Flica
Well-Known Member
I, personally, think it's purely economic.
Millennials can't afford a house, never mind a boat.
My first house, in Reading, cost me £832, in 1967.
I wasn't able to byt a boat, until a bequest from an uncle, in 1972, allowed me to buy a Seal 22 for £3000. Previously I'd crewed for others, on the Solent racing scene.
My current boat, bought in 1990, from the builder, cost me £33K. Being the prototype it had plenty of deliberate mistakes, but the functional specification was correct and it has done me for the last 27 years, over about 40K nautical miles which is about twice round the world (I've never been out of European waters).
In the Eastern Mediterranean, most of the UK owner-cruisers I meet are over 70, the youngsters are all to be found in flotillas and chartering - two ND age peaks, about 28 and 50. Many of the older group are Scots, own boats in the UK, many wish they weren't saddled with their boats (costs and climate). The younger peak are generally non-owners, though many are either co-owners and most race. Many children in this group.
Far more younger cruiser-owners are Dutch, highly sociable, highly competent and many about to or just retired.
Lots of French, especially in the Aegean, highly sociable (if you're a French speaker), a wide age range from early 40's to 80s. I've even met a French member of the RYS.
Italians, like taxes, are always with us - most lemming-like cross the Ionian in August and September, lots of kids, wide wives and always losing anchors. Some are extremely cultured and repay a little cultivation (the oldest owner-cruiser I met was 87 and knew his wines, being Piedmontese). He referred to other Italian power-boat owners as "Roman Mafia".
So I'd say that the cruising scene in the EC is extremely live and growing.
In the UK I perceive an increasing sclerosis and find it only too easy to believe the boat-owning population is decreasing.
Attempted margins in the supply-side are exorbitant - it's cheaper, despite the fall in the £, for me to buy things in Germany, Greece, Italy and even France. Sweden is possibly more expensive than the UK (but moorings cheap) and Switzerland impossibly expensive (because of the value of the Swiss franc).
I suspect that, if we do commit Brexit, UK incomes will continue to fall as will boat-owning.
Millennials can't afford a house, never mind a boat.
My first house, in Reading, cost me £832, in 1967.
I wasn't able to byt a boat, until a bequest from an uncle, in 1972, allowed me to buy a Seal 22 for £3000. Previously I'd crewed for others, on the Solent racing scene.
My current boat, bought in 1990, from the builder, cost me £33K. Being the prototype it had plenty of deliberate mistakes, but the functional specification was correct and it has done me for the last 27 years, over about 40K nautical miles which is about twice round the world (I've never been out of European waters).
In the Eastern Mediterranean, most of the UK owner-cruisers I meet are over 70, the youngsters are all to be found in flotillas and chartering - two ND age peaks, about 28 and 50. Many of the older group are Scots, own boats in the UK, many wish they weren't saddled with their boats (costs and climate). The younger peak are generally non-owners, though many are either co-owners and most race. Many children in this group.
Far more younger cruiser-owners are Dutch, highly sociable, highly competent and many about to or just retired.
Lots of French, especially in the Aegean, highly sociable (if you're a French speaker), a wide age range from early 40's to 80s. I've even met a French member of the RYS.
Italians, like taxes, are always with us - most lemming-like cross the Ionian in August and September, lots of kids, wide wives and always losing anchors. Some are extremely cultured and repay a little cultivation (the oldest owner-cruiser I met was 87 and knew his wines, being Piedmontese). He referred to other Italian power-boat owners as "Roman Mafia".
So I'd say that the cruising scene in the EC is extremely live and growing.
In the UK I perceive an increasing sclerosis and find it only too easy to believe the boat-owning population is decreasing.
Attempted margins in the supply-side are exorbitant - it's cheaper, despite the fall in the £, for me to buy things in Germany, Greece, Italy and even France. Sweden is possibly more expensive than the UK (but moorings cheap) and Switzerland impossibly expensive (because of the value of the Swiss franc).
I suspect that, if we do commit Brexit, UK incomes will continue to fall as will boat-owning.