Bluebird yacht model, alternative fin keel plan
Designer
Ken Watts
Date1940-1949
Object number00055721
NamePlan
MediumPaper
DimensionsOverall: 664 × 931 mm
ClassificationsMaps, charts and plans
Credit LineAustralian National Maritime Museum Collection gift of Robert Brown
DescriptionThe blueprint plans for building KOTARE were used to build one of the prolific Australian post World War 2 day sailing Bluebird class yachts, designed by Ken Watts. KOTARE was amateur built by its owner over number of years and launched in 1982. It is widely recognized as the last amateur built version of this popular class to be built and launched.
The alternate fin keel drawing detailed a different shaped keel from the original design.HistoryThe Bluebird was the product of Sydney Naval Architect Ken Watts. During World War II he considered what sort of simple yacht he could build when the war ended. He came up with a design which became the Bluebird, and although he never built one himself, he had created a design for a small yacht that could be amateur built in plywood, and allow sailors easy access to owning a yacht and enjoying sailing despite the hard economic times that were ahead. The Bluebird introduced several features which, though neither original nor entirely novel, were certainly departures from standard Australian practice.
The original owner and builder of KOTARE Robert Brown began the construction in his backyard in the late 1970s and saw the yacht launched in 1982. He named it KOTARE after a New Zealand coastal steamer on which his grandfather had been chief engineer. KOTARE was built to modified plans to give it higher head room, and it is not unusual for amateur builders to customize their own craft, as this is one of the appeals of building it yourself. Some of the plans are marked up with notes by the builder.
Robert Brown noted the following.
“I always regarded the Bluebird as Australia's own Folkboat, being as prolific as they were. They are a seaworthy little boat and I did single hand her offshore to King Island about 10 years ago, but I have heard of others being sailed much longer distances.”
The class is distributed around Australia, and some examples were built in other countries such as New Zealand
SignificanceThe alternate fin keel drawing is a typical example of a plan for amateur boatbuilding from the period following the post war period of the 1940s to 1970s.It has remained with the builder Robert Brown since he built KOTARE.