 
Valiant
Yachts Owners Association LTD. is an incorporated
entity for the owners and "wanna bees" of
valiants. We are an owners association, unaffiliated
with the factory or builder of Valiant Yachts, for
the purpose of passing information, sharing ideas
and uniting in a "world-wide family of sailing
owners" and for the pure pride & joy of
being Valiant Owners!
The
Birth Of The Valiant, by Sylvia Williams Dabney
We
learned
to sail on Puget Sound. Like
so many other people who live and cruise the Pactftc
Northwest, we were happy to be on our summer cruise
in August ... it is the best of the best of cruising
times. The weather is generally clear with little,
if any, fog. Winds are light. The sun is out nearly
every day, and the air is so clear it turns the sky
the most amazing color of blue you'll see anywhere.
In the background are craggy snow-capped mountains.
It is a place of the ultimate primal alliance ... a
nearly perfect cruising ground ... a place where
islands and bays stretch for endless miles. The last
week of August is our favorite, and we always laugh
when we say, "Wednesday during the last week of
August is always Perfect." It was always
a good rule of thumb.
A
taste of reality. It must have been a
Thursday or Friday of that last week in August,
1972, when we were crossing the Straits of Juan de
Fuca, sailing toward Victoria B.C. where we hoped to
dock infront of the Empress Hotel in time for
afternoon tea. All sailors who have been to the
Empress for tea, tell all of the other sailors
heading toward the Canadian Gulf Islands, that this
is a tradition you must not miss. We were looking
forward to participating in this tradition and
discussed what the proper attire would be, as we
thundered along under full spinnaker in our Islander
36’, "Amalia". The wind was building and
it was time to reef.
Where
it started. In 1969, as young corporate kids,
just a few years out of college, Xerox sent their
Marketing Team leaders to the Virgin Islands for a
week of rest and relaxation and a little bit of
work. It was a gray and dreary day in April, when we
left Seattle on that trip and as it turned out, it
changed our lives and the lives of many others,
forever. We stayed at a 100 room hotel on a small
island called Water Island, in the middle of
Charlotte Amalia harbor in Saint Thomas, in the
Virgin Islands. We had spent 4 days snorkeling in
unbelievably clear turquoise water, basking in the
sun, fishing and then we decided to try sailing. We
have always believed that your life can change in an
instant and you can’t see it coming, therefore
it’s important to live life fully, enjoy one
another and enjoy every moment. Those two hours we
spent sailing, because of an almost mystical and
spiritual experience, turned all of our dreams,
goals and thoughts about the future, upside down.
That night we laid awake for hours and by dawn, the
die was cast.
As
usual, it was gray, overcast, damp and dreary in
Seattle when we returned. We had turned the car
lights on to go to work and at 5pm we had headlights
on to come home from work. At 7pm, we were hunkered
down infront of a fireplace talking about how that
very moment, in the islands, the sun was blazing,
people were on the beach and people were sailing!
Three days after we returned to our Corporate jobs
in Seattle, we gave our notice. It’s hard to
explain unless you are a sailor to whom this has
happened, but it seemed to us we had a calling...we
even romanticized that it was an ancient calling
from deep inside...it may have been, but we knew we
didn’t want to live as we had been living, that it
was certainly better for us to "do" than
to "have" and that we wanted to spend as
much time together in our lives as we possibly
could. Remember, it was also a time of adventure,
escape and great excitement, as 1969 proved to be a
seminal year of change for a lot of us "sixties
types"!
The
following weekend, with stars in our eyes, we bought
a new Ericson 23’, named her "Amalia"
after the first place we had been sailing and signed
a contract for an Ericson 27’ which was still on
the drawing board. The day we took delivery of the
Ericson 27’ "Amalia II", we ran into the
dealer for Islander Yachts and we actually signed a
contract for an Islander 36’ for delivery the
following summer. We were a yacht brokers dream. We
were young, impulsive and driven by a dream, the
sirens call of sailing adventures and it was 1969
and we were hooked big time!
We
had made the transition from a camping style
"learn to sail boat" with only crawl
around headroom, to what we believed was the boat to
fulfill our dreams, the same dreams many of us have
when we "discover" sailing. We fantasized
about translucent turquoise lagoons where the
mahi-mahi would just jump into the cockpit, of rum
and cokes at sunset anchored by the palm trees, of
anchorages at secluded tropical islands, of sailing
across calm purple oceans, of white beaches that no
one else had yet discovered, of our youthful bodies
all tan and lean from hours of snorkeling on
glorious reefs. We were filled with the cocky
confidence that we could sail the oceans of the
world with what we knew and with the boat we
had...we were, so very young!
Reality
grows with the wind. Throughout the afternoon,
the wind continued to rise and "Amalia",
continued to charge forward and then surge to the
left and surge to the right, later we would find out
this violent motion was called "death
rolls" and by this time we were so out of
control we couldn’t shorten sail, so inexperienced
that we knew we had a lot to learn about sailing and
ourselves and so it was that afternoon, we realized
that as much as we loved this boat, she was not
suitable for us, for long distance, bluewater
cruising, living aboard nor for fulfilling our
sailing dreams. The Islander 36’ continues to be
one of our favorite boats. It has beautiful lines,
sails wonderfully and we know of 2 couples who have
sailed to Hawaii and back, but that day, we made the
decision to buy a true bluewater passagemaker,
whatever that was. We also started planning for the
liveaboard lifestyle, which included more knowledge
of sailing, more experience and a boat with more
storage for a large compliment of tools, parts and
gear and a boat that was conceived, designed and
built for bluewater passagemaking. But what were our
choices in 1972...there were very few alternatives.
And
then came Valiant. Westsail was just
coming into being and was even featured on a cover
of Time Magazine and after we called the California
office, a factory rep came to our house in Seattle
to show our father, Nathan and us the lines and to
tell us about all the plans they had for this new
boat. It was nice, but like shoes, it simply just
didn’t fit us.
Around
this same time, a mutual friend who knew of our
sailing passions, introduced us to Jay Benford, a
local yacht designer and Ferrocement guru, who was
designing Ferrocement boats in Seattle. After the
Corporate escape, we had established a printing and
publication company and became the printers of Jay
Benfords design books. It was just wonderful to see
the designs, reviews and new drawings he brought to
us for printing and we were enthralled with the
"new" concept of Ferrocement. Remember,
this was the era of the great escape and we became
one of the group who actually considered a
"concreter"...it made sense to us at the
time and afterall, there were not too many
alternatives at that time. During the Seattle Boat
Show, sometime around 1972, Jay Benford invited us
to come to the show and see a "real live"
Ferro cement boat being built. As it turned out,
this was the first time we met Nathan Rothman who
had recently arrived from New York, where he was
selling buttons on the street with John Lennons
photo on them and working at various City Island
boat yards. Nathan was now working for Jay Benford,
building production Ferrocement yachts. Next to
Nathan, inside this huge chicken wire cage, smearing
concrete, was Bob Perry, who was working for Jay
Benford as an assistant designer.
Nathan,
his significant other Linda, Bob and we, instantly
became great friends, after the show that night,
over great big bowls of Spaghetti at the recently
opened Spaghetti House in Seattle...gourmet dining
for us in those days. It was just one of those
special relationships where we did a lot of
dreaming, laughing, talking and we spent endless
hours together. Nathans girlfriend Linda was
unemployed, so I got her a job with my brother in a
plant shop in the University district of Seattle and
Bob who was then batching it, soon moved aboard our
Islander 36’ at Shilshole Bay Marina. We all spent
a lot of time onboard our Islander 36’ and in the
cafes around the Seattle marinas, drawing on
napkins, what would be our dream boat...a good
livable bluewater yacht. We talked about berths,
galleys, storage and performance. After a 3 month
cruise to Alaska aboard a ketch rigged Sea Spirit
32’, essentially a smaller version of a Sea Wolf
41’, we really started defining what our concept
of what a liveaboard cruising yacht was, what
performance was, what comfort aboard meant (primary
issue were a few less leaks) and what for us, would
be the ideal layout above and below decks. Of
course, every time we found what we thought was a
suitable boat, Nathan would tell us it was not right
for us. Up to that point, most offshore cruising
boats were heavy and slow and not all that fun to
sail.
The
"U" shaped galley was a must on our list,
the proper forward facing and really usable nav
station which would hold a large compliment of
navigation equipment, was also at the top, as was a
real double berth on which fitted sheets could be
used. We wanted a traditional layout and Bobs
concept of performance was critical, as it fit our
desires like a glove. All of these ideas eventually
evolved into the VALIANT 40.
With
the collapse of the "concrete era", both
Nathan and Bob soon found themselves unemployed.
Nathan suggested the we have Bob Perry work all of
our ideas into a design, as we all had the same
thoughts and dreams. Our parameter for performance
was that it had to sail equally as well as our
Islander 36’. Hull shapes were tossed around,
other Seattle friends, Mary and Bill Black, Steve
Murphy and Darryl McNabb started hanging over our
shoulders looking at the ensuing plans and we began
hearing "yes, we would also be really
interested in this boat". So it was that all
four of us were interested in the same type of
cruising yacht!!! Bob was young, hugely creative in
his yacht designs and a great friend. We had talked
about what had disappointed us in other boats, threw
ideas around and spent so very many hours aboard our
Islander 36 and a few local cafes, drawing, erasing,
talking, laughing and never thinking
Valiant Yachts would be born!
Having
been influenced by Scandinavian fishing boats and
other double enders which we were used to seeing in
the Pacific North West, some of which were off the
board of another great local yacht designer, William
Garden, we were greatly impressed with the cover of
a Soundings magazine that Nathan brought to the
cafe’ one morning. Nathan asked if we would be
interested in a boat that looked like this. It was
beautiful !!! "Holga Dansk" was the name
of the boat and she had the most beautiful hull
design we had ever seen. We were struck with
lightening it seemed, we had the inside lines we
wanted and now there she was, a hull design and
styling we just had to have...now we had a decision
to make...that was easy, but how and where do a
bunch of kids build a boat. (Later at the Miami Boat
Show in 1975 I think, where Nathan, Stanley and I
were introducing VALIANT to the world, we had some
"big time boating big whig" come to our
booth, where we had drawings and a projector with
slides of what we were doing in the boatbuilding
industry! His comment, which we have never forgotten
was that we were the "cutest kids I’ve ever
seen, the boat looks pretty nice, but you will never
make it...you can’t just start a company like
that!!!). Back then, we didn’t know better. Nathan
was unemployed at the time, Linda, Nathans
girlfriend was working at my brothers flower shop
for low pay, Jay Benfords Ferrocement production
company was out of business, and Bob Perry was
unemployed as well. We all were pretty motivated to
take some action.
Since
Nathan’s great love and experience was in
boatbuilding and since he was out of work and also
knowing we were in the market for a good offshore
yacht, he asked if he could build a boat for us, and
as we were totally tied up in the printing business,
Stanley said "yes, wonderful, why not",
since we had all talked so often about what
constituted a good boat and we were all kindred
spirits, we knew it would work! Because of the
recent oil crisis at that time, the big question was
where would he ever get resin, an oil byproduct? It
was the height of the oil shortage by this time, a
time when we took turns filling each others cars up
in the gas lines, a feat that sometimes took all
day, if we were tending to three or four cars. The
oil shortage meant of course, no resins for
fiberglass boats...something that impacted our lives
greatly over the next few months.
Being
a native of Seattle and an avid sailor by now,
Stanley suggested that since there were so very many
powerboat builders in the Northwest, who were not
currently building many fuel guzzling powerboats,
that Nathan should visit some of them such as
Bayliner, Tollycraft, Reinell and Uniflite and see
if they would sell resin to us. Uniflite had in fact
built sailboats in the past, the very beautiful and
famous yawls for the Annapolis Naval Academy.
Nathan
took out his earring, got a haircut, put on a suit,
shined his shoes, and then hit the road looking for
resin. He went only 90 miles north of Seattle, but
he was gone for several days. We were worried,
excited and VERY apprehensive, thinking that all
those companies might not have the resins we needed.
Nathan had no luck until he hit the Uniflite
factory. Nathan phoned with the "good news AND
the bad news". Yes, Uniflite had resin, but
rather than sell us the resin, they wanted to build
yachts for us. That was better than good news, we
were elated. The bad news was that Nathan had signed
a contract with Uniflite to build 12 of these
yachts. Remember, there were only three for certain,
and possibly a fourth who wanted a boat built. That
he had signed such a contract wasn’t just bad
news...it was just terrible news. Now funding had to
be found and a whole bunch of "never before
seen boats" had to be built and sold.
A
meeting was arranged with all of us. Having been a
marketing Manager for Xerox in his "Corporate
life", Stanley’s background was in product
and marketing development. Originally, the name
Voyager Yachts was chosen. Nathan had a couple of
very artistic friends, Michael and Marsha Burns, who
drew up the logo of the VY with the star in the
middle and we all loved the logo. We were really
dismayed when we found out that name was already
taken, so it was decided that we should keep the
logo, it was pretty and looked good from both sides
of a sail, so we had to work a name around it.
Nathan suggested and it seemed suitable, to name
this beautiful yacht after an America’s cup boat
and VALIANT YACHTS was born.
We
opened a tiny office on Lake Union in Seattle,
Nathan moved to Bellingham for a year to oversee the
building of the tooling and boat production He would
be the President of Valiant Yachts, Stanley would
become the Vice President and would take over
marketing and sales and Stanley would take Wednesday
off from our printing company every week and come
into this tiny office, write ads, put together
brochures, which we would print in our printing shop
and try to sell the other nine Valiants. For
funding, we turned to a mutual friend, Jeff Brotman,
who was able to secure an S.B.A. loan. Later Jeff
founded COSTCO, so undoubtedly we had gone to the
right source for startup advice and help. With the
completion of the tooling and the launching of the
first boat, the prototype, Stanley came to work as
the Vice President full time, later selling our
printing company and we all then became totally
immersed in the boating business.
Soon
after leaving Benfords, Bob found work in the
environs of Dick Carter near Boston, Massachusetts,
whose design and yacht building organization was the
hot design house of the era, having his designs win
world one-ton championships, as well as impressive
wins on the SORC. Bob was confident that he could
incorporate the current performance design
parameters of the time, within a comfortable
performance cruising yacht. It still had to sail as
well as our Islander 36! Thus, the era of the
performance cruising yacht was born. And
Interestingly enough, the Valiant 40 hull form, that
today is called the Valiant 42, is exactly the same
hull form that was originally laid down by Bob Perry
in 1973, with the exception of an evolved keel
design. The Valiant 40 became an instant success and
we had eight boats on order by the time the first
Valiant was launched. It is said that the Valiant
40/42 has been in non-stop production longer than
any comparable yacht, a true testimony to its
timeless design.
By
1978, we were selling and building some 50 Valiants
a year, including the Valiant 40, Valiant 32 and the
Esprit 37, which later became the Valiant 37 and
then evolved into the Valiant 39. With the success
of this new performance cruiser, Valiant became the
hot cruising boat of the era, attracting
enthusiastic fans and supporters. During that time,
there was a man, who continually came into our
Valiant office in Seattle. Remember, our only goal
had been and was, to go cruising, so we were ready
for some changes and what followed was the perfect
opportunity for us to get on our way. Dane Nelson
(he had 13 children), had come into the office
repeatedly and asked us to build a Pilot house
Valiant. Stanley’s constant response, tongue in
cheek, was that "it will never happen unless
you buy the company". As it turned out,
sometime later, he and his partner, Sam Dick, did
buy Valiant and the name of the company became,
Valiant Yachts, owned by Sam Dick Industries.
Uniflite was still building the boats, except for
the Esprit 37.
After
10 Pilot House Valiants were built and both Sam Dick
and Dane Nelson each owned a Pilot House Valiant,
Sam Dick Industries then sold to Uniflite, later to
become Chris Craft. Somewhere around 1982/83,
Valiant was bought by the present owner. He built
several Valiants somewhere in South Seattle and then
moved production to Texas. By then, we were out
cruising, chartering and brokering boats until we
took a direct hit from Hurricane Hugo in 1989.
After
Hurricane Hugo, we shipped "Native Sun" to
the Valiant Factory for a proposed six month
remanufacturing. The owner of Valiant yachts asked
Stanley if he could help Valiant with marketing and
sales, and so it was, that through 1994, once again,
Stanley was the Marketing Manager of Valiant Yachts
and I was asked to become Manger of Customer
Services. It was wonderful watching Valiant grow
again and change for the better and we enjoyed the
excitement of once again meeting with fellow Valiant
owners and lots of the old owners who came through
the Valiant doors. After four and a half years in
Texas, we realized that a lot of valuable time had
slipped by and we realized we needed to be back by
salt water. We moved our company back to salt water
and opened Offshore Atlantic Yachts in Annapolis and
Florida. We were Valiant factory dealers up to 1996
and in 1997, after a bad winter, with five feet of
snow in our driveway, we decided to move back to
Florida, a much more salubrious climate, where we
once had our Valiant office, some 18 years ago.
"NATIVE
SUN" is a "Good Old Boat" as a work
in progress. With current technology and access to
every part we could ever imagine to build a boat, we
know that though she is 25 years old, she is a
timeless classic. We continue to schedule projects
on her as time and money allow. We are only one
story of so very many we see every day in our office
and in our marina. There are a lot of stories and a
lot of "Good Old Boats". The reasons
people continue to love and work on these boats are
as varied as your imagination. Ours is a story of
the love of our boat, a hurricane and a long term
commitment. Others, are being able to buy a boat
which would be unaffordable to an owner as new, to
invest time and sweat equity to realize a yacht
which will take them anywhere they dream, others are
family boats with years of memories and there are
many more stories yet to be told.
Our
valiant story is about how a group of young,
idealist and enthusiastic people can come together
with a lot of creative energy and can develop
something "special". In the beginning, we
had no idea that this new and "radical
boat" would become known as a
"classic", 25 years later...truly a
"Good Old Boat".
Valiant
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