kcrane
Well-Known Member
Having emotionally committed to buying a boat, I've already started thinking about the extras and toys.
At the shows there isn't a garage that hasn't had a Williams pushed in, and the sale guys comment on how much fun they are and how we'll certainly need one.
Um, thinks back....
When we had the catamaran we had a new Lodestar with a 9.8 Tohatsu. Not a flash thing, but for the first 12 months it was shiny and clean and stood out like a sore thumb when you pootled in off the swinging moorings for a night in Yarmouth or amongst the throng outside the Folly.
We tied it up with a long steel wire and a padlock, and used a substantial outboard lock, but it would have been more than easy to cut the wire and just row it away. No-one ever did mind you.
So what do you do with a £20k Williams? Is it a practical way to get to shore in the UK? A blast around the bay a couple of times would be great, but would it be more sensible to have a secondhand rib with a slightly tatty 5-10hp o/b on the back?
At the shows there isn't a garage that hasn't had a Williams pushed in, and the sale guys comment on how much fun they are and how we'll certainly need one.
Um, thinks back....
When we had the catamaran we had a new Lodestar with a 9.8 Tohatsu. Not a flash thing, but for the first 12 months it was shiny and clean and stood out like a sore thumb when you pootled in off the swinging moorings for a night in Yarmouth or amongst the throng outside the Folly.
We tied it up with a long steel wire and a padlock, and used a substantial outboard lock, but it would have been more than easy to cut the wire and just row it away. No-one ever did mind you.
So what do you do with a £20k Williams? Is it a practical way to get to shore in the UK? A blast around the bay a couple of times would be great, but would it be more sensible to have a secondhand rib with a slightly tatty 5-10hp o/b on the back?