morsimon
Member
For your first boat, a 55 footer is big and a will be a handful, even assuming you have a good crew and the boat is well set up for short handed sailing. The Swans are racers or cruiser racers with big, high performance rigs, deep keels and decks usually laid out for large crews. The accommodation similarly tends to be designed for racing crews and although the quality of built is excellent the accommodation layout is not always ideal for a husband and wife with or without family and friends.
Jenbenbavs are designed for family cruising and, although less bespoke and hand finished, are built for the job. In particular, because of the charter market influence, ventilation and all fresco living is specifically catered for. HalNajMalSwe boats as well as Arconas, CRs and other (eg Wauquiez from France, Discovery and Oyster from Britain) are top quality and designed for short handed cruising.
For your first cruising boat I would recommend you look a bit smaller (say 40 to 45ft, 50ft max) and second hand. After two or three seasons you will have learned a lot, both about sailing biggish boats and what sort of sailing, and therefore type of boat, you really want. In this context the BenJenBav brigade have a lot to offer. On the other hand you are clearly a man of discernment who wants something a bit above average so an HR, Najad or Malo might suit you better.
I would not recommend a big Swan as a first cruising boat under any circumstances although after a few years you may decide that really is want you want.
jamesjermain- thank you for your well-considered post.
I do appreciate that 50+ ft is a lot of yacht although I believe (am told) that the Swan 53 is specifically set up for short-handed sailing and can be easily managed by 2 people, obviously I stand to be corrected on this. I understand that many of the Nautor Swan range is much more racing-orientated. My recent bareboats have been for Moorings 51 ft yachts which I have felt quite confortable with - however your point is well made.
Also many thanks for not infering that there is something unacceptable in trying to talk about semi-custom yachts and production boats at the same time - if you are not a permanent offshore cruiser then they serve a similar purpose to get you from A to B and hopefully back again in reasonable comfort and safety. From having read these forums for some time there does seem to be a strange elitism that haunts a number of posters - my point has simply been that the mass production builders do give you a lot of boat and functionality for a relatively small outlay when compared to semi-custom builders.
I have considered Wauquiez and Discovery although I didnt feel that the latter was right for me in terms of the accomodation layout. The former still remains a possibility.
Your advice is probably confirming what I have known all along but have not really wanted to admit to ie go for a secondhand Jenbenbav now, enjoy the sunshine sailing in the Med for a couple of summers and then reconsider my options and priorities. The Swan 53 is such a beautiful boat though that I do hanker for just going out and buying one right NOW. We live in an age of compulsive purchasing and instant gratification I guess. (I am not of course about to go out and buy one).
Having caught the sailing bug some time ago it doesnt change the fact that aesthetics are very important to me. I drive a nice-looking Italian car and would like a nice-looking boat. I dont think that there is anything wrong with that. I am very fortunate to be in a position where I have these difficult decisions to make !
Is your suggestion to go for secondhand also based upon the commissioning and snagging
hassles that go along with a new boat purchase or do you have other reasons for pointing me in that direction ?
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