[Rhodes22-list] Rhodes Continental Sails

Ric Stott ric at stottarchitecture.com
Mon Mar 1 15:59:24 EST 2021


Stan et al
This is a difficult subject but since you brought it up.
Rhodies -
If you plan to use your boat as the coffin - it will not work!
I shouldn’t have to remind you that the Rhodes  22 does not sink. 
I know Stan’s sense of humor is talking and so is mine.
But we have joked about how to send off our race captain on the C&C 35 I’ve been sailing on for 30 years.
He’s 85, bought his boat new and is still racing, but hey, ya never know.   
Far off-shore and out-of-sight, a thru-hull fitting comes loose - - -
The C&C disappears, the Rhodes becomes part of the Plastic waste island floating forever mid ocean.
Long live Stan and the Rhodes 22 - may we float forever. 
Ric 
 sv Dadventure
Hampton Bays, NY 
  
Richard Stott, AIA, LEED AP 
www.stottarchitecture.com
Office	631-283-1777
Cell		516-965-3164 





> On Mar 1, 2021, at 3:32 PM, stan <stan at generalboats.com> wrote:
> 
> It is a good thing one of us has a good memory.  No motor and we made it all the way to the dead end of that long narrow canal?  If I knew the boats were that good I would have kept them all.  What did you say your name was.
> 
> Roger, this guy knows more about the boat than I do.  Ask Him. He has owned two; I never could afford one.  But lately been considering it since they now come with a great surprise benefit: Free burial at sea for a neat net savings.
> 
> stan
> 
> Mike, thanks for those wonderful memories.
> 
> 
> 
> On 3/1/21 2:45 PM, Michael D. Weisner wrote:
>> I bought my first Rhodes 22, an RC - that's what they were called back then (1980) from Stan in Rose's kitchen, after our test sail. I attached 2 pdf files of the sales materials distributed to potential buyers in 1980 at shows, including the price list and a narrative on the Rhodes Continental.
>> 
>> Sheryl and I loved the RC, first seen at the Stamford in the Water Boat Show in the autumn of 1980. Stan had promised a test sail when I gave him the $25 REFUNDABLE DEPOSIT. Unfortunately, he was too busy taking orders at the show so we met him one very cold late October day at the house in Amityville. The wind was howling at a good 15-20 knots and we had a heck of a sail. Stan just sat on the cockpit seat with his back up against the cabin bulkhead facing the stern. He zipped his parka up and smiled as I sailed her hard. He didn't care what I tried because he had faith in the design. We came about and even jibed with all the cloth flying (150 Genoa). I asked him if we needed to reef the main (roller reefing) and he just shrugged, so we didn't. With a crew of 4 twenty somethings and the master, we were invincible. When we finally go back to the canal behind the house, Stan took the helm, showing me how to propel the RC with just the rudder. It was then that I realized, we didn't have an engine on the mount. Who needed a stinking motor?
>> 
>> Stan wanted us to be among the first to try out his IMF design but he was unable to give us a firm delivery date so we took delivery of the RC in March 1981. Stan set it up with us and we sailed for about an hour. He only told me how to retrieve her, no practice attempt. I dropped him at our dock and we went out for more sailing. The two of us were finally able to get on the trailer and dropped the mast in the dark. What a day! What a boat!
>> 
>> In those days, we sailed from March 1st through Thanksgiving, as trailer sailors! Now, we are on a mooring and I am happy to sail May 15th to October 15, but, we do sail a '91 Rhodes 22 w/IMF and lots of creature comforts. One thing hasn’t changed: I still love to sail my Rhodes 22 fully rigged in lots of wind. But, I must confess, I do furl the main and the huge Genoa well before we hit 15-20 kts.
>> 
>> Mike
>> s/v Wind Lass ('91)
>> Nissequogue River, NY
>> I’d rather be sailing :~)
>> 
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Rhodes22-list <rhodes22-list-bounces at rhodes22.org> On Behalf Of Roger Pihlaja Home
>> Sent: Monday, March 1, 2021 1:51 PM
>> To: The Rhodes 22 Email List <rhodes22-list at rhodes22.org>
>> Subject: Re: [Rhodes22-list] Rhodes Continental Sails
>> 
>> Joe,
>> 
>> It is my understanding that Stan changed the name from Rhodes Continental 22 to Rhodes 22 around the time he took over production of the boat.  Other than the in house production line, I think all the hull lines and sail plan were unchanged.  The hull molds were literally the same.  The Rhodes Continental 22 was not offered with the inner mast furling mainsail.  That came later.  Stan, if I’ve gotten something wrong here, please jump into this discussion.
>> 
>> Roger Pihlaja
>> S/V Dynamic Equilibrium
>> 
>> Sent from my iPad
>> 
>>> On Mar 1, 2021, at 1:33 PM, Joe Dempsey <joedempsey at hughes.net> wrote:
>>> 
>>> Then I'm confused. It is my understanding that the Continental was
>>> only built for a few years. My question, therefore is what is the
>>> difference in sail plan from a Continental and any other Rhodes 22?
>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
>>> -----
>>> Joe Dempsey
>>> s/v Respite
>>> Rhodes 22 1989/2005
>>> Deltaville,VA
>>> --
>>> Sent from: http://rhodes-22.1065344.n5.nabble.com/
>> -------------- next part --------------
>> A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
>> Name: Rhodes Sales Literature, circa 1980.pdf
>> Type: application/pdf
>> Size: 2084509 bytes
>> Desc: not available
>> URL: <http://rhodes22.org/pipermail/rhodes22-list/attachments/20210301/83808c7b/attachment.pdf>
>> -------------- next part --------------
>> A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
>> Name: Report on the Rhodes Continental, circa 1980.pdf
>> Type: application/pdf
>> Size: 687656 bytes
>> Desc: not available
>> URL: <http://rhodes22.org/pipermail/rhodes22-list/attachments/20210301/83808c7b/attachment-0001.pdf>
> 
> 



More information about the Rhodes22-list mailing list