bitbaltic
Well-Known Member
I don’t recall rubbishing boats that have been modernised, what I said was that there were some boats in our small harbour that had been modernised that I wouldn’t touch with a barge pole and a couple that hadn’t which I would, what I didn’t say was that all the modernised boats in our harbour were unseaworthy, just some. It’s not the goodies such as furling genoa and self tailing winches (which unless you’re racing a lot I honestly don’t see the point of) but the design, construction and way the boat is maintained that makes it sea-worthy.
My ‘new’ boat is a 1981 Sadler 25 which has furling Genoa and single line reefing(first reef only) but still has rope and pulley vang and non- self tailing winches. Furling Genoa is great.
I don’t disagree with you. What you said is that some boats in your harbour are rubbish (shock horror) whether modernised or not.
My post had nothing to do with whether old-fashioned boats are seaworthy (they are). It was saying:
- that most older boats in the market will have modernised sail handling systems (whatever you or I think of them)
- that if the OP is looking to learn To buy cheap boat to learn to sail on, it will probably have modernised sail handling, which makes seventies sailing manuals less relevant even if (following point 1) the boat is if seventies vintage.
I get your point about beautiful classics being beautiful classics and seaworthy too. I just don’t understand why you have taken issue with those points. The OP is unlikely to be able to buy, or learn to sail on, a classic yacht and manuals which tell him how to sail such a boat will be less useful on day one than one which talks about modern sailing gear and how to use it.
General point is I was not commenting on seaworthiness. I was talking about what he was likely to encounter on an older cheaper yacht that IS seaworthy.
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