Wilderness Boat Works (also known as Wilderness Yachts) was an American boat manufacturing company in Santa Cruz, California producing hand laid fiberglass monohull masthead sloops. They produced three boat designs, the 21 foot, 30 foot, and 40 foot Wilderness.
Run by Lynn Daugherty and John Josephs, the shop opened in the 1970s, first producing the Wilderness 21. Wilderness Boat Works closed their doors in the late 1980s. Their facilities were located at 2473 Mission Street in Santa Cruz[1]
The Wilderness 21 (W21) was manufactured as a one piece hand laminated fiberglass hull, that was offered in 16 colors, with a one piece, balsa core, sandwich laminated deck, interior teak floors and African brunzeel mahogany bulkhead. Wilderness Boat Works first made the Wilderness 21 in 1978.[2]
The Wilderness 21, later remanufactured as the Burns 21, was designed by Chuck Burns and first produced by shipbuilder Lynn Daugherty and John Josephs of Wilderness Boat Works of Santa Cruz, in California. There were about eighty made. The W21 was billed as a lightweight boat with a fine entry and high prismatic coefficient for speed and easy surfing in swell.
Burns recalls "2 W-21s sailed in the single-handed race from San Francisco to Kauai and the most notorious W-21 was Little Rascal sailed by Amy Boyer to victory in the women's division of the Mini-Transat race from Penzance England to Tenerife (Canary Islands) and thence to Antigua, West Indies."
In 1978, various Wilderness won races, including:
The Wilderness 21 was produced into 1987.
The Wilderness 30' was designed by Chuck Burns and first manufactured in 1979.[5] The 30 had several sail-plan configurations, the 30, 30 IB, 30 SX, and 30 SX FR.[6]
The Wilderness 40' was designed by Gary Mull and first Produced in 1980 and was the only boat manufactured by Wilderness Boat Works to include an onboard engine, originally a Yanmar diesel.[9]