Sagebrush....if you know what a Herreshoff boat is, perhaps you know his famous "MISTRALl"? Built in Saugus, ME in 1938, a friend of mine bought it from the USNA in Annapolis and we sailed it back to the SF Bay many years ago. We left Annapolis on Thanksgiving Day and fought heavy stormy weather from a hurricane on our way to Bermuda...but were blown off course towards Iceland for awhile. Sliding out on the bowsprit to change into the storm jib at night in huge seas was scary and intense... I left the MISTRAL in Bermuda and rejoined in Colon to come through the Canal up to Acapulco and home to Tiburon.
We sailed that boat up and down the coast to Santa Barbara or Monterey and inside the bay and out the 'Gate a lot and wooden boat freaks LOVED to watch us put up sail, take it down and tack...which was interesting with running backstays if you are familiar with them.
Its now in Germany and for sale the last I heard.
Funny story...we depart Annapolis and motor down the Chesapeake Bay. Then at night, the tensioning arm for the generator cracks and we can't make power...luckily the water pump ran on a different fanbelt so we limped back to the dock at dawn. I was Chief Mechanic based on being a hot-rodder so we needed about a 16" flat stock arm with a bolt hole at one end and a slot at the other to adjust fanbelt tension....
Good luck on Thanksgiving Day!....so we organized a few of the crew to go looking for something to adapt....we had a pile of stuff from a NO PARKING sign to steel crates to all kinds of trash. I blew off all the stuff they brought back but happened to notice that the shack on the gas dock had a sign on the roof that had probably disappeared in a hurricane and had the stubs of the "L" bracket with slotted holes like metal shelving has only beefier. Armed with a hacksaw and tape measure I was sawing of a section about the time the boats owner and Louise, the sailing master for the Academy wandered down the pier. She had seen the masts in harbor and suspected something and ran into the owner scrounging stuff with the crew. He told her about the problem and as they passed the pile of stuff the guys had scrounged that didn't work.
Right then as I was sawing away...they saw me and while the owner was REALLY embarrassed, Louise simply said to him, "That one of your crew"? To which the owner said yes...and Louise replied, "That's good, every crew needs one of those resourceful types".
When the "MISTRAL" was sold about 10-15 years later, that piece of angled metal I fit to hold the fan belt/generator was still on the engine. The owner saw no reason to ever change it and more than one marine engine mechanic observed that the "L" shape was less likely to ever vibrate and crack off like the original one did.
Look up "MISTRAL"....it has been sissified now but when we were sailing her she was still basically as Nat Herreshof had designed her...a schooner with a stay-sail and what I think was called a "Bermuda" rig???
Her is a pic of her underway after she was sold to her German owner...we sailed her with USNA marked sails...