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Idle-along
Type of dinghy
Type of dinghy
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Idle-Along |
| crew | 3 |
| type | Monohull |
| loh | 12 ft |
| beam | 6 ft |
| mainsailandjib | 160 sqft |
| designer | Alf (Unc) Harvey |
| location | Wellington, New Zealand |
| olympic | no |
|d-pn = |rya-pn =

Idle-Along (IA) - is a class of sailing dinghy (or small centreboard yacht) designed by Alf (Unc) Harvey at Petone (Wellington, NZ) in 1927. It grew to considerable popularity in the 1950s but its popularity gradually diminished during the 1960s. A redesigned hull for plywood construction by John Spencer kept the class going but on a smaller scale with a small revival in the 1990s with about 10 new boats being built. The Idle-Along is also sometimes referred to as IdleAlong, Idle Along, IA, I Class and Idie.
The premium annual trophy for the Idle-Along was the Moffat Cup - which was first sailed for in 1936. The Moffat Cup was revived in 2010 at Birkenhead and sailed again in 2011 in the Bay of Islands. The 2012 Cup was to be sailed in Taupo but economic pressure has seen the race rescheduled to Auckland as the Alf Harvey Memorial Regatta.
The Idle-Along is 12 foot 8 inches long plus bow sprit and 6 ft in the beam and carries 150 sqft of sail plus spinnaker.
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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