Searush
Well-Known Member
+1
There are times where you have to but then I consider my passage planning was not good enough...
If I have to listen to an engine I want to be paid for it...
You want to try sailing the N Wales area with tide gates, overfalls & drying harbours. There are many passages that simply would not be possible if the wind falls a little light or heads you a tad, in those cases a bit of proper motor-sailing can make a huge difference between missing a tide & anchoring off an exposed lee shore, battering on all night to the next harbour (may need engine anyway to overcome tides of 3+ kts) or being safely tucked up in a safe harbour with a glass in your hand.
You, Elton et al, can sail as you choose, but decrying the choices of others without appreciating the issues says more about your intolerance & lack of understanding than it does about those who for many reasons enjoy the benefits of motor-sailing. You might do well to re-read Maurice Griffiths "Magic of the Swatchways" for some instruction.
Like yourselves the moment of silence when the engine goes off remains magic, but knowing that I can point much closer the wind, clear a dangerous headland, beat the overfalls, make an important tide gate or gain a drying harbour is just as magic.