Aeolus
Well-Known Member
...... and I was well into my 80th decade when I bought it......
You should change your forum name to Methuselah!!
...... and I was well into my 80th decade when I bought it......
Sometimes I feel like that!You should change your forum name to Methuselah!!
That is precisely why each individual has to weigh up the pros and cons based on their own individual circumstances. In my case I simply would not be able to sail the boats I would like to own without one. If one is unable to reliably get in and out of ones berth in a range of conditions then a boat is a static caravan eating up money. My last boat was a new Bavaria 33 and I was well into my 8th decade when I bought it so specified everything that a lifetime sailing suggested was useful for ease of sailing singlehanded and that of course included a bow thruster. Not always necessary nor used, but there when needed. Can't say I noticed any significant loss of performance, but if there was, so what? Not difficult to to provide the power for it if the electrics system was designed properly.
Change of tack now and Bavaria has been replaced by a boat with the same characteristics as the OP and others here. Could not have considered owning such a boat without a bow thruster. While the Bavaria turned well and steered well in reverse it had huge windage and the main use for thruster was keeping the bow under control in a crosswind and from blowing off the pontoon while getting lines on board, the new boat turns slowly and steers unreliably astern, but with a long deep keel and lowish freeboard does not get blown around so thruster is used mainly to make a tighter turn (I reverse into the berth) and get the boat straight for reversing.
Its great of you do a lot of sailing and have a reliable crew a you can work up your techniques to deal with all sorts of situations, but for people like me who want to be able to sail without relying on anybody else you look for anything that makes things easier, or indeed makes owning a boat possible.
With no assistance at all it is perfectly possible to come alongside an upwind pontoon and hold the boat there while lines are secured - provided you can lassoo to attach the midships clear to the dock, you can then use the spring and propwash off the rudder to hold the bow in at the dock.
Nobody would be more pleased than I to see such skills in use again and to practise them myself, but I'm afraid it isn't going to happen.Perhaps do what they did before all boats had engines. Warping. Position your boat using lines and go from there?
And there would be a boy who was paid a shilling a week who was handy with the rowing dinghy.Nobody would be more pleased than me to see such skills in use again and to practise them myself, but I'm afraid it isn't going to happen.
Before boats had engines:
- there were no marinas,
- harbours had bouys strategically placed to enable sailing craft to be warped into position,
- all but the tiniest of sailing vessels would have a dinghy astern, instantly ready to be used to take lines ashore or to a buoy,
- there would be boatmen willing to assist in return for a tip.
Like it or not, we are where we are : dependent on our auxiliary engines when we get into the confines of a crowded port.