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In the nineteenth century, duck punts were used for wildfowling and fishing. The punt would often be hand-paddled to the quarry, with the gunner lying prone in the bottom. When a target presented itself, the gunner banged his hand on the side of the punt and fired as the duck took to wing.
Over time, rather than rowing long distances, the gunners began to set lug-rigged sails and they found that their punts, without keels or lee boards and steered with an oar off the quarter, could sail surprisingly fast in good conditions.
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Different designs of punts were developed on Breydon
Water and Hickling Broad and in the 1920s they began to race
against each other at local regattas. Following lively correspondence
in the Eastern Daily Press in 1926, the Norfolk Punt Club was
formed to preserve and if possible improve the traditional local
type of punt and to encourage competitions in quanting, rowing
and sailing of same.
The existing Norfolk Punts were measured and class
rules formulated for new boats. Overall length was between sixteen
and twenty two feet with sail area restricted to eight square
feet per foot of length. Initially spars had to be stored within
the hull effectively imposing a Gunter sloop rig. The maximum
cost of the hull was fixed at £2 per foot of overall length and
the cost of all other gear could not exceed £15.15.0 so that the
all in price for a 22ft punt was around £60.
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In 1929 Uffa Fox (possibly the foremost small naval architect
of the 20th century) joined two sections of mast together with duralumin
tubing and the resultant punt became the first to be Bermudan rigged.
Amid regular controversy, the class building rules were continually changed
as owners found ways round the initial restrictions.
Initially, the Club organised races throughout the Broads,
but in 1935, they bought a Harland and Wolff lifeboat, which was converted
to a houseboat by Cox Bros at Barton Turf. This was then moored on Barton
Broad to become the headquarters of the Club, and regular Sunday racing
was established. Additional rafts were gradually added and the lifeboat
replaced after the Second World War.
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After the war, the Norfolk Punt Class found the cost of clinker
boats too expensive and commissioned Wyche and Coppack to develop
a one-design hard-chine boat. In 1977, a fibreglass mould was produced,
again to save costs, so that the hard-chine boats could be constructed
out of fibreglass. A further development continued with a somewhat
different design by Phil Morrison in 1998 with an asymmetric spinnaker.
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'LimeLight' - Three Rivers Race 2007
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The Norfolk Punt has been one of the fastest single
hulled boats for the last eighty years it achieved 13.8 knots at
the world speed trials in Weymouth Harbour in 1978 considerably
faster than a Flying Dutchman. The new Morrison design is much faster
than the hard-chine design. |
Today the Norfolk Punt Club organises racing for a wide
variety of craft and has some 550 members. It tries to maintain its original
ethos of informal, economical and gentlemanly sailing combined with a
love of the beauty of the local environment. In addition to weekly racing
on Sundays and Tuesday evenings from May to September, there are a number
of Open Events held throughout the season and each August, the Club holds
its Open Regatta, attended by sailors from all over the Broads racing
a wide variety of boats. This event is organised in conjunction with the
Barton Broad Open Regatta Committee which is responsible for the racing
on Bank Holiday Monday.
DHA 22.07.2005
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