eddystone
Well-Known Member
It's not the suffering that we wish to impose on the young, though goodness knows, they deserve it, but the experience of manoeuvring a small craft which is light enough to be blown about by the slightest puff of wind, but also light enough to fend itself off with just a hand put out without risk of injury or damage.
Not entirely sure about that - some years ago a fellow parent unwisely got his hand between an out of control Topper and a stone set in an attempt to stop it mounting the shore - and spent the rest of the day in A&E - just saying even a small dinghy can have a surprising amount of kinetic energy.
Anyway, back to the theme, I think I still regard a Mirror Offshore as entry-level and the Centaur as aspirational. I seem to remember the brochure for the Mirror actually using the word "luxury" - Mum and Dad can sleep in the spacious saloon and the kids in the cockpit under the tent sort of thing. This has now started me thinking how on earth my parents and 3 biggish boys and luggage managed in an Austin 7 (Mini) in the 1960's.
During some further procrastination from the job in hand, I've found a new benchmark for "entry-level". That is apparently how Maclaren describe their new M570 C sports car at a mere £149,000. Entry level being relative to the P1 at c£1M or the track version at a cool £1.9M. So you could imagine the Oyster or Discovery salesman pointing out what a value proposition their latest 60 footer is - "But Sir, some cars cost more than this!"