HISTORY
The first Miracles were launched in 1975, since
then the Miracle has gone from strength to
strength and sail numbers today exceed 4,000.
From it’s design concept, the Miracle dinghy
was to be the roomier, faster brother of the
successful Mirror dinghy. Whilst being bigger
and faster, it still had to maintain a large degree
of safety.
This was achieved by the design of the very
forgiving hull shape which offers the
experienced helm a lively and healthy turn of
speed but in the hands of a novice will not put
them in the water with a moments lapse of
concentration.
The class enjoys a full race programme all
organised by the association which includes
area championships and a week long national
family event which caters for young and old,
novice and expert alike, but is also the perfect
boat to take on the family holiday, to potter
down river with a picnic, or for more serious
cruising adventures.
The miracle has had many people who have
gone on to other classes where they have
achieved national, world and Olympic titles.
Some have also returned with their children
who are now learning what their parents
already know… that the Miracle is a great boat
to sail!
THE BOAT
The Miracle has a true thoroughbred pedigree and was one of the last
designs to have come from the stable of the worlds foremost small
sailboat designer - Jack Holt.
Tens of thousands of dinghies sailed today were designed by him, such
was the success of his prolific designing career.
He brought sailing to the masses in the 1960's with his famous Mirror
dinghy and continued to produce hugely successful designs such as the
Enterprise, GP14, Cadet, Hornet, Pacer, Solo, and Streaker to name but a
few. The Miracle design represented the culmination
of lessons learned from his many previous designs and with Barry Read,
Jack Holt developed the slot and glue method of constructing Miracles
which enabled some
boats to be built from kits even by inexperienced Amateurs.
The optional spinnaker (with chute), flat aft section and wide
beam help to provide all the thrills and spills you'd expect from a
one-design thoroughbred planing racing-boat which even
downwind, remains stable enough for youth or inexperienced
helm to quickly learn to control - whilst up at the top end of the
fleet, world class racing helms and crews (take a look, you'll see
some famous names) continually fight close battles for prime
position. With it’s incredibly light weight, ample buoyancy and
stowage, deceptive roominess, high stability and tolerance
for differing crew weights - the Miracle is arguable the best craft
for single-handed or short-handed cruising adventures either
alone, with small children, or even the whole family. The forward
side deck is ingeniously cut away so that the young or
apprehensive can sit 'in' rather than 'on' the boat.
Whether for an hour, camping or overnighting on an extended cruise, you can venture out confidently in the
knowledge that should the weather deteriorate, her sail area of 95 square feet (before reefing) will remain safe and
controllable even in a really hard blow...and she will even take a small outboard engine (although it's a really good
idea to remember to remove it if you go racing!).
SPECIFICATIONS
PY number
1185
Length
12’ 9.5”
3.89m
Beam
5’ 2.5”
1.59m
Draft
Hull
6”
0.152m
Draft
Centreboard
3’ 6”
1.07m
Weight
Hull
130lbs
59Kg
Weight
Complete
169lbs
77Kg
Sail Area
Main
72sqft
6.8sqm
Sail Area
Jib
23sqft
2.1sqm
Sail Area
Spinnaker
80sqft
7.4Sqm
Specification documents
“one-design dinghy with
symmetric spinnaker raced with
2 or more crew
Popular with families.
Designer: Jack Holt in 1973
Construction available in:
•
Wood
•
FRP
•
Composite
MIRACLE
SPECIFICATIONS
Weight: 169lbs / 77Kg
Jack Holt 1912-1995