EuanMcKenzie
Well-Known Member
elizabethan 29 is stiff and easily driven like a twister and has big overhangs so is more like a stretched folk boat type
I like the look of the Varne Folkboat but finding one could be tricky.
The commodore of our club has a Marcon Cutlass and it seems to be a good and strong boat. Has anyone got one for sale in the Solent area?
I like the look of the Varne Folkboat but finding one could be tricky.
The commodore of our club has a Marcon Cutlass and it seems to be a good and strong boat. Has anyone got one for sale in the Solent area?
Having picked out the various makers so far that have been mentioned, and reading up over the last 2 hrs, I must say,to me the Westerly Tiger beats all as a small cruiser, I do like the Jaguar27, the larger boat for me would be the Catalina at 30 ft, I have a Pandora 700 although I find it very manageable on my own, it is a bit cramped, but has a very high spec,
Pretty boats, large fan club, and reputed to be good sea boats, for which you can read slightly undersailed and not all that quick. Our Hunter used to leave a club Sadler 25 for dead.
Ah. That's why so many of the boats I'm interested in are in Wales or Scotland.
I'm in the fortunate position of having an affordable mooring which should keep a 4' draft boat afloat at all states of tide. Hence thinking about older long keel boats.
I'd expect to make 5+ kts in a F3, and with my new sails, it points very well. If a Sadler 25 was 'left for dead' I'd suspect knackered sails or a dearth of sailing skills.
And the Hunter 27 is really ugly.
And I'm sure that huge coach roof presents a huge amount of windage
I like the look of the Varne Folkboat but finding one could be tricky.
The commodore of our club has a Marcon Cutlass and it seems to be a good and strong boat. Has anyone got one for sale in the Solent area?
Hustler 25.5: fast, stiff, nice looking& not expensive.
The Elizabethan 29 and ( better IMO ) Great Dane are good seaworthy boats, but very narrow gutted, probably have less room inside than my 1973 designed 22' !
Naturally I'm going to respond to that, nothing tubby about any Oliver Lee design; the idea with the A22 as on later lifeboats is the fullish width but low coachroof gives buoyancy when heeled let alone inverted.
You clearly haven't sailed an Anderson 22 or any other Oliver Lee design have you ?!
' Sweet handling ' is the most common comment. ask Jumbleduck on these forums and others
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