Laurie
Well-Known Member
has no one mentioned Kelt 8.50/850/feeling 29?
(well built, sail well, roomy, grounding plate.....short rudder)
(well built, sail well, roomy, grounding plate.....short rudder)
has no one mentioned Kelt 8.50/850/feeling 29?
(well built, sail well, roomy, grounding plate.....short rudder)
No, not similar to the Gib Sea at all.....quicker. As to bouncing up and down...well, at least there is a substantial grounding plate?
YM did a short comparo on these and others, there are one or two reviews which I got when I was looking at them ...all of which I can email on if you wish. PBO have run some pieces too...
How does one pm? I don't know, my email is laurie@lmilton.co.uk if I can help
Reviews cover most 28 and 29 footers, Moody's, Westerly's, Kelts, Jeanneaus, Feelings, MG, Laser, Gib Sea, Beneteau and others...... if you want them?
Email sent
If this doesnt work the other options are:
Hunter Horizon 272 / Ranger 265 (bit slow? fit out a bit basic to impress wife and kids!? have looked at 3 or 4 and havent fallen in love) 15-22k
Jeanneau 29 Lifting (slow? nice and new inside! looked at an absolutely immaculate one which has now sold) 33k
Delphia 29 Lifting (slow? nice and new inside!) 34k
Moody 31 Mk2 Bilge (too big for kids to think they are sailing it?! old? fast enough, have looked at some manky ones!) 30k
Cheers
Rob
When you actually try it, drying out on firm sand is horrific, even tiny ripples of waves jarring the boat like the End Of The World !
Having been the owner for quite a few years of a hunter horizon 272 TK then a Parker 27 and now a Moody 31 mk11 TK i feel fairly well qualified to answer this question.
I also used them for pretty much what you are going to do.
Horizon - good boat but certainly no where near as fast as the Moody 31 water line length alone sees to this, solidly built but simple, do your research on osmosis / wicking issues before purchasing there was a bad batch. 1gm10 grossly underpowered.
Parker 27 - wow what a boat, it sails like a witch in all directions, you have to gear down a bit or you can scare the family, can be a little flighty and need to reef early. 1gm10 grossly underpowered.
Moody 31 mk 11 twin keel- sails better than it should, will take everything in its stride, heavy and dependable, i do a little light club racing in it as i have all the other boats and it performs well. Acoomadation is lovely and build quality far better than the other two. Volvo is powerful and dependable, far better than the rest at family cruising.
All three boats live or have lived on my very soft mud mooring and never any issues with any.
When you actually try it, drying out on firm sand is horrific, even tiny ripples of waves jarring the boat like the End Of The World !
I am ' getting real ' on the occasion I mention a friends' novice wife burst into tears at the jarring, :
Try it more than once then!
Shame on you to proffer your esteemed advice on the basis of one bad experience.
You could well be putting off inexperienced lift keel users from one of the greatest pleasures you can have and for which their boat has been designed.
Pray tell how to to dry a proper boat upright, still intact, and the wildlife strolling around, that's my idea of pleasant.
We had a similar lift keel'er a Hunter Delta that dried on to hard sand nearly every day of its life. Like the Parker 27 it had a flat bottom with the keel lifted completely in to the hull. No big issues if the place you dry out is relatively sheltered, Entrance to Chichester Harbour for us, and West Kirby before us. No one would want to dry out in significant waves, however by the time the boat touches the sand the waves have usually subsided as there was only approximately a foot of water. Shelving beaches are more of an issue than large relatively flat drying sands.
Drying onto sand has the big advantage that you can get out and walk around the boat without getting muddy and mired. As indicated by other's drying on rocks is a NO NO, but shingle is fine. In fact if I remember correctly the Parker has a substantial internal Ballast Plate that could protect against landing on rocks in extremis.