Chiara’s slave
Well-Known Member
The one I have sailed on has a Macan Turbo in the oak beam garage. I dislike them from a deal of first hand experience.
Macan? Oak Beam garage? C32? Owners of such???The one I have sailed on has a Macan Turbo in the oak beam garage. I dislike them from a deal of first hand experience.
There you go. Not sure a boat exists that covers all the boxes. All boats offer different benifits and have compromises within each design.
A contessa will look after you well in a storm and do little to excite you in calm seas.
Steveeasy
The guy definitely meets runagound’s criteria. Though to be fair to the guy he’s a fairly hardened sailor. He had a Vancouver 29 before. He and us were the only members to show up for a particularly windy and wet club meet/ BBQ.Macan? Oak Beam garage? C32? Owners of such???![]()
It was certainly an aspirational boat when I had a Mystere 26 in the ‘70s but by the time I moved up to a Sadler 29 my mates were buying the Sadler 32 that was in most ways a ‘better’ boat than the Contessa, which slipped off my radar. I’m afraid that although I admire the nerve of anyone building a boat of quality and trying to sell it at that price, it seems to have become more of a rich man’s toy than a serious entry into the cruising market. Fine. I don’t begrudge the rich their toys, but I don’t feel any association with them.
Vancouver 29? Are you sure? I owned a Vancouver 27 for 7 years I think, best boat I’ve sailed ( for my sort of sailing) and if I won the lottery I’d commission a new one in the blink of an eye.The guy definitely meets runagound’s criteria. Though to be fair to the guy he’s a fairly hardened sailor. He had a Vancouver 29 before. He and us were the only members to show up for a particularly windy and wet club meet/ BBQ.
I have it on good authority that Willy Kerr, skipper of Assent the co32 that survived the Fastnet, believed the reason he pulled through was that he was the only boat of his size trying to go to windward . Albeit with a blown out storm jib, forereaching about 40 degrees off the wind, luffing into the steeper seas.The Contessa 32 was the only Class V boat to finish the 1979 Fastnet ... but instead of that being interpreted as "buy a bigger boat", the Contessa got marketed as a go anywhere world girdler.
I thought they were wonderful sailing boats. Then I tried one, and discovered that they are horribly wet, slow, disastrously in anything under 10kn, and difficult to sail with less than 4 large blokes. The rig is nearly unmanageable by modern standards, with that huge genoa and pathetic little main. The foredeck is tiny and cluttered for kite work, and they don’t point very well. Then you park up and go below….. There, it’s dark, pokey and if you’re sailing with a race crew, you’ll be hot bedding. What’s not to love?I think you have to sail one and let the boat tell you how good they are
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Boat dynamic vary dramatically when you sail in the tropics compared to Northern Europe. When the weather is hot, you predominantly live outside. No need for oilies. Spray in the face is hot. Oiles would be too sweaty so you get just as wet from sweating. A large saloon in not much use in the tropicsIn general I am a fan of boats with relatively narrow beam, lower freeboard and deep long keels.
Because when sailing you stand or cook or sleep or sit in the cockpit close to the axes of movement of the hull .
And Co32 seem to be popular with people who just like sailing ( so maybe there is truth I the OPs assertion!)
Cramped cabin? That’s a different subject
I think there is a comfort ratio out there somewhere . Some bright spark will dig out the numbers showing that a Co32 is numerically hopeless of course
Would I have one? Of course. But there are other boats I would have too. Enduring though, David Sadler must have been quietly proud of his design!
In the Sydney Hobart disaster, 6 people lost thier lives ...I agree it does have the 'Row Away Factor' that many AWB's lack. I have never sailed one, I would like to, but whether I would buy one, small accommodation, low headroom and wet, is a different matter.
At sea in poor conditions with an AVS of circa 160 Deg I would choose wet over an AWB.
… I think there is a comfort ratio out there somewhere …
You missed out - ..... and reinforced the senses of discernment and wisdom of those lucky enough to own one!Hats off to the editor, imho, for an issue that looks at a classic in a slightly extended manner - and one that has stirred up a discussion of the article and the yacht in question.