Absents of Proper rigging.

  • 03 Nov 2014 03:11
    Reply # 3139293 on 3138863
    Ben wrote:you can get a great old boat for next to nothing, fix her up and sail the world for two years.......and still have 100,000 left over in the bank, compared to the cost of a boat show boat.
    And the rest, Ben.  And you'd never need to go out to work again. 
  • 02 Nov 2014 01:57
    Reply # 3138863 on 3125402
    Deleted user

    I find it alarming how marketing has managed to convince the masses that you need a  55' boat for a cruising couple. The interior looks like a hotel room.....no handholds anywhere and not many fiddles of reasonable size. Seriously....you plan to try and sleep in that bunk in a seaway? Thumbing through CW is page after page of big complicated boats.

    The used boat market is overflowing with reasonably sized and priced alternatives.If you are handy at the most basic levels, if you can read and research how to do something on the internet, you can get a great old boat for next to nothing, fix her up and sail the world for two years.......and still have 100,000 left over in the bank, compared to the cost of a boat show boat.



  • 20 Oct 2014 00:26
    Reply # 3127245 on 3125402
    Corey - lest you feel you are a voice crying in the wilderness! 

    It's sad how less interesting boats have become over the past couple of decades.  I wonder if it's because new boats are well beyond the pocket of normal, working-class people?  This, in conjunction with the fashion for ever-larger boats (and the effective discrimination against small boats, where everything is charged by length, rather than area required/displacement) means that only the wealthy have any influence on new boat design.  Almost by definition, these people have very little experience: they have decided to take up 'yachting' on a bit of a whim, rather than buying a new boat as a logical move to 'upgrade' after owning several other boats.  Now that boats are treated more like motor cars - a depreciating asset - rather than like a house - an appreciating asset, reflecting improvements made to a long-lived product, no-one would regard it as an act of anything other than financial folly, to buy a brand-new boat from a Boat Show.

    However, it's very sad to see all the interesting, characterful little boats replaced by bland mega-yachts, trumpeting en suites and microwave as standard as being desirable attributes for a sea-going vessel.  At least browsing through the photos of members' boats on this website restores one's faith in human nature!

  • 16 Oct 2014 17:34
    Message # 3125402
    Deleted user

    I was at the Annapolis sailboat show this past weekend.  Not a junk rig to be found.  So few designs with any real character.   Well at least they were sailboats. 

       " ...there is nothing - absolutely nothing - half so much worth doing as simply messing about in junk-rigged boats" 
                                                               - the Chinese Water Rat

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