The Wayfarer is a wooden or fibreglass hulled fractional Bermuda rigged sailing dinghy of great versatility; used for short 'day boat' trips, longer cruises and for racing. Over 11,000 have been produced as of 2016.
Walloping Window Blind
Wanderer - sail No W48, the open sailing dinghy of the Wayfarer class that Frank Dye sailed to Iceland in 1963 and Norway in 1964. Now in UK National Maritime museum, Falmouth, Cornwall.
Wooden Wayfarer
MK II Wayfarer dinghy on Derwentwater, Cumbria.
Dinghy sailing is the activity of sailing small boats by using five essential controls:the sails
the foils
the trim
side-to-side balance of the dinghy by hiking or movement of the crew, particularly in windy weather
the choice of route
A Contender dinghy on a broad reach.
A Musto Performance Skiff dinghy on the reach
A 49er skiff in a race
Names of sailing dinghy parts