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The largest one design keelboat fleet in Canada

SAIL A SHARK 24

The largest one-design keelboat fleet in canada.

The Canadian Shark Class Association

2024 Coupe De Quebec Regatta | June 8 – 9

The 2024 Coupe Du Quebec Regatta will be held on June 8th & 9th at Beaconsfield Yacht Club. Join us for the second CSCA counter…

2024 Coupe De Quebec Regatta | June 8 – 9 Read More

Royal Canadian Yacht Club

2024 Trillium Regatta | May 25 – 26

The 2024 Shark Trillium Regatta will be held on May 25th & 26th at the Royal Canadian Yacht Club. Join us for the first CSCA…

2024 Trillium Regatta | May 25 – 26 Read More

The Canadian Shark Class Association

2024 Annual General Meeting – March 17

Notice of 2024 Annual General Meeting The Canadian Shark Class Association (CSCA) Annual General Meeting (AGM) will be conducted in an online virtual meeting format…

2024 Annual General Meeting – March 17 Read More

shark class sailboat

Eight Bells – John Clark

The Shark 24 fleet has lost a treasured member. John Clark, known as JC to many and “Clarkie” by a few, was a passionate sailor…

Eight Bells – John Clark Read More

2024 CSCA Regatta Schedule Announcement

Happy New Year to the Shark Fleet across Canada. Your CSCA Board is excited to announce a 10 regatta schedule for the 2024 season. A…

2024 CSCA Regatta Schedule Announcement Read More

shark class sailboat

JLS Wins 2023 Shark of the Year!

Congratulations to Peter Van Rossem and crew on Jonathan Livingston Seagull #276 for winning the 2023 Sid Dakin Trophy Shark of the Year! 2nd place…

JLS Wins 2023 Shark of the Year! Read More

CAN 290 Frostbite

EXPERIENCE THE SHARK 24

The Shark is the largest one-design keelboat fleet in Canada and is the perfect choice for competitive sailors and cruisers alike.

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Doyle Sails

ONE DESIGN // SHARK 24

When the one designs come down to one, it's Doyle. The big difference in one design.

Doyle Raudaschl has been developing Shark 24 sails together with the top sailors of the class for years. In addition to our top domestic sailors around Ernst Felsecker “Flossi” and Michael Scharper, Bodo Günther and Horst Rudorffer advise us on sail design.

Get in touch with an expert below or contact your local loft here

MEET THE TEAM

Florian Raudaschl of Austria sails in the Finn class during a practice race ahead of the start of the London 2012 Olympic Games in Weymouth and Portland, southern England, July 28, 2012. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier (BRITAIN - Tags: SPORT YACHTING OLYMPICS)

Florian Raudaschl Doyle Austria +43 6138 2333 [email protected]

Shark-24-4

DR 16 mainsail Application: all-round sail Wind range: 5 to 30 knots The sail is made of Contender Polykote Regattadacron and cut horizontally. We can add a row of reefs on request. Class symbols, sail numbers, sail windows, trim strips, Woolies, battens and sail bag are included in the price.

DR 17 Genoa 180% Application: light and medium wind Wind range: 5 to 20 knots The sail is made of Contender Polykote Regattadacron and cut radially. Soft hanks on the luff, trim strips, Woolies, sail numbers, sail window and sail carrier bag are included in the price.

DR 17 Genoa 150% and 120% Area of ​​application: medium and strong winds Wind range: 15 to 30 knots The sail is made of Dimension Polyant SQ Dacron MTO cloth and cut radially. Soft hanks on the luff, trim strips, Woolies, sail numbers, sail window and sail carrier bag are included in the price.

DR 20 jib 105% Application: strong wind Wind range: 18 to 30 knots The sail is made of Dimension Polyant SQ Dacron MTO cloth and cut radially. Soft hanks on the luff, trim strips, Woolies, battens, sail window and sail bag are included in the price.

DR 20 spinnaker Area of ​​use: all-round Wind range: 5 to 30 knots The sail is made of Contender Superlite 50 spinnaker cloth and cut horizontally / sheet radially. Sail numbers, individual color selection and sail carrier bag are included in the price.

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Sail1Design

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November 30, 1999 by Sail1Design Editor Leave a Comment

shark class sailboat

Windrift Judy Kingsley’s “Windrift” off Coboug in 1981

When George Hinterholler designed the Shark in 1959, he was looking for a boat that would “go like hell when the wind blew.”  Growing up sailing in Austria’s Salzkammergut region, Hinterholler was used to light displacement finkeelers; fast, responsive and exciting.

The few sailboats he found on Lake Ontario when he immigrated to Canada in 1952 had heavy displacement hulls.  They were ponderous and had a bad habit of hoppy-horsing in the rough Lake Ontario chop.

The young boat builder/designer was bored by their performance. Announcing that he could build a boat that would sail circles around the rest, he retired to the shed behind his Niagara-on-the-Lake home and built Teeter Totter, a hard-chined 22-foot sloop made of plywood.  It was the forunner of the Shark.  And when the wind blew, it did go like hell. Its designer loved it and so did his friends.

There was an immediate demand for the nimble little boat 35 years ago, so that winter Hinterholler increased the length to 24 feet and began building plywood Sharks in his shed.  Hull number 5 was for a customer by the name of Bill O’Reilly who demanded that his boat be built of a substance relatively new to boat building; fiberglass.  He even offered to teach Hinterholler how to use it.  With fiberglass it took 18 man-hours to produce a hull instead of the 128 hours devoted to a wooden hull, and  fiberglass was virtually maintenance free.  That made his boat the  affordable yacht and Hinterholler and Shark were on their way to  International success.

Since then, more than 2500 Sharks have taken their place in the fleet, both on the North American continent and in Europe.  It rapidly became the biggest one-design keelboat fleet on the Great Lakes and today their are active groups on the east and west coasts and in the Montreal and Ottawa areas.  About 500 Sharks sail the large lakes of Austria, Switzerland and Germany and the waters off the Swedish archipelago.

There have been changes since Hinterholler first designed it, but they have been cosmetic.  The sleek hull, straight stem, and long flat run at the stern, fin keel and spade rudder made it a racer that climbs easily over its bow-wave to achieve speeds in excess of 10 knots.  The six-foot beam and doghouse accommodate a V-berth, two quarterberths with  sink, stove and coldbox, making it a pocket cruiser with sitting headroom.  It draws less than four feet, making it an ideal boat to tuck into anchorages denied deeper draught boats.

The Shark’s prompt success was due in no small part to its early racing record.  In 1960, Hinterholler crewed for George Steffan, later President of Mirage Yachts, in the Freeman Cup.  They cleaned up with three 1sts using brisk 18-knot winds to put a leg them and their nearest competitor in the race.  In the 1963 Freeman Cup the Shark did it again.  For small boats, the course was from Niagara-on-the-Lake to Rochester NY, 80 nautical miles along the south shore of Lake Ontario.  There were no spinnakers and no genoas on Sharks in those days and the race was sailed with main and working jib only.

“We thought our biggest competition would be the “Thunderbirds,” Hinterholler said “but after the first surf, we knew that there would be no contest.  We barreled down the course in seven hours and 44 minutes.”

In 1963, using a spinnaker on a close reach across Lake Ontario, Sid Dakin, one of the first to own a Shark, sailed the blockhouse Bay race from Toronto to Olcott, NY, with an adrenaline pumping average speed of 10.2 knots, beating the 56-footer Innisfree on a boat-for-boat basis.  That sort of speed boggled the minds of sailors unaccustomed to semi-displacement hulls.

Racing boats come and racing boats go, but the shark remains.  With its flexible rig and planing abilities, it is as up to date as anything on the market today.  And, with its low-aspect, 7/8ths rig and heavy keel, it has a sea-kindliness and seaworthiness to match its speed.

Hinterholler admits that the Shark’s scantlings are better suited to a tank, but the proof of his wisdom in overbuilding the boat has been in its longevity.  Virtually each of the 2,500 Sharks built in the last 35 years is still sailing and many of the first hulls off the line are still winning their share of races.

The Shark is seem sailing happily in all major Canadian cruising waters, but some owners have taken them much further afield.  In 1972, Clive O’Connor, his wife, two year old baby and their guitar sailed their Shark from Niagara-on-the-Lake to Melbourne, Australia.  They arrived in good form, still speaking to each other and their Shark, at last report, was still being used for research on Australia’s Great Barrier Reef.

Randal Peart sailed his Shark from Windsor and then crossed over to England, cruised the French canals, and then sailed BACK across and cruised the Caribbean for a year.  He’s still alive and well and eccentric. If you’d like to correspond with him, he’d be happy to hear from you at: [email protected]

(Editor’s Note: The text of the above paragraph has been changed from the original, to reflect new information from Randal’s wife, Patricia, received on Sept 11, 2000)

On his return, he reported no structural damage and no bulkheads adrift, but he did ask for a new set of gudgeons to replace his worn ones.

More recently, Bob Lush added a foot to the stern of his Shark to bring it up to a minimum 25-foot size for the OSTAR single-handed transatlantic race.  His biggest problem crossing the Atlantic was getting stuck in the doldrums and listening to empty sails slap for too many mind-destroying days.

The Shark is a forgiving boat which makes it appealing to novices, but with 14 separate lines to tweak, it is as technical as any sailor could wish. An active class association defined the Shark’s measurements and specifications as early as 1966 and in 1984, the association adopted a more formal measurement form patterned after a number of international one-design classes.  The fact that all Sharks, both new and old have been built to these specifications has kept the racing fleet viable and maintained the market value of the boat.

The association is active at the international, national and regional levels giving Shark owners who are not part of a local fleet a point of contact and an active racing program.  In addition to regular club races, there are regional, provincial and national Shark Class regattas.  The highlight of each year is the Shark World Championship, a seven race series held for two consecutive years in North America and, in the third year, in Europe.

Host for the 1994 Shark Worlds, won by Don Ruddy in #268 Dartos, was the Niagara-on-the-Lake Sailing Club, the club Hinterholler helped found.  Fifty-six Sharks competed in the 1994 event  The World Championship in 1995, won by John Clark/Don Ruddy was held in Freidrickshaven on Lake Constance.  Several Canadian Shark sailors competed in this event.

(Editors note:  The host for the World Championship in 1996, won by Jeff Mitchell in #336  Frankly Scarlet, was the Kingston Yacht Club and in 1997, won by Don Ruddy in #268 Dartos, was the Buffalo Canoe Club.  In 1998 the Championship, again won by Don Ruddy,  was sailed June 6 – 12, at the Yachtclub Breitenbrunn, Neusiedlersee, Burgenland, Austria.  The 1999 Championship was sailed at the Royal Canadian Yacht Club in Toronto, Canada and won by Sid Dakin in #1456 “Duck Soup”and the 2000 Championships at Parry Sound on Georgian Bay, in Ontario, was won by Don Ruddy in “Dartos “.  The 2001 Championship also won by Don Ruddy, was held at Yacht-Club Kreuzlingen in Switzerland and the 2002 Worlds is scheduled for Toronto,Ontario at the Mimico Cruising Club)

Class website http://shark24.org/

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One Design Boating Sails - Shark

Shark Downwind

Evolution Class Mainsail $1350

  • Visibility Window
  • Custom Tapered Battens
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  • Class Royalty
  • Sail Numbers

Evolution Class Genoa $1240

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Evolution Class Spinnaker $1250

  • Colour Options- Airx 600

Evolution Jib $1100

  • Long or Short Foot

Accessories

Furling Sock $295

Price List  Shark 24 Price List

IMAGES

  1. Exploring Photos: Shark class sailboat was built in NOTL

    shark class sailboat

  2. Why Choose The Shark 24?

    shark class sailboat

  3. Canadian Shark Class Association

    shark class sailboat

  4. Canadian Shark Class Association

    shark class sailboat

  5. Why Choose The Shark 24?

    shark class sailboat

  6. The Shark, a legendary sailboat for 90 years

    shark class sailboat

COMMENTS

  1. Canadian Shark Class Association

    The Shark is the largest one-design keelboat fleet in Canada and is the perfect choice for competitive sailors and cruisers alike. Learn More. The Shark is the largest one design keelboat fleet in Canada and an officially recognized one design keelboat class of World Sailing.

  2. International Shark Class Association

    About Us. World Cup 2022 Results. World Sailing. World Cup 2023 Results. INTERNATIONAL SHARK CLASS ASSOCIATION. INTERNATIONAL SHARK CLASS ASSOCIATIONINTERNATIONAL SHARK CLASS ASSOCIATIONINTERNATIONAL SHARK CLASS ASSOCIATION. Shark24 News. 2015 European Champion Hai Heels. Shark24 news.

  3. SHARK 24

    Since then, more than 2,500 Sharks have been built. Besides North America, Sharks sail the lakes of Austria, Switzerland, Germany and the waters of the Swedish archipelago. There have been a number of cosmetic changes to the design but, by in large, one-design standards have been maintained. 'Sharkscan' has been the class newsletter.

  4. Shark 24

    190 sq ft (18 m 2) Class is a member of World Sailing. [ edit on Wikidata] The Shark 24 is a Canadian -designed 24 ft sailing yacht which has earned itself a reputation of extraordinary reliability and longevity among sailors both in North America and Central Europe. Having been designed by George Hinterhoeller back in 1959 to cope well even ...

  5. Shark 24

    Shark 24 is a 24′ 0″ / 7.3 m monohull sailboat designed by George Hinterhoeller and built by C&C Yachts, Hinterhoeller Yachts Ltd., and Halman Manufacturing Co. starting in 1959. ... Shark Class - International # Built 2500 Hull Monohull Keel Fin Rudder Transom hung Construction FG

  6. Shark: A Boat for When the Wind Blows

    The Shark is a forgiving boat which makes it appealing boat for novices, but with 14 control lines, there are more than enough things to do for expert racers. An active class association tightly controls the racing in the fleet and ensures that all boats have the same minimum racing weight.

  7. One Design Shark 24

    ONE DESIGN // SHARK 24 When the one designs come down to one, it's Doyle. The big difference in one design. Doyle Raudaschl has been developing Shark 24 sails together with the top sailors of the class for years. In addition to our top domestic sailors around Ernst Felsecker "Flossi" and Michael Scharper, Bodo Günther and […]

  8. 2024 Shark Schedule Announced

    As a class, we continue to see new faces buying and restoring the Sharks that have been on the regatta circuit for many years. A true testament to the longevity of the Shark 24 sailboat. 2023 Shark of the Year. Congratulations to Peter Van Rossem and crew on Jonathan Livingston Seagull #276 for winning the 2023 Sid Dakin Trophy Shark of the Year!

  9. PDF 2022 Annual Report International Shark Class Association

    International Shark Class Association The World Sailing regulations include requirements that World Sailing Class Associations must meet to maintain the right to hold a World Championship and its World Sailing Class designation. This report compiled by World Sailing is a summary of the information provided by the Class Association.

  10. Shark 24

    The Shark is a forgiving boat which makes it appealing to novices, but with 14 separate lines to tweak, it is as technical as any sailor could wish. An active class association defined the Shark's measurements and specifications as early as 1966 and in 1984, the association adopted a more formal measurement form patterned after a number of ...

  11. Shark 24

    Shark 24. Public group. ·. 2.0K members. Join group. For people who race and cruise the Shark, a 24 ft keelboat designed by George Hinterhoeller and built in Canada and Europe from the 1960s to the 1990s....

  12. Shark Class

    Shark Class - International. shark24.org Source: ... Sailboat. Shark 24. 1959 • 24 ′ 0 ″ / 7.3 m For Sale View More . Have a sailboat to sell? List it for free and it will show up here. Great choice! Your favorites are temporarily saved for this session. Sign in to save them permanently, access them on any device, and receive relevant alerts.

  13. Sharks are Attacking for '22

    The Shark 24 has enjoyed over 60 years of sailing success since the first launched in 1959. The strong leadership of sailing clubs across Canada and the Canadian Shark Class Association has maintained a energetic one design fleet.

  14. Defiant-class patrol vessel

    The United States is building 13 small patrol vessels, based on the Damen Stan 2606 patrol vessel design, for small Caribbean nations, to be known as the Defiant class. The United States Navy, which will play an oversight role in the ship's construction, also calls the design Near Coastal Patrol Vessels.The $54 million contract was awarded to Metal Shark Boats of Louisiana.

  15. Shark One Design Class Racing Sails

    Leech and Foot Lines. Draft Stripes. Class Royalty. Visibility Window. Accessories. Furling Sock $295. Price List Shark 24 Price List. All Prices as listed are in Canadian Dollars. Shark One Design Class Racing Sails from Evolution Sails.

  16. Shark Worlds 2023

    August 16, 2023. As of the week before the event, there are 49 registered boats for the 2023 Shark Worlds at the Niagara-on-the-Lake Sailing Club. The tag line for the event is "Well Sailed Since 1959". A great intro for a class that needs very little introduction to sailors around the Great Lakes and the inland lakes of Germany, Austria ...

  17. SHARK CATAMARAN

    Though he had already designed a number of successful catamarans, (including the first Little Americas Cup winner, 'Hellcat'), Rod MacAlpine-Downie gave his business partner, Dick Gibbs, credit as the designer of the SHARK. Early boats were also built by Gibbs. The first SHARK gained notice by winning the 'Yachting' One-of-a-kind regatta of 1963, held in […]