

1. Short videos

These are excellent for grabbing attention. Ideas include:

  • a quick walk-round of the boat
  • a “problem of the week” clip
  • a restoration before-and-after
  • a one-minute history of the A-Rater class
  • footage of river scenes and club life
  • short humorous commentary about learning and mishaps

Short videos perform well because they are easy to consume and easy to share.

2. Restoration updates

These create continuity. Even small updates matter:

  • sanding complete on one section
  • varnish chosen
  • rigging issue identified
  • rudder fitting inspected
  • sail measurements considered
  • temporary cover replaced or adjusted

Not every post has to be dramatic. Regularity often matters more than drama.

3. Historical posts

These give Champagne depth and context. For example:

  • the history of Thames A-Raters
  • famous races or trophies
  • old photos of the class
  • how river racing differs from open water sailing
  • notable boats, sailors and clubs

Historical content helps the project appeal beyond the immediate restoration. It also gives followers a reason to value the boat as heritage, not just as a possession.


Building Emotional Investment

Social media works best when people feel something.

For Champagne, the emotion is not just excitement about racing. It is the sense of restoring and reviving something beautiful and important.

People can become emotionally invested in several ways:

  • by seeing progress over time
  • by sharing the frustrations and setbacks
  • by understanding the heritage
  • by recognising the ambition behind the project
  • by enjoying the humour and personality in the storytelling

A boat account that only posts polished photographs may look nice, but it often lacks emotional pull. A boat account that shares uncertainty, hope, small improvements and real enthusiasm is much more compelling.

For example, a post saying:

“Today’s progress: not glamorous. We inspected the cover, found more holes than confidence, and added ‘proper cover’ to the growing list.”

That has character. It is informative, but it also sounds human. People remember that.


Serious Heritage… but With a Sense of Humour

This balance is important.

Thames A-Raters deserve respect. They are part of a long and rather wonderful sailing tradition. But that does not mean the content should be solemn and overly formal.

A little humour helps enormously, particularly when it reflects the real experience of restoration and sailing.

There is plenty of room for posts that gently poke fun at the process:

  • discovering that “quick jobs” are never quick
  • the gap between restoration plans and restoration reality
  • the endless optimism required when dealing with old boats
  • the tendency of projects to grow arms and legs
  • the difference between “looks fine from a distance” and “needs attention up close”

Humour makes heritage accessible. It also makes the people behind the project feel real.

The key is not to make the class feel trivial. Rather, it is to show affection, enthusiasm and honesty. Serious sailing heritage and a smile are not opposites. In fact, they often work beautifully together.


Creating a Visual Identity

Social media presence is not only about words. It also needs a recognisable look.

Champagne should ideally have a simple but coherent visual identity across all platforms. That might include:

  • a consistent profile image
  • a logo or wordmark
  • a small set of colours
  • recurring type styles
  • similar thumbnail or post design
  • a recognisable tone in captions

This does not have to become corporate. In fact, it should not. But consistency helps people recognise the project instantly.

Possible visual themes might include:

  • navy blue, cream and gold
  • classic maritime typography
  • elegant but slightly informal graphics
  • a blend of heritage style and modern clarity

A good identity makes even ordinary updates feel part of a larger story.


Practical Lessons From Building the Presence

Any social media project teaches lessons quickly. I suspect Champagne’s will be no different.

Some practical lessons already seem obvious:

Start before you feel fully ready

If you wait until everything is perfect, nothing gets posted.

Tell the story simply

Not everyone knows sailing terminology. Clear explanations win.

Use a content mix

Photos, reels, blog links, explanations and humour all have a place.

Show progress, not just perfection

People enjoy seeing how things develop.

Keep the tone human

Followers respond to personality more than polish.

Think long-term

This is not a one-week campaign. It is the beginning of an ongoing story.


Personal Reflection: Why This Matters to Me

What interests me about building Champagne’s social media presence is that it combines several things I enjoy: sailing, storytelling, photography, video, design and teaching.

In some ways, explaining Champagne online is rather like teaching. You start with the assumption that many people know very little about the subject. You then try to make it clear, interesting and enjoyable without losing the depth of the topic.

That challenge appeals to me.

I also like the idea that a social media presence can help keep old traditions alive. A Thames A-Rater is not just a boat of the past. Through video, photos and regular posts, she can become part of a living story that reaches far beyond the club gates.

And if the account also includes the occasional restoration blunder, varnish frustration or mildly panicked question about sails, so much the better. That is part of the reality, and reality is usually more interesting than polish.


Conclusion: Building the Audience Before the Start Line

Before Champagne can race properly, she needs something else in place: attention, interest and a community.

That community will not appear by accident. It has to be built through thoughtful posting, clear storytelling and a genuine sense of invitation. The aim is not simply to collect followers. It is to create a group of people who care what happens next.

That means introducing the Thames A-Rater to non-sailors, sharing restoration progress, posting short videos, using history well and keeping the tone warm and human. It also means remembering that the story begins long before the first competitive start.

Champagne does not need to be fully finished before she becomes worth following.

In fact, the opposite is true.

The earlier people join the story, the more they will care about where it leads.

Tuesday, 2 June 2026

Varnish, Sandpaper and Patience: Protecting Champagne’s Woodwork

 


Varnish, Sandpaper and Patience: Protecting Champagne’s Woodwork

Hook:
Varnishing a boat is simple: sand, clean, varnish, wait, repeat… and try not to get impatient.

There are some jobs on an old racing boat that look small until you start thinking about them properly.

A little patch of exposed wood.
A bit of tired varnish.
A place where water might have crept underneath the finish.
A wooden edge that has gone dull rather than glossy.

At first glance, it is tempting to say, “I’ll just give that a quick tidy up.”

Unfortunately, boats hear phrases like that and laugh quietly to themselves.

With Champagne, our Thames A-Rater restoration project, one of the next jobs is protecting the exposed woodwork. I have not actually started the varnishing yet, but the preparation has begun. I have bought a good quality marine varnish — Epifanes, recommended by several experienced sailors at Upper Thames Sailing Club — along with 600 grit paper and a wide curved sanding block that can be adjusted to follow the shape of the hull.

That may sound like a small shopping list, but in boat terms it represents something much bigger: accepting that this is not a five-minute job.

It is a job involving varnish, sandpaper and, most importantly, patience.


Why Bare Wood Cannot Be Ignored

Wooden parts on a classic racing boat are not just decorative. They are part of the character, structure and history of the boat.

On a boat like Champagne, the varnished woodwork is part of what makes her look like an A-Rater rather than just another racing dinghy. The gleaming brightwork, the curve of the trim, the mast, spars and wooden details all add to the feeling that this is not simply a boat — it is a piece of river history.

But wood and water have a complicated relationship.

Wood can survive beautifully on boats for decades, but only if it is protected. Once the varnish breaks down, cracks, lifts, or gets damaged, water can start to creep underneath. That is when problems begin.

A small exposed patch can become:

  • stained wood
  • lifted varnish
  • blackened grain
  • soft patches
  • rot
  • expensive repair work
  • a much larger job than it needed to be

The trouble is that varnish can look fine from a distance while still failing at the edges. Water does not need a grand entrance. It only needs a tiny gap and a bit of time.

And boats, of course, live in the ideal environment for making tiny problems bigger.


The Suspicious Signs: Has Water Got Underneath?

One of the things I need to investigate on Champagne is whether some water has managed to get underneath the varnish in places.

This is where the job becomes more than just making the boat look pretty.

When varnish is doing its job, it forms a clear protective skin over the wood. When water gets underneath, that skin can begin to lift. The surface may look slightly cloudy, dull, uneven, darkened, or flaky. Sometimes it is obvious. Sometimes it is only visible when the light catches it at the right angle.

This is why I need to go round the boat carefully, not just enthusiastically.

There is a big difference between saying:

“That bit looks a little rough.”

and asking:

“Why does that bit look rough, and has water got underneath?”

The first approach leads to a quick cosmetic patch.
The second approach leads to a proper repair.

And with an old racing boat, the second approach is usually the safer one.


The Tools: Varnish, Paper and a Sensible Sanding Block

I have now bought the first set of materials for the job.

The varnish is Epifanes, which was strongly recommended by sailors at the club. That matters. In theory, I could have stood in a shop reading labels and pretending to be an expert. In practice, when several boat owners who have actually maintained boats on the river say, “Use this,” it is worth listening.

I also have 600 grit paper, which is fine enough for smoothing between coats and preparing existing varnished surfaces without attacking the wood like a man trying to remove paint from a garden gate.

The third useful item is a wide curved sanding block, which can be adjusted to match the shape of the hull or curved woodwork. That should help avoid the classic amateur mistake of sanding unevenly, creating flat spots, or concentrating pressure in one place.

The aim is not to punish the boat into submission.
The aim is to prepare the surface gently, evenly and thoroughly.

That distinction matters.


Sanding: The Part Everyone Wants to Rush

Sanding is one of those jobs that looks easy until you do it properly.

The temptation is to rub at the surface until it looks vaguely smoother, then reach for the varnish because that is the exciting bit. But varnish is unforgiving. It does not hide poor preparation; it preserves it beautifully under a glossy layer so you can admire your mistake for months.

The sanding stage needs to do several things:

  1. Remove loose or failing varnish.
  2. Feather the edges where old varnish meets exposed wood.
  3. Smooth the surface without damaging the shape.
  4. Create a key so the next coat can bond properly.
  5. Reveal whether the problem is only on the surface or whether there is deeper damage.

This is also where I will need to be honest.

If a patch of varnish has lifted because water has crept underneath, simply sanding the top and adding a new coat may not be enough. The loose or damaged varnish has to be dealt with properly, otherwise the new varnish is just sitting on top of an old problem.

That is the boat maintenance equivalent of putting a new roof tile over a leak and hoping the rain has not noticed.


Cleaning: The Quiet Step That Matters

After sanding comes cleaning.

This sounds obvious, but it is one of the stages that can make or ruin the job. Dust, grease, moisture and old debris all interfere with varnish. A surface can look ready but still be covered with fine sanding dust.

The wood needs to be clean, dry and free from contamination before varnish is applied.

That means taking time to remove dust properly, checking corners and edges, and not varnishing just because the brush is already in your hand and you are feeling optimistic.

Boats punish optimism.
They prefer preparation.


Choosing the Right Weather Window

One of the difficulties with varnishing is that the boat does not live in a controlled laboratory.

If this were one of our science practicals, I would control the temperature, humidity, timing and conditions. Unfortunately, Champagne is in the real world, where the weather has opinions.

Varnishing needs a sensible weather window. Too damp, too cold, too hot, too dusty, too windy, too likely to rain — all of these can turn a promising job into a sticky disappointment.

The varnish needs time to flow, level and cure. It also needs to be protected while it dries. That is not always easy when the boat is outdoors, the British weather is being British, and every passing insect suddenly decides that wet varnish is the ideal place to spend its final moments.

This is one of the reasons the job has not started yet. Buying the varnish is easy. Finding the right time to use it properly is the real challenge.


The Difference Between Tidying Up and Doing the Job Properly

There is a phrase that should probably be banned from boat restoration:

“I’ll just tidy that up quickly.”

Sometimes a quick tidy is exactly what is needed. But more often, especially with varnish, the “quick tidy” becomes a temporary disguise.

A quick tidy might make the boat look better for a few weeks.
A proper job protects the wood for much longer.

The difference is in the preparation:

  • checking where varnish has failed
  • sanding back properly
  • dealing with any water damage
  • cleaning thoroughly
  • applying suitable coats
  • allowing enough drying time
  • sanding between coats if needed
  • building up protection gradually

This is not glamorous work. It does not have the instant excitement of launching the boat, hoisting the sail, or taking a dramatic photograph on the river.

But without this kind of work, the glamorous bits become much more expensive later.


Why Rushing Varnish Usually Leads to Regret

Varnishing is one of the great tests of patience.

The instructions always seem simple enough. The practical reality is rather different.

You apply a coat.
Then you wait.
Then you inspect it.
Then you may need to sand.
Then you clean again.
Then you apply another coat.
Then you wait again.

At some point, a dangerous voice appears in your head and says:

“That is probably good enough.”

This is the voice that must be ignored.

Rushing varnish can lead to runs, dust, poor adhesion, trapped moisture, uneven finish and the sort of result that looks fine until the next time the sun shines across it at an unkind angle.

The problem with a bad varnish job is not just that it looks poor. It can also fail sooner, meaning the whole job has to be done again.

There are many jobs in life where rushing saves time.

Varnishing a boat is not one of them.


Personal Reflection: Learning to Slow Down

One of the unexpected lessons of owning Champagne is that the boat sets the pace.

I may want everything done quickly. I may want her looking smart, protected, ready to sail and ready to photograph. I may want to move on to the more exciting jobs: rigging, sails, racing, filming and telling the story of her return to the water.

But the boat has other ideas.

She is an old racing boat. She has had a life before us. She has patches, marks, repairs, history and probably a few surprises hidden under innocent-looking fittings. She is not a flat-pack project with numbered parts and a cheerful instruction booklet.

Working on her properly means slowing down enough to look.

That is not always easy. I am naturally inclined to start solving problems, making things, filming things, writing things and moving on to the next job. But varnishing does not reward that approach. Varnishing rewards the person who waits, checks, prepares, applies carefully and then resists the temptation to poke it.

There is probably a life lesson in there somewhere, although I would prefer it if the lesson did not involve quite so much sanding.


Practical Plan for Champagne’s Woodwork

Before I start, the sensible approach is to make a small plan rather than attack the boat with sandpaper in a sudden burst of enthusiasm.

The practical steps are likely to be:

1. Inspect the woodwork carefully

Look for bare patches, lifted varnish, dark staining, cracks, scratches, cloudy areas and places where water might have crept underneath.

2. Photograph the problem areas

This helps create a record of what needed attention and makes it easier to compare before and after.

3. Decide what needs light preparation and what needs deeper work

Not every area will need the same treatment. Some may only need gentle sanding and fresh coats. Other areas may need varnish removing more thoroughly.

4. Sand carefully

Use the 600 grit paper and curved sanding block where appropriate, taking care not to damage the shape or remove more material than necessary.

5. Clean thoroughly

Remove dust, check the surface, and make sure the wood is dry before varnishing.

6. Apply varnish properly

Thin coats, and the use of thinners, careful brushwork and patience are likely to produce a better finish than trying to achieve perfection in one dramatic coat.

7. Wait

This is the hard bit.

8. Repeat as needed

A good varnish finish is built up. It is not slapped on in a hurry.


The Wider Restoration Lesson

Varnishing Champagne is not just about woodwork. It is part of the wider restoration mindset.

Before a classic racing boat can be sailed hard, filmed beautifully and admired properly, it needs all the quiet jobs done well.

That includes checking fittings, looking at the rigging, sorting covers, protecting wood, examining sails, making repairs and asking experienced people for advice. Some jobs are exciting. Some are messy. Some are repetitive. Some involve standing in a boat park holding a sanding block and wondering how a “small patch” became an afternoon.

But this is how old boats survive.

They survive because somebody cares enough to notice the little things before they become big things.


Conclusion: Patience Is Part of the Restoration

The varnishing has not started yet, but the thinking has.

The materials are ready. The varnish has been chosen. The sanding paper and curved block are waiting. The next step is to find the right weather, inspect the woodwork properly and begin the slow process of protecting Champagne for the seasons ahead.

It would be lovely if boat restoration were a sequence of dramatic moments: the purchase, the launch, the race, the trophy, the sunset photograph.

In reality, it is also sandpaper, dust, drying time, weather forecasts and trying not to rush.

And perhaps that is the point.

A boat like Champagne deserves more than a quick tidy up. She deserves the careful, patient work that keeps her strong, beautiful and ready for the river.

So the job begins before the brush touches the wood.

It begins with looking properly, preparing properly, and accepting that varnish, like sailing, rewards patience.

Monday, 1 June 2026

Does Champagne Need New Sails?

 


Does Champagne Need New Sails?

Old Sails May Still Look Like Sails, But the Wind Knows the Truth

One of the many things we are discovering with Champagne, our Thames A-Rater, is that owning an old racing boat is rather like opening a beautifully varnished box of questions.

Some questions are simple.

Does she float?
Can we rig her?
Will the mast stay up?
Can we get her round a course without embarrassing ourselves too much?

Other questions are rather more expensive.

Does Champagne need new sails?

The simple answer is: yes.

The more practical answer is: yes, but not now.

That may not sound very heroic, but boat restoration is not just about dreaming. It is about priorities, budgets, safety, performance and deciding which jobs must be done now, which jobs can wait, and which jobs need to be placed carefully on the “very desirable but financially terrifying” list.

New sails would be wonderful. They would also cost a great deal of money. At current estimates, a new mainsail would be in the region of £2,800, and a new jib around £1,500. That means we are looking at roughly £4,300 before we have even started thinking about other work on the boat.

So, for now, the question is not simply, “Would new sails be better?”

Of course they would.

The better question is: can we sail, learn, race and enjoy Champagne using what we already have?

At the moment, I think the answer is yes.




What Sails Do We Actually Have?

Champagne came with her original sails, which appear to date from around 1994. That makes them older than some of the people who will probably sail past us at speed.

They are patched in places, and they have clearly lived a life. They have been hoisted, dropped, folded, pulled, flogged, stretched, dried, stored and probably sworn at for over thirty years. Yet, at first glance, they are generally usable.

They are not perfect. They are not crisp racing sails. They are certainly not going to frighten the front of the fleet into early retirement.

But they are sails.

In addition, we have been very kindly gifted an old set of sails from a sister A-Rater, Straight Dealer. This gives us more options. They may not be perfect either, but having a second set means we can compare condition, shape, fit and usefulness.

For a boat like Champagne, that matters. We are still learning the boat. We are still understanding the rig. We are still discovering what needs fixing first. It would be slightly mad to spend several thousand pounds on new sails before we have properly worked out how the boat behaves, what the rig needs, and which parts of the restoration list are genuinely urgent.


The First Job: Inspect What We Already Have

Before rushing to a sailmaker with a credit card and a look of blind optimism, the sensible thing is to inspect the sails properly.

That means laying them out carefully, ideally on a clean dry surface, and looking at them section by section.

We need to check:

  • the overall material condition
  • existing patches and repairs
  • stitching along the seams
  • the bolt rope or luff attachment
  • the corners: head, tack and clew
  • eyelets, cringles and reinforcement patches
  • UV damage
  • mildew or staining
  • areas where the cloth has become soft or distorted
  • whether the sail shape has stretched badly over time

This is not just about whether the sails have holes. A sail can be technically intact and still be a poor sail.

A torn sail is obvious. A stretched sail is much more subtle.

That is where the wind tells the truth.


Why Sail Shape Matters So Much

To a non-sailor, a sail can look like a big triangular sheet. If it goes up the mast and catches the wind, surely it is doing its job.

Sadly, racing boats are not quite that forgiving.

A sail is not just a sheet. It is an aerofoil. It has shape, curve, depth and twist. The wind flows over it, generating drive. If the shape is wrong, the boat becomes harder to control and slower through the water.

Old sails tend to stretch. The carefully designed shape moves. The draft can become too deep or shift to the wrong place. The leech may become tired. The sail may not flatten properly when the wind increases. Instead of producing efficient drive, it can produce drag, heel and frustration.

On a boat like an A-Rater, that matters enormously.

A Thames A-Rater carries a very large rig for its hull. That is part of what makes them spectacular. It is also what makes them demanding. Poor sail shape can make the boat more difficult to handle, especially in gusty river conditions where the wind comes through trees, bends, moorings and awkward gaps in a way that appears specifically designed to humble the inexperienced.

A good sail helps the boat point higher, accelerate better and remain balanced.

A tired sail may still move the boat, but it can make everything feel harder.


Are the Old Sails Good Enough for Now?

This is where the practical answer comes in.

Are Champagne’s 1994 sails good enough to win major races?

Almost certainly not.

Are they good enough to help us learn the boat, test the rig, get sailing, identify problems, practise handling and join in racing?

Very probably, yes.

That distinction matters.

At this stage, our first priority is not extracting the final half knot of performance. Our first priority is getting Champagne safely and reliably back into regular use.

We need to know:

  • does the rig tune properly?
  • are the halyards, sheets and blocks working smoothly?
  • is the mast set up correctly?
  • does the jib attachment need improving?
  • does the rudder cassette need work?
  • are the covers adequate?
  • is the hull watertight?
  • are there structural issues hidden beneath cosmetic ones?
  • can we launch, recover, rig and sail her without drama?

Only when those questions are answered does it make sense to think seriously about new sails.

Buying new sails before solving the underlying boat issues would be like buying racing tyres for a car before checking whether the steering works.

They might look wonderful, but they would not be the sensible first move.




Repair, Replace or Upgrade Gradually?

There are really three options.

Option 1: Keep Using the Existing Sails

This is the cheapest option and probably the most sensible starting point.

We can use the current Champagne sails for initial sailing, training and gentle racing. We can photograph them, inspect them, mark areas of concern and keep notes on how the boat performs.

If a seam opens or a small tear appears, we can get it repaired.

The advantage is simple: we get sailing.

The disadvantage is that old sails may limit performance and may not give the best impression of what Champagne is truly capable of.

But at this stage, getting her regularly on the water is more important than pretending we are immediately ready to challenge the front of the fleet.

Option 2: Use the Gifted Straight Dealer Sails

The gifted sails from Straight Dealer are a real bonus. They give us a chance to compare two older sets.

One set may have a better mainsail. The other may have a better jib. One might be stronger, while the other might have a better shape. We may even end up with one “training” set and one “better race day” set.

This is exactly the sort of practical generosity that keeps classic and development classes alive. Boats like A-Raters survive not just because people spend money, but because other sailors share knowledge, parts, stories, old kit and encouragement.

The Straight Dealer sails may not solve the long-term issue, but they could buy us time. In boat ownership, time is often as valuable as money.

Option 3: Buy New Sails

This is the dream option.

A new mainsail and jib made properly for Champagne would give us the best possible sail shape, improved performance and a clear baseline for tuning the boat. It would also look magnificent.

But the cost is serious.

With the mainsail at around £2,800 and the jib around £1,500, we have to think carefully. A-Rater ownership already involves other costs: covers, fittings, running rigging, varnish, repairs, insurance, storage, transport, safety equipment and the inevitable “small parts” that somehow never feel small when they are added together.

New sails may be necessary eventually. They are not the first restoration priority.


Could We Buy as a Group?

One possible route is to talk to other Rater teams.

If several boats need new sails, there may be an opportunity to approach sailmakers together. A group order might not dramatically halve the price, but it could potentially reduce costs, simplify measuring, and make the process more efficient.

It could also help with consistency across the fleet. Different boats will have different requirements, and no two old boats are ever quite identical, but there may still be advantages in discussing materials, design, measurements and timing together.

A coordinated approach might also make it easier to speak to sailmakers who understand Thames A-Raters and their very particular rigs.

This is not like ordering a generic dinghy sail from a catalogue. An A-Rater sail plan is part of the boat’s personality. The sails need to suit the boat, the mast, the rig, the river and the way the boat will be sailed.

A group conversation could be useful even if a group order does not happen immediately.


Talking to Sailmakers

At some stage, we will need proper advice from sailmakers.

That means not just asking, “How much for a new main and jib?” but providing useful information:

  • measurements of the existing sails
  • photographs of the sails hoisted
  • photographs of the sails laid flat
  • mast and boom measurements
  • details of the rig
  • class rules or restrictions
  • how the boat will be used
  • whether the aim is club racing, serious competition or restoration authenticity
  • whether we want maximum performance or durable club racing sails

A good sailmaker will want to understand the boat, not just sell cloth.

It may also be worth asking whether the current sails are worth repairing or whether repair money would be better saved towards replacement. Sometimes an old sail reaches the point where every repair simply extends the decline. Other times, a modest repair can provide another season or two of useful sailing.

That judgement is worth getting right.


The Financial Reality of Racing Boat Ownership

It is very easy to fall in love with a boat and then discover that the boat has a shopping list.

Classic and development racing boats are especially good at this. They whisper things like:

“Just a little varnish.”
“Just a small repair.”
“Just one new fitting.”
“Just a better cover.”
“Just a new jib.”
“Just a new mainsail.”

Before long, the word “just” has quietly emptied your wallet.

That does not mean the project is not worthwhile. It simply means we have to be realistic.

The joy of Champagne is not just in owning her. It is in bringing her back, learning her systems, understanding her history, filming the process, sharing the story and becoming part of the A-Rater community.

New sails will be part of that story one day.

But at the moment, they are not the opening chapter.


Our Current Plan

The sensible plan is:

  1. Inspect both sets of sails carefully.
  2. Photograph and document their condition.
  3. Hoist them and assess shape under load.
  4. Identify any urgent repairs.
  5. Use the best available combination for initial sailing.
  6. Speak to other A-Rater teams about their sail plans.
  7. Get advice and quotes from sailmakers.
  8. Consider whether a group order could reduce costs.
  9. Save new sails for the right moment.

That last point is important.

New sails should come when Champagne is ready to make proper use of them. If we buy them too soon, they risk becoming expensive workshop decoration while we are still sorting covers, fittings, rigging and repairs.

If we wait too long, we may hold the boat back.

The art is finding the right moment.


Personal Reflection: Learning to Be Patient

I would love to see Champagne with a brand-new suit of sails.

There is something deeply exciting about new sails. They are crisp, clean and full of promise. They make a boat look ready. They suggest speed, purpose and competence — even if the crew has not quite caught up with that impression yet.

But restoration teaches patience.

The temptation is always to spend money on the visible things first. New sails, polished fittings and smart graphics all make a boat look transformed. But the less glamorous jobs often matter more.

A secure rig matters more than a beautiful sail.
A reliable rudder matters more than a perfect leech.
A watertight boat matters more than a gleaming photograph.

So yes, Champagne needs new sails.

But first she needs careful inspection, sensible repairs, time on the water and a crew who understand her.

For now, the old sails have a job to do. They will help us learn. They will help us test. They will help us discover what Champagne really needs.

And perhaps, when the time is right, a new set of sails will not just be an upgrade.

They will be a celebration.


Conclusion: Not Yet, But One Day

Does Champagne need new sails?

Yes.

Does she need them immediately?

No.

The original 1994 sails and the gifted Straight Dealer sails give us enough to begin the next stage of the project. They may not be perfect, but they allow us to sail, learn and make informed decisions.

New sails are expensive, and they deserve to be bought at the right time, with the right advice, for a boat that is ready to use them properly.

For now, the plan is simple: inspect, repair, compare, sail and learn.

The wind may know the truth about old sails, but old sails still have stories to tell.

And Champagne’s next chapter is only just beginning.

Saturday, 30 May 2026

The Champagne Project: What Needs Restoring First?

 




The Champagne Project: What Needs Restoring First?

Buying a classic boat is the easy bit. The real work begins when you start making the list.

Champagne has now had her first proper introduction to life at Upper Thames Sailing Club. We have given her a quick check over, water tested her, and even managed to get her into a race. That sounds rather more organised than it felt at the time.

In reality, the first few outings with a newly acquired classic boat are less like a polished launch ceremony and more like an extended detective story. Every fitting becomes a clue. Every rope has a history. Every wobble, leak, squeak or mysterious knot raises the same question:

“Is that normal, or is that about to become expensive?”

Before Champagne can return to the water properly, the restoration list needs turning from a vague cloud of worry into a practical plan. Not everything needs doing immediately. Not everything is dangerous. Not everything needs restoring to concours condition before we can sail.

But some things do need sorting before we trust her properly.

So the first job is not varnishing, polishing, painting or ordering beautiful new sails.

The first job is making the list.


From Excitement to Inspection

When Champagne arrived, the temptation was obvious: rig her, sail her, photograph her, race her, and pretend that everything else could wait until winter.

Unfortunately, boats do not always respect enthusiasm.

Old boats, even very beautiful ones, have a habit of hiding problems until you start using them. A fitting that looked perfectly acceptable ashore may start moving under load. A cover that looked “a bit tired” may reveal itself to have more holes than cover. A rope that had probably done many years of loyal service may choose exactly the wrong moment to snap.

That is why the first stage of the Champagne project is a proper inspection.

Not a panic. Not a shopping spree. Not a complete rebuild.

A careful, photographed condition report.


The Hull: What Is Cosmetic and What Is Serious?

The hull is the obvious place to start because it is the part of the boat that keeps the water on the outside, which is always a desirable feature.

Champagne has already been water tested, which is a useful first step. A boat can look splendid on a trailer, but the river gives a much more honest assessment. We need to look carefully for signs of leaks, cracks, old repairs, movement around fittings, and any areas where water might be getting into places it should not.

Some marks on a hull are cosmetic. Scratches, faded gelcoat, tired paint and general scuffs are part of the story of an older racing boat. They may offend the eye, but they do not necessarily stop the boat sailing.

Other issues are more serious. Any cracking around high-load areas, signs of softness, flexing, distortion, or water ingress need to be treated differently. The key question is not “Does this look nice?” but “Is this strong enough?”

That is the difference between restoration and decoration.


The Deck: The Place Where Problems Become Visible

The deck needs the same careful approach. Decks on older boats tell stories. Fittings are moved. Holes are drilled. Repairs are made. New systems are added. Old systems are abandoned but not always removed.

Champagne’s deck needs checking around every fitting, especially where loads are transferred into the structure. Shroud fittings, mast step areas, jib fairlead tracks, cleats, blocks and control line attachment points all need careful inspection.

A slightly tired-looking deck may only need cleaning, varnish or cosmetic attention. But a loose fitting, soft patch, or crack around a loaded area needs proper investigation.

This is where a photographed condition report becomes so useful. Rather than saying, “I think that bit near the fitting looked a bit suspect,” we can photograph it, label it, and return to it later. It also means we can compare before and after, and ask advice from people who know far more about Thames A-Raters than we do.

Which, at this stage, is quite a large number of people.


Mast, Boom and Rigging: Learning the Language of the Boat

One of the more intimidating parts of Champagne is the rig.

We are used to dinghies where there are fewer adjustments and where the setup is relatively straightforward. Champagne is different. We have to learn how to tighten and adjust the mast, the shrouds, the lowers and the baby stays. We also need to understand what each adjustment actually does.

This matters because the mast is not simply a pole that holds the sail up. It is part of a tuned system. Rig tension affects sail shape, pointing ability, power, balance and safety. Too loose, and things can move around alarmingly. Too tight, and loads may go where they were never intended to go.

At the moment, this is very much a learning process. We need to inspect the mast and boom carefully, check the fittings, look for cracks, corrosion, movement, wear, and any signs that something has been improvised because it once broke at an inconvenient moment.

That is not a criticism of the boat. It is simply how old boats survive. They are kept going by practical people making sensible repairs.

But now those repairs need to be understood.


The Snapped Rope and the Case for Proper Fittings

One small but important example came with the jib.

The jib had been secured to the mast by a bit of rope. That rope snapped.

This is exactly the sort of thing that turns a vague worry into a specific job. The answer is not to tie another old bit of rope on and hope. The answer is to replace it properly with a suitable 6 mm shackle.

That is the kind of restoration priority that makes sense. It is small, inexpensive and not particularly glamorous, but it improves safety and reliability immediately.

Classic boat restoration is not always dramatic. Sometimes it is simply replacing something temporary with something trustworthy.


The Rudder Cassette Wobble

The rudder is another priority.

The rudder in the cassette wobbles, and that needs fixing. Steering is one of those systems where “it will probably be alright” is not a good maintenance strategy.

A small amount of play in a rudder may not sound exciting, but on the water it can affect control, confidence and performance. In stronger wind or close racing, vague steering is not just annoying. It can become a real problem.

This job needs looking at carefully. Is the cassette worn? Is the rudder stock moving? Are the fittings loose? Are bushes or packing pieces needed? Has something distorted? Is the movement vertical, sideways, or both?

The first job is to identify exactly where the movement is coming from. Only then can we decide whether it needs adjustment, replacement parts, packing, repair, or a more substantial rebuild.

Either way, the rudder goes high on the list.


Covers: Protection Is Not Optional

Champagne’s current cover is not really doing the job.

Her tight-fitting cover has more holes than cover, and at the moment she does not have a proper tent-like cover. She just has a temporary tarpaulin.

That may be acceptable for a short period, but it is not a long-term answer. A classic boat needs protection from rain, ultraviolet light, dirt, leaves, birds and the general enthusiasm of British weather. A poor cover can create more problems than it solves. It may trap moisture, rub against varnish, sag into puddles, or let water in exactly where we do not want it.

A proper tent-style cover would protect the boat far better, especially while restoration work is ongoing. It would allow airflow, shed water properly, and reduce the amount of damage being caused while we are still trying to repair earlier damage.

This is one of those jobs that is not exciting, but it protects every other job.

There is little point varnishing beautifully if the next week’s rain is allowed to sit on the deck.


Running Gear: Every Rope Has a Job

The running gear needs a systematic check.

Sheets, halyards, control lines, blocks, cleats, fairleads and tracks all need inspecting. Anything worn, stiff, damaged, badly led or unreliable needs recording.

One particular area we need to understand is the fairlead tracks for the jib. Where should the fairleads be set? How does their position affect the shape of the jib? What is the best starting point for light wind, stronger wind, pointing, and river sailing?

This is not just restoration. It is learning how to sail the boat properly.

The position of a jib fairlead changes the balance between tension on the foot and leech of the sail. Too far forward, and the leech may be too tight. Too far back, and the foot may be over-tensioned while the top of the sail twists away. On a boat like Champagne, small adjustments may make a noticeable difference.

So the job is not simply “check fairleads”.

The job is: inspect them, understand them, mark sensible starting positions, and learn how to use them.


Cosmetic, Structural or Urgent?

The hardest part of a restoration list is deciding what matters first.

Everything looks urgent when you are standing beside an old boat with a notebook. The varnish looks tired. The ropes look mixed. The fittings need checking. The cover needs replacing. The rudder wobbles. The rig needs learning. The boat needs cleaning. The sails need assessing. The photographs need taking. The list grows faster than the work gets done.

So we need three categories.

1. Urgent safety and reliability jobs

These are the things that could cause failure, loss of control, damage, or unsafe sailing. For Champagne, that includes the rudder cassette wobble, suspect ropes, the jib attachment, rigging checks, mast security, shroud and stay tension, and any structural concerns around loaded fittings.

These jobs come first.

2. Sailing performance jobs

These are the things that help Champagne sail better once she is safe. This includes learning the rig settings, sorting the jib fairlead tracks, checking sail condition, improving control line systems, and making sure the running gear works smoothly.

These jobs matter because Champagne is not just a display object. She is meant to sail.

And, ideally, not always at the back.

3. Appearance and preservation jobs

This includes varnishing, polishing, cleaning, paintwork, cosmetic repairs and presentation. These jobs matter too. A classic boat deserves to look cared for, and appearance is part of preservation.

But appearance comes after safety and structure.

A beautifully varnished boat with a wobbly rudder is still a boat with a wobbly rudder.


Making a Photographed Condition Report

The most useful practical step now is to create a photographed condition report.

That means working around the boat methodically and recording what we find. Each area should be photographed, labelled and described. The report does not need to be overcomplicated, but it does need to be clear enough to be useful later.

The sections might include:

  • Hull
  • Deck
  • Mast step
  • Mast
  • Boom
  • Standing rigging
  • Running rigging
  • Rudder and cassette
  • Centreboard or lifting gear
  • Jib fittings and fairlead tracks
  • Covers and storage
  • Sails
  • Trailer or launching equipment
  • Urgent replacements
  • Questions for experienced A-Rater sailors

Each item can then be given a priority: urgent, soon, winter job, cosmetic, or advice needed.

The important thing is to move the project out of the world of “I’m sure there was something else” and into a practical working document.

A boat restoration should not rely entirely on memory, especially when the person doing the remembering has already forgotten where he put the 10 mm spanner.


Asking the Right People

One of the great advantages of restoring Champagne at Upper Thames Sailing Club is that there are people around who understand these boats.

A Thames A-Rater is not a normal dinghy. It has its own history, its own setup, its own handling characteristics and its own little collection of mysteries. There is no shame in asking for help. In fact, it would be foolish not to.

We need advice on rig tension, mast setup, jib fairlead position, rudder cassette repair, cover design and the order of work. Some of this can be worked out slowly by trial and error, but it is much better to learn from people who have already made the mistakes.

Restoration is partly about tools and materials.

But it is also about listening.


The First Priority List

At this stage, Champagne’s first working priority list looks something like this:

Safety and control

Check mast, shrouds, lowers and baby stays. Learn how to tension and adjust them correctly. Inspect all standing rigging and loaded fittings.

Rudder

Investigate and fix the wobble in the rudder cassette. Steering needs to be positive and reliable before regular sailing.

Jib attachment

Replace the temporary rope arrangement with a suitable 6 mm shackle.

Running gear

Inspect sheets, halyards, cleats, blocks and control lines. Replace anything worn, unreliable or badly led.

Jib fairlead tracks

Understand how they should be used and set a sensible starting position for sailing.

Covers

Replace the failing tight-fitting cover and temporary tarpaulin with a proper protective cover, preferably tent-like, to keep the boat dry and ventilated.

Condition report

Photograph and document the hull, deck, fittings, rig, sails, foils and covers before starting major cosmetic work.

Cosmetic work

Clean, protect, varnish and improve appearance once the urgent and structural work has been properly assessed.


Why the List Matters

There is something slightly sobering about making a restoration list. Until the list exists, the project can live in the imagination as a beautiful classic boat gliding along the Thames, sails drawing, varnish glowing, crew looking competent and relaxed.

Then the list appears.

Rudder wobble. Cover holes. Rig tension. Fairlead positions. Shackle replacement. Varnish. Fittings. Photographs. Questions. More questions. Possibly a few expensive questions.

But the list is not the enemy. The list is what makes the project possible.

A vague worry drains enthusiasm. A practical list creates progress.

Each job completed makes Champagne more reliable, more understandable and more ours.


Conclusion: Restoring Confidence as Well as the Boat

The Champagne project is not just about restoring a Thames A-Rater. It is about restoring confidence.

Confidence that the rig is secure. Confidence that the rudder will respond. Confidence that the jib is attached properly. Confidence that the cover is protecting the boat rather than merely decorating it. Confidence that we understand what needs doing first, what can wait, and what requires expert advice.

Classic boats reward care, but they also demand honesty. Champagne has already shown that she can float, sail and race. Now we need to make sure she can do those things properly, safely and repeatedly.

The glamorous photographs will come later.

For now, the most important tools are a camera, a notebook, a checklist, and the willingness to admit that “I’ll just have a quick look” is almost certainly how a restoration project begins.

And probably how most Saturdays disappear.

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