Cost of cruising 1960 v 2015

I wonder what it would have cost to buy the boat in those days.

They paid £3300 to have the boat custom built in 1950. Adding on 50% for fitting out that comes to just under £5000. Something like £300000 today, for a 30-footer. The advertised "on the water" price for a Beneteau Oceanis 31 is just over £86000. If you add 50% for fully outfitting it, it's still about half the price.
 
If you allow £20 per day for mooring fees today, that leaves £43 for food, entertainment and boat bits. We certainly spend less than that, but it's not an outrageous sum, surely?

Pardon me but if spending £20 daily for mooring fees plus £43 for food, entertainment (and boat bits?) also every day what kind of 'cruising' is it? With respect, it seems more like a floating pub-crawl between marinas. What's wrong with anchoring and cooking on board?
 
Pardon me but if spending £20 daily for mooring fees plus £43 for food, entertainment (and boat bits?) also every day what kind of 'cruising' is it? With respect, it seems more like a floating pub-crawl between marinas. What's wrong with anchoring and cooking on board?
Nothing at all. But there are many, many who sail or motor from Marina to marina, eat out and visit hostelries. It's a perfectly legitimate way to cruise. Not for me, but to each his own.
 
Surely in comparing lifestyles, the Hiscocks seem to have a more frugal existence and marinas/ paid anchorages etc didn't happen.
 
I know from the builder that Paean (24 footer) was sold to her first owner for £875 in 1961. At that time it was the same as one year salery of the Doctor who borght her.

Today a GP earns about the same as a new 35 foot AWB. About 100k I believe.
 
Today a GP earns about the same as a new 35 foot AWB. About 100k I believe.

That's a partner GP, and they got a huge (~40%) payrise under New Labour in return for not doing out-of-hours work any more. Yeah, I know - a lot more money for doing a lot less. Nice work if you can get it. Grumping aside, doctors' salaries have been very anomalous, and don't make a good basis for comparison.
 
That's a partner GP, and they got a huge (~40%) payrise under New Labour in return for not doing out-of-hours work any more. Yeah, I know - a lot more money for doing a lot less. Nice work if you can get it. Grumping aside, doctors' salaries have been very anomalous, and don't make a good basis for comparison.

Fair enough. I'm no economist - if I was I'd never have "invested" in MAB :)
 
FWIW, I was on 1k pa by 1970 & thought I was made for life, my house cost £3k but I couldn't have afforded a boat on that. We got our first boat (£5k) in 1980 when an insurance policy matured. Moorings were self laid & free.

Incidentally, £1k pa was the salary for a Policeman or a Teacher at the time, both of which were "good jobs".
 
It doesn't surprise me that certain things are more affordable today compared to 1960........... Cars , flights, holidays, televisions and , it seems, boats.
(I am not including houses).

Perhaps, in 1960 , food was more expensive ?

.
 
It doesn't surprise me that certain things are more affordable today compared to 1960........... Cars , flights, holidays, televisions and , it seems, boats.
(I am not including houses).

Perhaps, in 1960 , food was more expensive ?

.

Dunno about 1960, but in 1969-70 we were spending £8 per week on our weekly shop for a couple & we felt we were living well. Our mortgage was about £24pm, about 1/4 of my salary.
 
So, allowing for the figures being estimates, it's perhaps fair to say that it's possible to go long-term cruising today for less money than the Hiscocks spent in 1960, even allowing for things like mooring fees. The money saved on buying the boat would finance a lot of voyaging. I would have expected the opposite.
 
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