Summary: About our boat, "Al Hoceima" - A French built steel ketch, model type Petit Prince, designed by Marcel Sobrero. Included are Interior layout drawings; information on her home berth at Port Credit Harbour Marina, and the town she was named after - Al Hoceima, Morocco.
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“Al Hoceima” is a French-built steel Ketch of the model type, Petit Prince, designed by Marcel Sobrero. We’d like to link to Marcel Sobrero or Petit Prince, but Petit Prince is no longer being made anywhere that we could find and any searches on Marcel Sobrero bring up nothing. Al Hoceima’s first owner loved a beautiful, coastal, town in Morocco and named his boat after the town (see below for more information).
The hull was professionally built in 1980, and the interior was completed by the
original owner to, as I like to say, “Somewhat less than professional
standards”.
LOD 41’
Beam 13.5’
Draft 6’ 1” originally, but it’s become more like 6’ 6” after living aboard for
the past few years
Displacement is 16t, approx.
The underwater profile is a very long fin keel, and a very beefy full-length
skeg and skeg mounted-rudder.
Ballast is lead with the rest of the keel cavity used for fuel storage.
Fuel capacity is approximately 800 liters of diesel, based on my measurements
and calculations, but I’ve never had it more than half full.
Water capacity is approximately 400 liters in two tanks under the main saloon’s
port and stbd couches.
Engine is a 50hp Perkins 4.108 diesel mated to a bronze 3-blade fixed
propeller. The propeller lives in a cutout in the skeg.
She is Ketch-rigged with a removable staysail and associated running backstays.
Sails at the moment: Spinnaker Genoa #1 jib #2 jib #3 jib Staysail 2 storm jibs (one new) Mainsail with 2 reefing points Main Trysail on a dedicated track Mizzensail with 2 reefing points |
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I’d love to get a mizzen staysail… I’ve got a halyard ready and waiting for it!
She has two cabins, fore and aft, sleeping two normal-sized people aft and two
tiny people in the v-berth. She can sleep two people in the saloon and another
in the tool room if and when it is built into a berth. There are two heads with
sinks and manual toilets. Our galley (kitchen) contains a three-burner gimballed
propane stove with oven and a small fridge with the wee-est freezer. She was
altered from the original layout to incorporate a head aft, but isn't too far
off the original interior drawings except the nav station and galley are on
opposite sides.
Al Hoceima sailed from France to Canada along a circuitous path (we inherited a
huge bin full of charts covering Europe, parts of the Med, Japan, West Indies,
US Intracoastal, etc.), then to the West Indies for two years and back up to
Lake Ontario. She’s seen much more of the world than we have.
She is currently in Port Credit Harbour Marina in Lake Ontario. We have owned
her for four years and someone has lived aboard her full-time since then, less
about three months during the moving-in process.
Port Credit Harbour Marina in the early spring
Note the damage from the winter ice and storms as evidenced by some of the wonky dock angles!
Click HERE for the Google Maps page close-up |
"Al Hoceima" at her winter slip. The winter frame and plastic has been removed at this point, and she looks ready to move to her summer slip. Pretty cool that you can see details like the boats' mooring lines from a satellite image! |
The Town - "Al Hoceima" (where the
boat got her name)
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Photos of the town Al Hoceima, Morocco are from: http://lexicorient.com/e.o/hoceima.htm
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David S. Malar and Angelika Jardine. All rights reserved.
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