Anonymous wrote:
Green-ness? Ecology? The only sustainable answer is to consume less. If we want to be "green", we'd better not cut down trees and stick their timbers together with synthetic resins, then make sails out of synthetic materials. In fact, we'd better just make coracles and kayaks with wicker frames and natural fibre or animal skins.
All of which has nothing to do with the choice of auxiliary for this boat, which decision needs to be based on convenience, cost, availability and suchlike factors. There is no "green" solution. Or rather the only "green" solution would be to have no auxiliary at all.
But David, it isn't a case of either/or, and presenting it this way is what makes people despair about having any power at all, over their chance to stop things getting worse.
No-one is suggesting that you go around naked. However, go and see if you can find what you are looking for second-hand, before buying new. As I mentioned, ecological overshoot is at least as important as reducing carbon but no-one is discussing it. If you buy something already existing, then at least you have used no more resources to keep you warm or whichever example you want to choose. And when you buy, or build, new, try and make something that will last for decades or even longer. I have two woollen jumpers that are both about 50 years old!
Yes, the green solution would be to have no auxiliary at all and I wish I had the mentaility to go with that. The next greenest thing is to avoid using one's engine. Having a smaller boat with a sail and a low horsepower engine is a better alternative to a twin-engined launch. None is as good as nothing, but better to try for success and fail now and then rather than give up completely.