Yachting World has named Swallow as one of the world’s coolest yachts, as nominated by offshore sailor Nikki Henderson, the youngest ever Clipper Around the World Race skipper.

Sophie Neville and Stephen Grendon in Swallows & Amazons (1974). (Click to enlarge)

“For my most influential boat, my mind drifted to the story of Swallows and Amazons, which gripped me as a child,” Nikki Henderson recalls.

Arthur Ransome’s much-loved tale of children who set out in their dinghy Swallow to colonise an island was published in 1930. It has been adapted for television and film, although Henderson favours the original text which was a childhood inspiration.

“Having resisted the lure of watching the film productions, the boat still remains a picture in my mind, so I cannot say much to her appearance, construction or speed apart from that she is small, well proportioned, and playful.

“Like people, I believe boats have an aura, or a personality. To me, she is so representational of the best parts of our sport: adventure, freedom, and independence, motivated by an innocent childlike curiosity. Inspirational yet grounding.”

Both the original Swallows and Amazons book and the story of the 1974 film – The Making of Swallows and Amazons – are available from the Nancy Blackett Shop, in support of the work of the Nancy Blackett Trust.