Monday, 12 September 2011

Golif - the first all-plastic sailing yacht?


The 23ft Golif was built from 1962 by the Jouët works at Sartrouville. Jouët claim she was the first production small offshore cruiser to be entirely built in GRP, and she caused a stir on her introduction at the first Paris Boatshow in January 1962.

The unusual name comes from a famously ruthless, daring, and reportedly amorous 17th century French pirate, Louis Adhémar Timothée Le Golif, also known as “Borgnefesse”. Since his nickname means something like "one-eyed-arse", you would probably have been wise to address him, at least until you got to know him well, as Captain Golif.

Golif was designed by Jouet with one eye on the American market, where the management believed they could sell a lot of boats. They had probably been helped considerably in their objective by the earlier successful transatlantic voyages of Jean Lacombe, in a plywood Jouet Cap-Horn. Apparently the company's market research suggested that the Americans favoured rather more interior comfort than the European market was used to, and that stiffness under sail and transportability by road would be important qualities for US buyers. Some of the Golif's characteristic features, such as its panoramic cabin window, shoal draft, relatively light displacement and high ballast ratio, stem directly from these market-related requirements.

Even today, Golif's looks seem rather quirky, though the underwater hull shape and the rig appear conventional. At the time, however, Golif's rig was considered rather tall and narrow, and the aluminium mast was in those days quite an innovation on a small cruising yacht. The odd pinched shape of the coach roof seems to have been intended to maximise the width of the side decks, but without sacrificing headroom in the places below where you might want to stand. Thus, with perfect French logic, there is low headroom over bunks and seats, where you sit or lie down, but there is plenty of headroom over the central passage and galley area, where you stand or walk. As the Jouët company said, this deck was designed from the inside!

Unusually for such a small boat, Golif had a decent chart table at which you could comfortably sit and work while facing the direction of travel, as you might in a much larger yacht. This was achieved by making the chart table swing down from the cabin deckhead right in the centre of the boat. Another innovation was a hinged and sliding hatch (visible in the colour photo of a Golif recently for sale in France)

Some versions of the Golif were delivered with an optional deeper keel for racing performance. These boats were excellent performers in offshore races and won many prizes, but it was a perfectly standard Golif that achieved the greatest fame for the class. In 1964, Jean Lacombe who had been France's sole entrant in the 1960 Observer Singlehanded Transatlantic Race (OSTAR), returned to repeat the feat in a Golif, once again the smallest boat in the competition. This was the year of Eric Tabarly's first triumph, so Lacombe's achievement was rather overshadowed by the acclaim and fanfares garnered by the winner. Nevertheless, Lacombe's Golif took joint pride of place, alongside Tabarly's Pen Duick II at the centre of the 1965 Paris Boat show. (see photo)

There are varying estimates of the total number of Golifs built by Jouet and also by the Dubigeon yard in Normandy. The total number certainly comes to over 1000.


Jouët Golif
LOA: 6.50m
LWL: 5.92m
Beam: 2.22m
Draft: 0.96m
Displacement: 1200Kg
Ballast: 480Kg (cast iron)
Sail area: 23.2sqm

Many thanks to the French Golif owners website for all the b&w images and much of the information used in preparing this post. Colour photo of a Golif recently for sale in France from an advertisement on www.leboncoin.fr

A scanned copy of the original 1963 Jouet Golif sales brochure is available in .pdf format from Yacht Brochures.co.uk

9 comments:

  1. oh.. very great to find some about my boat. ive got it in the jear 1999 and i took a very long distance with it. the northern sea / the east sea / some waterways from berlin till groningen and so on. in trouble it was so safety an stabile, i´m called her a duck. it was a very small but also very nice ship in a nice construction. so long … ari

    ReplyDelete
  2. Another Smart post from you Admin :)

    ReplyDelete
  3. There are really a lot of new boat accessories that pops up nowadays. Better be careful and in choosing which one you are going to get, something that you really believe that you needed for your boat.

    Raymarine Multifunctions Display

    ReplyDelete
  4. I owned a second hand Golif from 1970-1973. Sailed solo from Mamaroneck, NY to Bar Harbor Maine. Took two weeks. Great little boat. Believe it was twenty feet. Sold it since the dear wife was not sailor.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Water-Resistant is not Water Proof. I called the MFG who said "We do not recommend using Great Stuff in Marine Applications". Plenty of absorption tests with Great Stuff, Polypropylene etc on boat building sites. Take the foam hat you made and weigh it. Then submerge it in water for a week and weigh it again and let me know how closed cell it is. :) Again, I think you did a great job. Just don't want people thinking it actually added any boyancy to the boat. @ Jachika

    ReplyDelete
  6. Great post. I just bought one built 1965 and was looking for some info about it. It came to my country from Swiss while I was looking for that size sailboat. Probably trade man take it for little money and sell it in here also cheap as the boat is 50 years old. Beside the age of the boat it is in excellent condition and looks it was taken from the first owner which take a good care all this years. Even there are some modern technology built inside like gps autopilot, four stroke engine, most of the staff that come with the boat are from the factory. It is interesting to see feather pillows produced 20th April 1965, working Hipolito petroleum stove....

    ReplyDelete
  7. I Just bought a jouet golif and the Guy i bought IT from didn't know hoe dmthe battery chargded during sailing. Van anybody give me any info?

    ReplyDelete
  8. I bought in this year a Golif from the year 1967. Instantly I fall in love in this boat, because of the unique shape. Correctly I am doing all required rebuild after 55 years. Looking for a active Golif community for knowledge sharing.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Hello, it is so nice to find an article about my boat. I have it for nearly three years now. After buying it I made it up in the look of the 1964 OSTAR, with the red hull and the big white number 15 on the bow. And I baptised it "Jean Lacombe". Although it is quite small I am spending several weeks of the year on it.
    By the way, doese anyone out there have information about what happened to the Golif and the Cap Horn of Jean Lacombe after the races of 1960 and 1964? In 1965 the Golif was exposed on the Paris Boat Salon. But that does not necessarily mean, that this boat was the exactly same one used in the OSTAR race. His first boat, Hippocampe, which he built himself, is still remaining in North Carolina.

    ReplyDelete