muyuu
Well-Known Member
An American friend of mine who's around 70 years old single-hands a 55ft Benneteau. It does have electric winches and that joystick docking thingie.
The OP still hasn't said what he means by "cruising".
As he asked the question 4 years ago, and hasn't even been online for over a year, we may never find out....
I singlehanded a 37ft gaff cutter for thirty years; she had been designed to be handled by a couple and was very easy despite the lack of any modern gadgets. She had a manual windlass, no wInches, staysail was self tacking, roller furling jib, roller reefing mainsail. When I bought her she actually had no electrics at all and had been sailed by the previous owners, an elderly couple, for thirty years. Displacement was 20,000lbs and of course long keel.
I am now thinking of "modernising" my sailing and thus far I have been dismayed by how far backwards, rather than forwards, we seem to have gone! The thing that really dismays me is how much more hard work seems to be involved in sailing a modern boat. This boils down to the following factors:
1. Much, much, more friction in the rig. Very often the approach seems to be "add a winch" rather than "eliminate the friction". I absolutely detest, and consider unsafe, sails that don't come down or reef when they ought to, which is when I first think about it!
2. Sloop rather than cutter rig means graunching the expletive deleted headsail in on every single tack. On the old gaff cutter the staysail took care of itself and you just cast off the old and belayed the new jib sheet at the psychological moment. Easy.
3. Very many boats have cockpits optimised for sailing with a crew on deck. I think that a cruiser should be capable of being sailed by one small woman on deck!
I cant afford bowthrusters and suchlike, so my modern boat is going to be a little smaller (she will none the less have better accomodation, I fancy) and I am voting 33-35ft


Did I buy a nice 33 footer?
Minn, wow, that's just stunning :encouragement:
She is “Croix des Gardes”, she lives on the Orwell, when not hibernating in her private barn in Cambridgeshire and she belongs to Pyrojames, who rescued her and rebuilt her and sails her singlehanded making it all look very easy. 52ft on deck and 22 tons.
I'm looking for a broad range of views from forum members on the longest cruising yacht for a single-handed sailor assuming that sailor has average skills, not a seasoned professional. All input greatfully received.
Thanks
I wondered if you were going to confess...![]()
I did smile when I read Minn's post way back..)
No tacking through moorings under genoa for me.
Mind you, we were enjoying a pint on the RHYC lawn this summer when a 12 metre came elegantly past, doing exactly that, in rather a narrow part of the river. We were most impressed!
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(You will notice that she is steered with one of those stick things, not with “his” and “hers” wheels in the modern manner).