Issue: December 2003
Manufacturer:
Etap
The
Etap 21 shown here is Peter’s seventh yacht.
He and Lucy loved their Cavalier 37, but in
the two months they have owned their Etap 21
they used it more often than they used the
Cavalier in the last two years of owning the
boat. Peter and Lucy are not ordinary
sailors. Based on Sydney’s Pittwater, they
figured that if they were being honest with
themselves their holiday time would allow
only limited cruising, as far afield as Port
Stephens in the north and Jervis Bay in the
south.
For such trips they were happy to consider a
small boat and were prepared to order from
France a Pogo Mini-Transat 6.5m racer. The
15-month waiting time put them off and then
they saw the Etap 21 — which has a Mini
Transat-style hull — the decision was easy.
There are two versions of the Etap, the
fixed-keeler shown here and a trailable
model. Like the Transat racers she has
plenty of beam aft and twin rudders.
Unlike them she has a modest rig (note the
roach-free main and fixed backstays) and a
neat and comfortable internal fit-out.
Unlike them, too, she shares with the rest
of the Etap range that unique virtue of
being virtually unsinkable. There are other
benefits. Peter reports that the foam-filled
construction also makes the hull very quiet
when sleeping aboard (the slop/slap of water
on the thin hull of a small boat can make
sleep difficult) and it also eliminates
condensation. Peter is a design architect
and he is a big fan of the Etap’s
engineering detail.
Note how the stanchions slot into the feet,
which also support the tubular toerail. The
shroud support struts in the cabin are
exquisitely detailed, as are the rudder
connecting linkages. The internal mouldings
are superb; even the stowage areas are fully
lined. Aluminium pads are moulded into the
skins to take the loads of aftermarket deck
fittings for, say, the asymmetric.
The builders give you reference points so
you know where to drill. A particularly nice
touch is the reefing system. On the port
side of the main the red reefing line runs
through small blocks attached permanently to
the sail, one each in luff and leech areas.
This is the second reef. On the starboard
side is a blue line (or was it green?) also
runs through two small blocks; reefing
should be fast and easy and winches are not
needed. The auxiliary on Peter’s boat is a
5hp Yamaha with fine-pitch prop: “Plenty of
power”, he said. The layout below does not
need a lot of description, as it is
open-plan with a vee-berth up front and
quarter berths aft. There is a chemical
toilet under the cushions forward.
The cooker is a two-burner metho stove. The
sink is connected to removable 10lt plastic
jerrycans. Storage space is enhanced by two
large removable fabric bags mounted on the
hull sides; you can pack your gear at home,
carry them on board and set in place for
use. The tabletop can also be set in place
in both the cabin and the cockpit, and stows
away when not needed. As on the bigger Etaps,
the mainsheet traveller bridge can be
removed when the party get under way in the
cockpit.
The day before we sailed the Etap I had been
out on a Beneteau 57, a very fine yacht with
electric winches and a bow thruster and
electric furlers and interfaced electronics.
It is good to get things back into
perspective on a boat like the Etap. The
mainsail flicks up in a second, the mooring
is dropped and off she sails. It takes the
owner perhaps a minute to hank on and hoist
the jib. At 1100kg the Etap is not race-boat
light and she has a conservative rig, but
she kicks up her heels and responds
cheerfully to any change in wind strength.
The twin rudders make the steering a bit
heavier than a single setup would be, but
the advantages quickly become obvious. We
had a sea breeze, which ranged from zero to
about 15 knots and back to zero in about 30
minutes. At one point there was no
perceptible wind and the Etap started to
circle. With the first breath of breeze the
onlookers could sense on cheek, earlobes or
neck the little boat snifffed the breeze and
accelerated.
As the wind builds she heels initially, then
the cast-iron bulb keel stiffens her up. And
just when you think you may need to reach
for the traveller to ease a bit of pressure
you realise that the leeward rudder is
biting deep into the water and keeps the
boat tracking straight. This is the most
memorable aspect of the Etap’s behaviour;
because the rudders are inclined to the
vertical at rest (i.e. their lower tips are
canted outwards) the leeward rudder is more
or less vertical as the boat heels and it is
also pushed deeper into the water as the
leeward bilge submerges (and the windward
rudder lifts clear.) As a result directional
stability is exceptional, vital on short,
light hulls, which can get out of sorts when
tiller, mainsheet and the skipper’s brain
get out of phase with sharp gusts and lulls.
Handling the Etap is simple.
The helmsman can step easily between tiller
and mainsheet traveller in the course of a
tack. There is a nice Spinlock sliding
tiller extension, but with three sailing the
skipper did not need to move too far
outboard. It was easy to sit on the windward
gunwale at quite high angles of heel. At
quiet times the crew can stand in the
companionway and reach all the control
lines. But this Etap is more than just a
small, light boat. It is a truly modern
hull, short and beamy with twin rudders, and
it has the potential for coastal cruising in
the right hands.
The owners of this boat, experienced
cruising sailors, intend to do exactly that.
People race boats like this — admittedly
more extreme (both the boat and the people)
— across the Atlantic. A German couple with
a young son sailed an Etap 21 around the
World. It took three years — the son was two
years old when the voyage started, five when
it ended. No one is quite sure where they
stowed everything.
This is a delightful and refreshing boat to
sail: “It gets you back to sailing again”,
says Peter, back to the fundamentals. It is
a reminder that the real joy of sailing lies
in the undiluted responsiveness of a small,
light boat. But it has the potential,
whether you use it or not, to take you
further than you might have thought
practical in such a small craft. And because
of the qualities of its foam filled hull, it
will presumably also do its best to bring
you home again.
Words and Photos by Barry Tranter
* Prices & data correct at time of
publication |