Tally Ho (yacht)

Seven years later, in June 2024, with the restoration nearly complete, Tally Ho sailed in the open water of Port Townsend Bay.

[2][7][8] The yacht crossed the finish under heavy conditions, 52 minutes after the John G. Alden–designed 30-ton schooner La Goleta, but won the race on corrected time.

While being floated with empty oil drums, Tally Ho rolled over, and in the process lost its mast, bowsprit, and rudder.

[10] Facing difficulties in their refit plans, in June 2017, the Association sold Tally Ho to English boatbuilder and sailor Leo Sampson Goolden for $1.

[12][13] In 2021, Clallam County required Goolden to apply for a conditional use permit, as the location where the boat restoration work was taking place was not zoned for that activity.

[4] Goolden has announced plans to sail Tally Ho back to Britain in time to compete in the 2027 instance of the Fastnet race, the centenary of its original win.

Tally Ho , in white and red, in the Port Townsend Boatyard