1985-1990 or thereabouts when the AP Navigator started to become popular.
The cruise that hooked me into yottin' was in 1953, my wife and I and our six-month old daughter circumnavigated Sicily (starting and finishing in Malta) in a 30 feet loa, no engine. No WC, no water tanks (two jerricans), cooking by gimballed primus, a large compass, sextant and appropriate tables. no chart table, in fact no table at all. No electrics. oil nav lights.
Daughter played in cockpit and slept in a karrikot between the bunks.
This was the happiest cruise of my long cruising experience.
The secrets of good seamanship and great happiness are the same. Manage without what you haven't got, and have modest expectations.
Fabulous. Exactly the sentiments anyone needs to get the most out of yachting. I doubt the nearly-infinite complexity of a large luxurious modern yacht, comes anywhere near to repaying (in pleasure per £), what its owner must have got from his first, humblest command.
Fabulous. Exactly the sentiments anyone needs to get the most out of yachting. I doubt the nearly-infinite complexity of a large luxurious modern yacht, comes anywhere near to repaying (in pleasure per £), what its owner must have got from his first, humblest command.
When you start even thinking about concepts like pleasure per £ you are already doomed.
Depends what level you're doing it at, doesn't it? I aim to be dinghying by next spring, hopefully cruising adventurously, in fair weather if somebody up there likes me. And I hope my expenditure for the 1st seaon as a whole, boat and storage included, will be under £1000.
That's quite a good rate, isn't it?![]()
Very. But having a good time having spent a certain sum is not the same as trying to evaluate a rate of enjoyment. That is as unwise as calculating a cost per day out or cost per mile, either of which can lead to all sorts of unwanted angst.
I dare say that in 30 years time we will all be complaining that we did our formal training in a real boat, not some modern yacht simulator in Northampton!![]()
Assuredly. But, reasonable to reflect how much quantifiable satisfaction 45ft, costing £250,000 provides, which a 36ft costing half as much, could not have done. 2 couples might feel comfortable on the smaller yacht, but 3 couples may well feel cramped on the larger...
...which makes ever-bigger yachts look like they'll give ever-decreasing proportional returns.
(But I may be just trying to console myself about having to search in the "boats and equipment for under £1000" section.)![]()