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LORITA MARIA in 2009
Lorita Maria
LORITA MARIA in 2009
LORITA MARIA in 2009
Private Collection

Lorita Maria

Vessel numberHV000392
Vessel Registration NumberPH73N
Sail Number173
Designer (1921 - 1995)
Date1963
DimensionsVessel Dimensions: 11.89 m x 8.43 m x 3.43 m x 1.9 m, 9.65 tonnes (39 ft x 27.66 ft x 11.25 ft x 6.25 ft, 9.5 tons)
DescriptionLORITA MARIA's design was commissioned in 1962 from Alan Payne by Sydney NSW owner Norman Rydge Jr, and named after his wife. At this time Payne had been working on the design of the America's Cup 12 metre GRETEL and employed ideas he had learnt from tank testing that design, especially in the shape of the keel. It was built by Jeff Clist who was well known for his craftsmanship and had previously built the Payne designed Tasman Seabird RONITA. Rydge had gained experience sailing a yacht called PEGASUS and wanted a new design that would be consistent in variable weather and capable of sailing Australian and International ocean races.

Rydge was particularly keen on strong construction and Payne specified a glued, double-planked hull, with closely spaced frames. The yacht was heavily built all round and had a low ballast ratio. It derived form stability from its beamy, hard-bilged hull shape. In hindsight, Rydge considered that the additional weight of the heavy construction used for the deck and cabin was a handicap to the yacht's performance in fresh conditions, while Alan Payne suggested it had too much wetted surface area for success in light weather sailing.

Despite this LORITA MARIA was a good ocean racing yacht. In its first season it won the 1963-64 Ocean Racing Points Score at the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia, was third in the 1963 Sydney To Hobart race, and managed a fourth place in its class in the light weather 1965 Fastnet Race in the United Kingdom. It generally carried a crew of six including the skipper.

Rydge had shipped the yacht to the UK with the intention of taking part in some of the major races outside of Australia, which no other Australian yacht had done up to that time. He recalls that the other competitors were impressed with his spirit in coming so far to take part, and equally impressed with the design and construction of LORITA MARIA.

Rydge continued to race LORITA MARIA back in Sydney for many years, and used it for cruising and day sailing with his family. He sold the yacht in the 1990s to Paul Smith, who continued to use it for coastal cruising until he passed away in 2007. The current owner intends to use it for cruising as well.
SignificanceLORITA MARIA is a wooden ocean racing yacht built in 1963 and designed by renowned naval architect Alan Payne for Norman Rydge Jnr, a successful Sydney sailor and business man. In 1965 it became the first Australian yacht to compete in the Bermuda and Transatlantic races, two of the most famous blue water offshore yacht races in the northern hemisphere. It was a custom design for Rydge and in 2010 LORITA MARIA remains in almost the exact configuration and detail as it was when launched nearly 50 years ago, including the custom made sheet winches in the cockpit, and its dinghy by the same builder.
LORITA MARIA's tender showing the transom bow
Jeff Clist
1963
QUESTING on its trial sail after being restored by Sydney Wooden Boats in 2015/16
Andrew Riddell
1949
MARIS at Lord Howe Island in 2013
Alan Payne
1958
SERENADE sailing on Port Stephens NSW in 2008
Alan Payne
1949
ATHENE, possibly  in the early 1930s
WM Ford Boatbuilders
1905
SOLO on Moreton Bay Qld, around 2011.
Alan Payne
1955
SKERRY OF KURRABA and its big spinnaker, which could be carried quite shy.
Knud Reimers
1958
Skirmish
Bluey Williams
1969
SIANDRA sailing in the Cape Verde Islands off the West African coast in 2000.
Arthur C Robb
1956
METUNG in London on its circumnavigation
JC Bull
1956
GRETEL in Italy in 2003
Lars Halvorsen Sons Pty Ltd
1962
GRETEL II at the 2010 Classic and Wooden Boat Festival at the ANMM
Bill Barnett (1915-2018)
1970