macca499
Well-Known Member
I think sometimes people just get fed up with boats/never ending costs and want them gone at any price or ill health/old age/death prevents them from sorting the boat before sale. I recently viewed a Bavaria 33 in Scotland which took my fancy, there was a brand new oven/hob sitting in a box in the saloon to be fitted and a selection of used chartplotters sitting on the dining table to replace the faulty chartplotter at the helm. I did wonder why someone wouldn't just do these relatively small and cheap jobs before listing then after speaking to the broker, realised the chap had suffered ill health and just wanted the boat gone. It was a 2006 model listed at slightly more than the boat OP viewed, it would have made a great boat for whoever bought it shortly after with a bit of work.I don’t understand why the owner isn’t paying to get these issues sorted out, and at the very least sticking the running rigging through the washing machine. Always be wary of anyone selling who says “that will only cost about £800 to fix”. In my experience it translates to “the replacement part will be £800+vat”! Similarly brokers must have unusual relationships because a “couple of thousand” actually means three (+vat!). If a job is easy and relatively cheap to do then it makes no sense not to have done it already whilst it is sitting on the hard.
You’ll be surprised - all your friends will now be big boat sailing friends! Most of my friends have never sailed at all or perhaps sailed a dinghy on a Neilson holiday but will happily join us and get involved - the trick is not to scare them.
Edit - when I think back to my recent boat search, nearly every boat I viewed from 20 year old to 5 year old showed signs of neglect and the owner giving up on it at some stage