Halberg Rassey 31

The V27 will do exactly what you want, cruise further afield and in retirement you will have the time to do it. I took mine to most of the Atlantic coast of France down to La Rochelle and once to Vigo. ( just because I wanted to, I had to return two days after I had arrived ) all in my 3 week annual holidays. The 27 is ideally suited to single handing being a comfortable if sedate passage maker.
 
Vancouver .. Nicholson .... boats of that range are excellent boats but of course 'cramped' compared to later 'floating caravans' ..... but which would you prefer to be in when sh** hits the fan ?

My 1973 Sunrider 25 ... I would trust that boat in far worse weather conditions than many of todays larger boats ...

As to HR .....

There's Halberg Rassy and there's other boats .... and I say that having surveyed quite a few ... mostly the older.
 
The V27 will do exactly what you want, cruise further afield and in retirement you will have the time to do it. I took mine to most of the Atlantic coast of France down to La Rochelle and once to Vigo. ( just because I wanted to, I had to return two days after I had arrived ) all in my 3 week annual holidays. The 27 is ideally suited to single handing being a comfortable if sedate passage maker.
Suspect OP knows all that - but he has clearly stated his reasons for considering a change.
 
… The 27 is ideally suited to single handing being a comfortable if sedate passage maker.
The HR 31 will be equally good for single handing. The key as ever is a bullet proof autopilot, good sail controls ideally led aft - and preferably easy and predictable manoeuvring under engine. And the HR is probably heavier and steadier in a sea than a 27 footer.

It is a fallacy, IMHO, that a smaller boat necessarily makes easy for single handing - certainly up to about 12m the extra stability and better systems often make a slightly bigger boat easier to handle underway.
And the HR 31 is still compact - similar size to Concerto’s Fulmar which covered a few miles.
 
The things that would put me off the HR31 would be
1 -the Fractional rig as I always prefer masthead rig for cruising
2 - Sail drive - somewhere suspicious of having a great big hole in the hole sealed with a rubber gasket
3 - sloop rather than the versatility of a cutter rig for instance ability to sail with staysail rather than furled Genoa in strong winds
4 - some people say more modern in terms of hull and keel design but despite their detractor there are still advantages in a long keel design for single handing and seakindlyness

Ok I am biased as I own and sail a Vancouver and have covered many miles including ocean crossings, space and storage is not an issue particularly if you are single handed
 
The things that would put me off the HR31 would be
1 -the Fractional rig as I always prefer masthead rig for cruising
2 - Sail drive - somewhere suspicious of having a great big hole in the hole sealed with a rubber gasket
3 - sloop rather than the versatility of a cutter rig for instance ability to sail with staysail rather than furled Genoa in strong winds
4 - some people say more modern in terms of hull and keel design but despite their detractor there are still advantages in a long keel design for single handing and seakindlyness

Ok I am biased as I own and sail a Vancouver and have covered many miles including ocean crossings, space and storage is not an issue particularly if you are single handed
1 and 3 go together.

By going for a fractional rig you necessarily get a smaller and easier to handle jib. What I singularly fail to see is the attraction of for shorthanded coastal / channel sailing is a big overlapping jib that requires lot of grinding. That has never made any sense to me.
 
1 and 3 go together.

By going for a fractional rig you necessarily get a smaller and easier to handle jib. What I singularly fail to see is the attraction of for shorthanded coastal / channel sailing is a big overlapping jib that requires lot of grinding. That has never made any sense to me.

Hear Hear .... I say this many times - get rid of those huge gennys ..... they usually are not actually giving that increase as thought ... for cruising - have a more manageable foresail ...

My 38ft racer .... the self-tacker is maybe maximum 0.5kts less when cruising - but Oh Boy what a better setup than faffing about with overlapping gennys ...
 
1 and 3 go together.

By going for a fractional rig you necessarily get a smaller and easier to handle jib. What I singularly fail to see is the attraction of for shorthanded coastal / channel sailing is a big overlapping jib that requires lot of grinding. That has never made any sense to me.
The OP hasn't said what he means by further afield. Coming from the Solent, I assume that he may want to go to, say, Southern Brittany, Ireland or the Baltic, for which the HR and other boats mentioned would be ideal. Modern mainsail gear means that a large main is no handicap, and even reefing is only a minute's work in the cockpit. By all means have a ketch/long keel if you wish, but 20% added to the time taken will be significant for many, and much modern cruising consists of fast hops from one harbour to the next. If the 31 is anything like my 34, the motion should be comfortable for a boat if its size, and with little tendency to slam. It is not the sort of boat where you can leave the helm and go and make a cup of tea and come back to find it doing the same course, but the helm should be light and steady and take to an autopilot readily.

Saildrives have advantages to offset the servicing needs, such as much smoother running and a deeper bite in the water, that won't lose grip in rough seas, and have been around for long enough to any fears about sinking to have been well answered. Less prop walk in many installations can also be a benefit.
 
1 and 3 go together.

By going for a fractional rig you necessarily get a smaller and easier to handle jib. What I singularly fail to see is the attraction of for shorthanded coastal / channel sailing is a big overlapping jib that requires lot of grinding. That has never made any sense to me.
A Vancouver doesn't have a big overlapping jib it has a high cut yankee.
 
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