帆船运动
在斯里兰卡扬帆远航是一次令人叹为观止的体验,这里拥有清澈见底的海水、习习热带微风和迷人的海岸风光。米瑞莎、亭可马里和本托塔等地拥有宁静的泻湖和生机勃勃的海洋生物,是帆船爱好者的理想之选。无论是悠闲的日落巡航,还是充满冒险的海上之旅,斯里兰卡丰富多样的海岸线都能为您带来难忘的旅程,将宁静与探险完美融合,使其成为世界上风景最优美的帆船目的地之一。
Catamaran Sailing
What are Catamarans?
Catamarans are a type of multihued sailing vessel featuring two parallel hulls of equal size. The craft is geometry-stabilized; deriving its stability from its wide beam, rather than from a ballasted (weighted manually with sand, gravel or iron according to the load present on the boat) keel as with a monohull sailboat. The size of the catamaran can vary from small (sailing or rowing vessels) to large (naval ships and car ferries); while being either manually sailed or motorized. The structure connecting the two hulls can range from a simple frame strung with webbing to support the crew, to a bridging superstructure incorporating extensive cabins and/or cargo space.
The Advantages of a Catamaran
The History of Catamarans
Catamarans were first developed over 3500 years ago by the Polynesians. These early examples were likely related to outrigger canoes and consisted of two canoes bound together with a wooden frame, sometimes accompanied by a sail. Despite their simplicity they were nonetheless effective, allowing the seafaring Polynesians to voyage to the distant Pacific islands.
In the 5th century AD the Tamil kingdoms, of what is now known as, Tamil Nadu in South India had catamarans in wide use; though were different from those used by the Polynesians. As the Tamil word ‘kattumaram’ (from which the name catamaran was derived) suggests; these craft were made of shaped logs bound together with rope. These primitive catamarans served them well though and were soon adapted by the neighboring regions.
The first documentation of this craft in English happened when the 17th-century English adventurer and privateer William Dampier encountered the Tamil people of southeastern India during his first circumnavigation of the globe. He wrote about the primitive watercraft he observed in use there in the 1697 account of his trip, A New Voyage Round the World. Quoting his statement:
“…on the coast of Malabar they call them Catamarans. These are but one log, or two, sometimes of a sort of light wood … so small, that they carry but one man, whose legs and breech are always in the water.”
The first example of catamaran development in the West occurred in Europe when it was designed by William Petty in 1662 to sail faster, in shallower waters, in lighter wind, and with fewer crew than other vessels of the time. However, the unusual design met with skepticism and was not a commercial success. The design remained unused for