Tall stories?There are many incredible stories told where
Hallberg-Rassy is involved in one way or the other. Many are so incredible
that it is hard to believe they are true. We can only assure you that
everything you can read below is absolutely true and has happened in real
life. First GRP boat in a museum a Hallberg-Rassy After three and a half circumnavigation a Hallberg-Rassy boat has been retired into a museum. The Swedish sailor Kurt Björklund´s HR 31 Monsun "Golden Lady" has become an important attraction at a museum in Råå in southern Sweden. "Golden Lady" is the first GRP boat in Sweden to come to a museum. We at Hallberg-Rassy are of course very proud of this. Kurt Björklund was the first owner and took delivery of this boat here in Ellös 1974. Kurt knew that he wanted to do some serious sailing, but could never have imagined how far he would travel. In 1983 Kurt retired from work and went on his first solo Circumnavigation. The second one included the rounding of Cape Horn. There has never been made any special strengthening of the boat to coop with harsh weather conditions during the three and a half trips around the world. Kurt built a hard top to have an even better protected cockpit. Kurt donated the boat to the Råå museum. - I could have
sold the boat for some SEK 300 000 But I could not stand the idea of not
knowing where the boat was and how she was doing. I prefer scarifying the
money and have peace in my mind, Kurt said Just delivered Hallberg-Rassy 36 stolen At 10 am on Sept. 27th 1996 a Hallberg-Rassy 36 "Heras" was
stolen from its home port of Maasholm in Northern Germany. The perpetrators had a lead of 15 hours maximum. But the search was to no avail. In the next few days 2000 descriptions of a stolen boat was sent to various ports, locks and boat professionals. 1800 posters were distributed. Shipping agents and crane operating firms were contacted in case the boat had been loaded on a trailer or placed in a container and sent to a far-away destination. We can all only speculate on what happened to "Heras". In early November of 1996 it was reported that a
Hallberg-Rassy 36 with the name of "Hercules" had sailed from
the Canary Islands with three German speaking men aboard. However, no such
yacht is registered in Germany. Could it have been the stolen "Heras"? According to the insurance company it is very rare that a stolen boat of this type is not recovered, particularly after a thorough search. The Helmut Meyer family feel deeply about the loss of their boat. The insurance money was paid, but the financial loss the Meyers was still substantial, due to the deductible and valuable personal items aboard that were not insured. However, the enjoyment of the "Heras" has been
returned to the Meyers in the form of a new HR 36, the "Sareh"(Heras
spelt backwards). It is the third HR 36 for the Meyer family. The first
one hand a traditional stern. When the Meyer family saw the newly
developed HR 36, with a hull which was fuller from the cockpit and aft,
with a developed stern with a swim platform, they became eager to replace
their first HR 36. A buyer who was willing to pay well for the old boat
was quickly found and the order for the new boat, which was later stolen,
was placed. HR 36 mysteriously lost and found again Previously we reported about the HR 36 "Heras" which had been
stolen. Big difference between Ellös and Ellos Hallberg-Rassy is located in a small village, Ellös on the island Orust,
on the Swedish West Coast. Ellös is 75 km north of Gothenburg. Ellös is
not to be confused with Ellos. Ellos is a mail order firm. Unfortunately
confusion has happened. Customers from countries where the Swedish
letters, Å, Ä and Ö do not exist, have ordered a taxi drive to Ellos,
only to find that they are in the right place to buy cheap clothes, but
not to fulfil their expectations to take delivery of a beautiful yacht,
nor to find any coastline. Ellos mail order is located in Borås, 80 km
east of Gothenburg, away from the coastline. That means 130 unnecessary
kilometres in a taxi. His Royal Majesty the King of Sweden, Carl XVI Gustaf, visited the stand
of Hallberg-Rassy at the biggest boat show in the world, boot Düsseldorf
in Germany in January 1999. The King of Sweden looked in detail at the
biggest Hallberg-Rassy on show, the HR 53. The criminal police and Hallberg-Rassy One day the criminal police phoned Hallberg-Rassy. In a place for
harbouring stolen property a sail had been found. The sail was
confiscated. The police did not have any idea about the type of boat the
sail belonged to. All they knew was that it was a genoa for a rather big
boat. They described the sail with measurements, material, the name of the
sailmaker and a building number. All these facts were familiar to the
person in the yard who took the call. The year before this person had sold
his HR 34 with a sail that had the same characteristics. He asked the
police why they phoned Hallberg-Rassy as there are hundreds of yards
producing boats with sails that would match the specification of this
specific sail. The police officer answered that he thought the sail must
belong to a big beautiful boat. The only big and beautiful boat he could
think of was a Hallberg-Rassy. By coincidence he had contacted the
previous owner. The new owner was contacted and he confirmed that a genoa
had disappeared from his boat. Sometimes you realise that this planet is
not so very big. CIA used a Hallberg-Rassy for secret missions According to reliable sources, it has come to our knowledge that the CIA has used a Hallberg-Rassy 49 as an espionage boat in Alaska. The vessel sailed in an area of great natural beauty, disguised as a long-distance sailing boat. Below deck, parts of the boat were modified to allow special bugging devices to be fitted. Alaska is only 50 nautical miles away from the former Soviet Union. The HR 49 was moored in the Bering Sea and could listen to Russian submarines. There was also diving equipment on board, as well as a large air compressor. Evidently they had divers as well. This all took place in the middle and at the end of the 1980s. The boat has been sold to a "real" long distance sailor now and he has refitted the boat to the original design. They now have a washing machine fitted where the surveillance equipment used to be.
Hallberg-Rassy yachts are built in the small village of Ellös on the
island Orust on the Swedish West Coast. The fact that boats have been
built in the area around Ellös since the Vikings is common knowledge, but
scientists claim that it is very likely that the oldest known remains of a
boat in the world come from Ellös. When the excavators started digging
for the new road from Ellös heading east, pieces of resin were found.
According to the scientists the resin was used to caulk boat hulls which
were probably made of aspen-wood. The resinclods come from birchtrees and
are these specific trees mending material. By studying marks in the
resinclods it was found that these had been sitting on boat hulls. Hallberg-Rassys well kept by thieves
|
© Copyright Hallberg-Rassy Varvs AB www.hallberg-rassy.com 1996 - 2008