Wansworth
Well-Known Member
With yourquite large budget what about a few charters in possible boats you might like and your good lady,maybe even an ocean trip..
If you can get hold of a copy, it is worth looking at what Yachting Monthly in their current adition has to say about the Krakenn 50. Also in Yachting World April 2018 there is a review of the Amel 50 plus a very interesting article by Pete Goss on his choice for a Blue Water Cruiser for 2, a Garcia Exploration 46.
But all massively above the OP budget
I would go with medium displacement such as Bowman as they have a better build than AWBs. Another option is we had a heavy displacement steel ketch with a long keel and cutaway forefoot, the reason being if you sail for long enough something hit or you will hit something. We were anchored off Dominica when a heavy pirogue that couldn't get their engine to turn off hit us at full speed on the beam. A lightweight boat would have been holed and anything behind it destroyed, we had a chip in paint that I fixed. They will also survive hitting a reef.
Sorry for sounding dumb but what is a AWB?
Pretty well nothing short of a deep dived nuclear submarine is safe and comfortable in a tropical revolving storm or in the Roaring Forties.
You're forgetting something - the world's perfect 22' boat. Regularly tested in force 11, apparently.![]()
Really? I crossed in a Lagoon 50 last year and found it pretty dreadful. Very slammy and performance never exceeded what I would have expected from my 36' AWB.I’ve sailed a Lagoon cross Atlantic and found it both fast (15 knot top speed but cruised for days at 8-10) and forgiving.
An Andersen 22 should be within budget then.:encouragement:
Good luck to the OP in buying an Xc45 for 300k, double that and you might find a bargain somewhere.
Does anyone know about lifting Catamarans out for anti foul is this going to be a problem?
Thanks
p2s