Anonymous wrote:
Tell us about the catamaran!
Selling of boats is a funny thing. Sometimes they can be for sale for years before the right buyer comes along. The boat I have just bought is a good example. It had been quietly for sale for years before I came along and snapped it up before anyone else could get their hands on it. It is of a relatively unknown design in New Zealand, and probably for its length has accommodation on the smaller size. But when I saw it for sale it was exactly what I wanted, and was in extremely good condition having been in the same family since a new boat.
So somewhere there will be a buyer for Arion.
The cat is a Simpson design, cedar strip round bottoms with epoxy and kevlar, epoxy saturated ply elsewhere, with a Wharram Tiki sloop rig, all beautifully built in 2004 but a bit scruffy. It was built in Tasmania and sailed north, has cruised the length of the east coast four times. It has lovely buoyant bows and narrow transoms, with stern mounted rudders on skegs. Lots of buoyancy compartments so it cannot sink if holed, two bunks on the bridgedeck, galley, toilet, chart table, etc, in the hulls. I love it but I think I need an offer on Arion before I can proceed. If Arion does not sell I will be in a real pickle financially, possibly lose both boats if there was even a minor problem, like one of the boats dragging ashore while I was on the other (I would have to keep them both at anchor because I couldn't afford mooring fees.) I may miss out on the cat, which will be unfortunate, as I think it ideal for me. But right now, I am very comfortable financially for an old vagabond. I think in a few weeks I will take Arion back out of the marina I am in in Mooloolaba and go back down into Moreton Bay where I can skulk around, lie on my anchor and save $200 a week from my pension. Hopefully someone will come along who likes junk rig, is not afraid of maintaining an older steel boat, and recognises that there are thousands of dollars worth of first-class gear on board.