Magazine dedicated to the maritime culture and heritage of the Mediterranean, published by the Barcelona Maritime Museum.

The Drac, an aristocrat among sailboats

This dragon belonging to the MMB is 60 years old

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Even at 60 years old, the Drac is a sailboat that still captures our attention. Those who are lucky enough to be able to sail on it, or to see it sail the waves, can attest to it. The Drac is a dragon, a classic design that has starred in many Olympic Games, and is now enjoying a new lease on life under the care of the MMB.

The Drac, sailing in the RCMB regatta. Argo 16. Museu Marítimo de Barcelona. Photo: M. Granollers.
The Drac sailing in the RCMB regatta. Photo: M. Granollers.

They may soon turn 100 years old, yet the dragons are still as youthful and energetic as ever, despite their slightly aristocratic appearance. They may no longer enjoy the aura of being Olympians, though that probably makes them even more attractive. Their health is still in ship shape.

In 1928 the Royal Gothenburg Yacht Club was looking for a type of sailboat that was affordable for young people. During a time of economic crisis, most designs were too expensive for young people. That is why it launched a contest to achieve a “relatively fast, attractive and seaworthy” keel cruiser, based on the standard of 20 square metres of sail. A year later, the first dragon was made by the Norwegian Johan Anker.

The design is reminiscent of a 6-metre FI (for example, it is relatively narrow, with large projections both fore and aft, and the rudder is attached to the keel), but it was simpler and less expensive. It allowed people to cruise (it had a small cabin with two bunks, so it could make trips along the coast) while the aim was to create a single type, so that everyone could compete on equal terms.

Although dragons were intended as a cruiser, they enjoyed notable success in regattas. At first they participated in club regattas —they were adopted by the Royal Gothenburg Yacht Club, the Royal Danish Yacht Club, and the Royal Norwegian Yacht Club— but regional competitions soon began, especially in the Scandinavian and Baltic countries, where the ship was first created.

in order to sail in light winds, dragons lacked a bit of cloth, so the jib grew to become a Genoa sail. To keep the sail centred in the same place, the mast was moved back 40 centimetres. At the same time, the crossbeams were shortened to be able to catch the Genoa sail properly, and a fiddle block was added to the top of the mast, which makes it possible to control the bending of the sail and improve the performance of the mainsail.

A Borrensen from 1966

In 2003, the brothers Josep Maria and Enric Montal Costa offered the Museu Marítim de Barcelona a dragon that they owned in the port of Arenys. It is true that this sailboat was not in good condition and needed a thorough restoration —in fact, it turned out to be worse than it seemed— but it was a good opportunity to acquire a classic ship and get it sailing again.

The Drac is a wooden dragon built in 1966 at the Borrensen shipyards in Denmark, when Borrensen was the most prestigious dragon manufacturer; fibreglass in the hull and aluminium masts were not introduced to this class until the early 1970s.

The Drac was imported in 1966 by the Spanish Sailing Federation and then belonged to various individuals, until it passed into the hands of the Museu Marítim de Barcelona in 2003, which thoroughly restored it in 2005. The museum changed the keel, replaced about 20 frames, replaced the rudder blade and stem, totally reconstructed the transom, deck and cabin, built two bulkheads to reinforce the hull, and added a general treatment of paint and varnish.

The Drac returned to the water in 2008. Since then it has participated in numerous regattas and has sailed through the waters of the city of Barcelona. From the very beginning, the MMB’s intention has been to bring the Drac back into active life.

The ship is moored at the docks of the Reial Club Marítim de Barcelona and will now enter the shipyard again for a thorough overhaul, which will basically entail checking the port transom, repairing a broken beam and rebuilding the deck, in addition to adding some coats of paint and varnish.

A fleet around the Fortuna

The Spanish Sailing Federation imported that dragon, bearing sail number E-27, to reinforce the fleet that was being formed in Barcelona, ​​where the then Prince of Spain wanted to compete, with the intention of taking part in the Olympic Games.

Dragons thus experienced a golden age in Spain, especially around Barcelona, ​​where a fleet of this class was formed, both at the Reial Club Nàutic de Barcelona (RCNB) and the Reial Club Marítim de Barcelona (RCMB). The dragon purchased by the Spanish Sailing Federation was part of this fleet.

Juan Carlos I of Spain owned the dragon christened Fortuna, also built by Borrensen, which had been given to him by the Greek royal family for his wedding to Sofia of Greece. Currently, the Fortuna is in the Museu de l’Esport, on Montjuïc. Juan Carlos I’s father, the Count of Barcelona, ​​Juan de Borbón, also had a dragon (the Hispania VII ), built in the Abascal shipyards of Santander in 1961, with which he sailed in Cascais (Portugal). Santander is precisely the first place in Spain with dragons, starting in 1959. A few years later, Pau Ferrer built two in Mallorca while the Lagos shipyards of Vigo built three.

At that time there was already a Drac in the first dragon regatta in Spain, from 2 to 6 September 1959, which featured a Drac, built in Santander that same year, led by the brothers Santiago and José Pi and Joan Mirangels, from the Marítim de Barcelona. This Drac, with the same crew, won the first Spanish Championship of that class of vessel, organised by the RCMB in 1960.

Dragons were very popular in the Greek royal family. So much so that Prince Constantine won the gold medal in the Rome Olympics (1960) and his sister Sofia actively participated in training, to the point that she was part of the reserve crew in that competition.

In fact, Sofia of Greece sailed so well that she even won some regattas in Barcelona. Her competitors still remember that she excelled especially in light wind conditions, so much so that a rumour spread around the docks that she was asked to stop sailing so as not to hurt her husband’s results.

After the restoration, the Drac was ready to be transferred from the MMB to the RCMB to be launched in 2008. Argo 16. Museu Marítim de Barcelona. Photo: MMB.
After the restoration, the Drac was ready to be transferred from the MMB to the RCMB to be launched in 2008. Photo: MMB.

 

The restoration of the Drac required the keel to be completely rebuilt. Argo 16. Museu Marítim de Barcelona. Photo: MMB.
The restoration of the Drac required the keel to be completely rebuilt. Photo: MMB.

 

According to the class’s latest annual report, there are over 1,000 active dragons, most of which are in Europe. Germany has by far the most, with almost 500; Britain and Austria have nearly 100 each, while just over 50 each are in France and the Netherlands.

Overall length: 8.90 m
Floating length: 5.66 m
Breadth: 1.95 m
Draught: 1.20 m
Weight: 1,700 kg, 1,000 of which are in the keel. The ballast must be iron (lead is not allowed).
Sail surface:

  • Main sail: 16.00 m2
  • Genoa sail: 11.70 m2
  • Spinnaker sail: 23.60 m2

Crew: 2-4 (285 kg maximum weight)
Price of a brand new dragon: €102,000

Infographic of the Drac with the main elements. Author: Carles Javierre. ARGO 16. Museu Marítimo de Barcelona.
Infographic of the Drac with the main elements. Author: Carles Javierre. ARGO 16. Museu Marítimo de Barcelona.

A balance, highly responsive sailboat

The class does not seem to have suffered much from losing its Olympic status. Many regattas are still held today, both locally and internationally, in several countries (especially European ones). In Puerto Portals (Mallorca), for example, a competition is held every year, mostly featuring foreign participants. In addition to the regattas, these are also known to be highly social events.

The dragons that are currently being made have evolved a lot, yet the essence remains the same as when they were first made, even though this ship is no longer a coastal cruiser, but basically a racing sailboat.
This ability to evolve prudently is one of the reasons why dragons are still alive and well today even when the model is approaching 100 years old. Today’s vessels maintain the shapes of the hull, which are the essence of its sailing characteristics, though the bunks have disappeared from the cabin —dragons are no longer a cruising and racing sailboats, but rather ones intended purely for racing—, the masts can be made of aluminium and most new boats are made of plastic. Of course, exotic materials are not allowed: carbon masts are banned while the Genoa sails and mainsails must still be made of Dacron to keep prices under control. The guiding principle is not to allow changes that involve a large increase in price for a small improvement in performance.

Dragons are known for its versatile adjustments, thanks to the existence of two halyards and a fiddle block. The halyards, which must be loosened and re-rigged each time the sail is tacked or gybed, allow the sail to be flattened considerably when the wind picks up, while with the fiddle block, a kind of triangle-shaped crosspiece towards the bow located at the top of the mast, the upper curve of the gaff can be adjusted.

Thanks to all the possibilities to maintain control, the dragon is a truly well-balanced sailboat. Experts say that to get the most out of it, it should be a little ardent (that is, have a slight tendency to luff), which should be corrected by keeping the tiller between 2 and 5° windward. In this way, the sailboat is so responsive that the movement of a crew member to the leeward side causes it to luff.

Finally, the high ballast-displacement ratio (1,000 kg on the keel for 1,700 kg of displacement) allows it to keep sailing when very few sailboats can. In fact, races have been run in winds of 30 knots.

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The Drac at the RCMB regatta. Photo: M. Granollers.

A princely sailboat
Dragons have been a very popular sailboat among Europe’s royal houses. As early as 1948, the then Princess Elizabeth of England and her husband were looking for one, and members of the Island Sailing Club in Cowes gave them the Bluebottle as a gift.
Years later, another prince, Constantine II of Greece, won the gold medal in the 1960 Olympics. His sister —now Queen Emeritus of Spain— used to train with him.
In 1972, two princes who also ended up being kings of their countries, Harald V of Norway and Juan Carlos I of Spain, participated in the 1972 Olympic Games, though not with as much success as Constantine II: Harald finished 11th and Juan Carlos, 15th. The crew of the Fortuna was completed by the Duke of Arión and Félix Gancedo, then world champion in the snipe class.

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The Drac sailing on the coast of Badalona. Photo: Sisu Martí.
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