Thanks Ade! It's not going to put me off going to Carsington! I can't wait to get her on the water. I'll make a rough repair for the time being and lok to do something more permanent over the winter.
Stom,
watch out about temp repairs, they have a habit of becoming permanent repairs. Particularly with a Kevlar boat each time you sand into the structure you will increase the footprint of the repair.
First establish how bad the crack is: Does the side tank leak through it? Can you flex the area (floor and tank) and make the crack open and close? If it is close to the shrouds does the crack open with rig tension (bounce on the forestay while someone has a finger on the crack)
If the results of all this are OK, then it is probably cosmetic and can wait till the winter. Draw on the end of the crack with a permanent marker so you know if it is growing.
If you to find problems with the above tests then it needs to be fixed. Investigate and find the problem, a stanly knife is good cut through the laminate on the open side of the crack and find out what is there. There is a good chance that when it was built the panels were probably assembled with a filet, and then tape put over the joint. It looks a bit like that filet and tape joint has cracked away from the panel. That broken joint needs to be removed, a patch over the top will be hard to seal. By cutting away with a knife and chisel you can probably get the broken stuff off without exposing too much kevlar.