Whitelighter
Well-Known Member
I have often wondered whether people suffer a little expectation bias with these things.
I chartered a Botnia Targa 31 for a year and did well over 200 hours on her, all in the north Irish Sea. We used her in all sea states from pretty wonderful to truly horrid.
I bought a Rodman 1250, more space, better side decks, a softer and much drier ride.
As far as whether the Botnia has got the substance to go with its reputation...of course it has!!! Seeing as we're on the YBW forum...has anybody read the boat reports?? Are they all wrong when they regard Targa as one of the best sea boats money can buy?!!
Sorry about the rant there!! But if anybody has been lucky enough to go out on a Targa in a sea...like I have...they will understand.
but now thinking that with the botnia we could just make shorter, easier work of a bumby crossing..)
Thanks in advance
I think to answer your question IMHO a BT will make shorter easier work of it.
We had a BT 35 for 2 years and found her a very confidence inspiring boat which I was more than happy to take the wife and kids away on in allsorts. We are based in the Clyde and took her to Ireland, round the Mull of Kintyre North to Tobermory "Round Mull", Iona Corryverckan, Grey Dogs blah Blah.
Great seakeeping boat ability to outrun or run around nasty weather, very safe on deck and plenty power. Folk used to ask what speed does she plane at - the answer is there wasn't one - differrent from a lot of other motorboats which want to stick their nose in the air half the time. We frequently passed other motorboats making heavier work of choppy conditions and were only one passed ourselves - by a bigger Targa !
If you can get over the utilitarian looks and the somewhat spartan accomodation (the new ones are a lot better) they are extremely well built (hence the price) and yachties dont tend to hate them so much (!) we sold ours after two years for not much less than we paid for her.
~Galps:
I found the Targa far too hard a ride in the rough sea, being a planing hull, and really wanting to be on the plane regardless of sea state. If not on the plane, you really needed to be down to displacement speeds, did not seem to be any happy middle option.
.. I think you should concentrate on normal boating use. Now, if your normal boating use is setting off into the eye of a storm and that is the thing your wife and kids think is huge fun- hour after hour being scared sh*tless, I think the Targa is probably better.
However, if you expect 95% of your boating is going to be in the kind of conditions that almost every other motorboater chooses to venture out into, then I think the swift trawler will suit.
Yes, you can get caught out, of course, but most people think is nicer to stay in port and wait (especially when wives and kids are along) if the weather is lousy.
As someone else said, it is pretty physical being smashed about at sea, however good the boat.
And just in case it is you who falls ill and gets injured, your wife can take the helm and get you all home safely?
+1
It is about meeting your personal preferences. Nice to know that your boat will do great in one or the other condition, but a bit wrong to accept a bunch of compromises on that account if you never get to use it.
As mentioned before the Safehaven Interceptor series will cope with 'anything'. Impressed but personally wouldn't get any value from that kind of abilities (since I'd avoid going out in it) and definitely would not be able to justify the cost etc.
Check the beautiful balance at 2:14 and 2:54
Back to the drawing board
The other four hulls tested were commercially available hull forms – from an Irish design commonly used as a pilot boat to the unusually shaped French 'Le Beak' design, But extensive trials showed that the experimental boat's hull was the wrong shape for the extreme conditions we ask our lifeboats to take on.
In rough weather, the boat slammed heavily into the troughs of waves when travelling into prevailing seas. There was also a severe side-to-side rolling motion, giving the ride a 'corkscrew' effect.
Crew safety is paramount, and so in 2007 it was back to the drawing board; taking what we'd learned from the experimental boat and finding a hull shape that would perform in all conditions.
Dream of a lifeboat?
http://commercial.apolloduck.co.uk/feature.phtml?id=341781
Of course you will need to fit her out for comfort yourself.