The Cherubini megayacht
When I was about 15 I drew one. It was a very traditional Feadship-styled 165-footer, all white, with a pretty counter stern and not-to-garish raked bow. It had a C on the side of the raked funnel and it flew a family flag. My dad got mad at me for drawing an architectural railing on it and made me include 'that nice green canvas' between the heavy white-painted stanchions. It did look much better. I wish I still had that drawing.Later I had an actual sleeping dream about a dining saloon on a large yacht that was round in front, and when I woke up and got to the drawing board I sketched it out. (I've never had a board big enough to really draw up something this big as an actual design; if i did, I would have.) It was about 175 feet, with long traditional clipper bow, bowsprit, two masts, and a tall, slightly raked funnel. It looked like JP Morgan's Corsair. It had two hatches aft of the deckhouse to accommodate two cars (an XJ-6 and a Bentley R-2 saloon) beneath and two mahogany Riva speedboat/launches above. Inside the fantail stern was a workout room with direct deck access. The hull was deep navy blue, the houses pale gray, the funnel black, the brightwork all Honduras mahogany. There was a slight step in the deck forward of the house. Best of all there was that semicircular forward dining saloon, with short narrow window sashes all around, and a longitudinal elliptical dining table for about 12 or 14 inside. Aft of main saloon the upper deck rail mimicked it, just before the long after deck with the two speedboat/launches, the mizzenmast with lifting boom, and the round fantail with the scuttle to the workout room. Below three full-width cabins accommodated the owners and 'special' (read that: in-law) guests. There were about four or five other cabins. On the main deck there was a TV room and library, and forward were crew quarters for like 12.This was in like 1980; and even then I was adamant that there should no useless ostentation but in every detail the look and function of a true ship. The long counter stern and clipper bow have purpose-- they take seas comfortably and reliably. There were to be grab rails everywhere and no attempt to hide lockers marked 'PFDs', 'Fire equipment', etc. Side decks were narrow and lifelines waist-high. All berths were parallel to the centerline. The refrigerator doors faced forward. The stove had fiddles. The superstructure was aluminum, but the hull was steel because aluminum disappears underwater. There were to be three screws, three engines and a generator, all running through a hydraulic system that allowed any engine or engines to run any screw or screws, the generator, the windlasses, the bow thruster, and the winches for lifting the boats and cars. This is what I thought of when I was like 23. I guess these things are what make us.To rely on a much-repeated phrase of my father's, any yacht to be seaworthy must be 'worthy of the sea' --to deserve to be there by virtue of intelligent and sensitive design, careful construction, and responsible use. I wish some people in the megayacht business were more aware of these things rather than of seeing that they're well covered by insurance and enabled by tort action when the inevitable happens.