T
timbartlett
Guest
I don't disagree with you -- though I think perhaps you are making rather a sweeping generalisation. Plenty of people still go camping under canvas in the UK, rather than to resort hotels in the Med, and some people who could afford to go on Cruiseliners in the tropics choose, instead, to go dog-sledding in Alaska or motorcycling across India. But I wonder whether you have misunderstood me.Well the thing is aspirations have changed people used to sail all over the place in smaller cruisers content with a depth sounder, a few old charts , probably not updated, a couple of changes of clothes and a passport
I think there may be a perception amongst those who might come into sailing that they "need" a big boat, because they simply don't see likes of Corribees, Hurley 22s, Centaurs, Sadler 25s and Contessa 26s.
Similarly there is a perception that all dinghies are fibreglass ironingboards with wings and huge coloured sails that fall over a lot -- rather than safe, stable boats like the GP14 that you could build from a few sheets of plywood or a Bell woodworking kit, and that you could then take the family (+dog) picknicking in.
If someone with those perceptions sees a wooden GP14 for sale for <£500 "in need of attention", of course they are going to be wary: they may well believe that it's a restoration project for an enthusiast, rather than a boat that a novice can go sailing in. Similarly, if they are sold the idea that a 35 footer is a good starter boat, and is OK for pottering around the Solent, what are they likely to make of a 21 foot Corribee? We know that Corribees have crossed oceans and sailed round Britain -- but we aren't the ones who need to be persuaded!
And in ten years time, the supply of GP14s, Graduates, Mirrors, Herons, Corribees, Hurleys, etc is going to be drying up. I don't see many to replace them.