Kukri
Well-Known Member
That would not be the model that I would recommend for the OP’s purpose.?
What a fantastic bit of advice. I’m in North London so Chatham quite local. I’ll do a bit of digging and may we’ll take you up on the offer.With a budget of £50K, you should definitely get a good Fulmar and have plenty of money to improve it further. As a Fulmar owner who has been getting Concerto just right over the past 6 years and nearly completed, I suggest you have a look at the PowerPoint presentation I made to a RYA conferencein January year.
https://wiki.westerly-owners.co.uk/images/3/3f/Concerto.pdf
This video may give you an idea of how a Fulmar sails.
Then check out the other videos I have on YouTube.
The best advice I can give is to buy a boat, possibly not a Fulmar, in the best condition you can find, even if it costs more, and avoid a fixer upper as this will cost you a lot more in money and time in the long run besides it reduces your sailing. Your first year of ownership should be mainly sailing locally with a few longer trips. You will find what needs to be changed or improved, along with learning better sailing skills. It is a steep learning curve running a boat.
If you decide that a Fulmar is your choice of boat, I would be happy to advise privately on which Fulmar to buy. If you are near Chatham I am happy to show you Concerto and possibly take you out for a sail.
My plans for this year include a 2 week cruise on the East Coast and then later down to the Solent to be the Westerly Owners Association boat at the Southampton Boat Show - all provided Covid does not disrupt things. Next year I am sailing singlehanded round the UK including the Orkneys and Shetland. This is a major trip and the boat must be ready to for all weathers.
I agree, but someone suggested it.That would not be the model that I would recommend for the OP’s purpose.?
Now I really like the idea of a Vancouver. What’s the difference?
Rustler. I’ll look.As a recent retiree, I'd recommend something with a lowish freeboard. A lot of more modern stuff is quite a step down from the deck to a marina berth or into a dinghy. It's not going to be a problem for a fit 55 year old but you'll appreciate it if you're closer to 65. I'm biased but a Nicholson 30,32 or 36 depending on your ability and budget. If money really is no object, Rustler.
Rustler. I’ll look.
With that sort of budget you should really be looking at a more modern boat in the 32-34' range. Essentially any cruising boat can do round Britain. The question is how do you want to do it. At one end of the scale you can rush round as fast as you can in a sporty 26' like a friend did in an MG 27 in 4 months, or you can take your time and day sail staying at different places to explore, perhaps even taking 2 years to do it - what's the rush? If you are toward that end of the continuum then you will spend 80% of your time in harbour and only sail when conditions are right. For that you don't need one of those offshore heavyweights some have suggested, but a boat that has good accommodation, light and airy, all mod cons and easy to handle. It is not an assault course battling the weather come what may.Can get dual UK / EU nationality which helps.
Budget probably under 50k to start but if the advice is get a centaur / fulmar and re- engine and re / rig. Then it’s all in range.
This post has all the qualities of a troll but I think/hope it’s not.
with a budget of 50k you couldn’t have spent two minutes on yachtworld without challenging your assumptions about centaurs and all sorts of other vintage boats (of all qualities) mentioned.
you can circumnavigate the U.K., and cruise to Holland and France to boot, in everything mentioned and almost everything else conceivable for that matter between 5k and 50k.
the answer is not to but some old boat for half the budget and sit in port doing it up for years and years and consuming the rest of the budget without sailing but supposing it to be a great investment in a hardy vessel. The answer is to buy the best 50k boat you can find for comfortable coastal cruising and that is likely to boil down to a huge amount of choice amongst roughly 20 year old AWBs.
As usual the wide goalposts have allowed the forum to slip into standard mode of recommending the boats we have/approaches we took which is the forum’s favourite and default position. ‘Advice is a form of nostalgia’; caveat emptor.
This post has all the qualities of a troll but I think/hope it’s not.
with a budget of 50k you couldn’t have spent two minutes on yachtworld without challenging your assumptions about centaurs and all sorts of other vintage boats (of all qualities) mentioned.
you can circumnavigate the U.K., and cruise to Holland and France to boot, in everything mentioned and almost everything else conceivable for that matter between 5k and 50k.
the answer is not to but some old boat for half the budget and sit in port doing it up for years and years and consuming the rest of the budget without sailing but supposing it to be a great investment in a hardy vessel. The answer is to buy the best 50k boat you can find for comfortable coastal cruising and that is likely to boil down to a huge amount of choice amongst roughly 20 year old AWBs.
As usual the wide goalposts have allowed the forum to slip into standard mode of recommending the boats we have/approaches we took which is the forum’s favourite and default position. ‘Advice is a form of nostalgia’; caveat emptor.
The part that I disagree with, is that you may well spend £50k on a 15-20 year old AWB and still find that it needs standing rigging, engine, sails, electronics etc replaced and then you are well over budget.
I also don't agree that having to attend to these items means spending years in port. No reason why you can't get all this stuff done over one winter, or if it ain't totally broke, do it as you go along.
Suggest you have a look at some of the AWBs suggested - they really do not conform to the stereotypes often given.I half agree with you and personally have no issue with more modern boats, but I don't have sufficient experience of them to recommend any in particular.
The part that I disagree with, is that you may well spend £50k on a 15-20 year old AWB and still find that it needs standing rigging, engine, sails, electronics etc replaced and then you are well over budget.
I also don't agree that having to attend to these items means spending years in port. No reason why you can't get all this stuff done over one winter, or if it ain't totally broke, do it as you go along.
What is the chance of this happening. Before the Nicholson 30 I mentioned earlier, my parents owned a Northerny 34. The major difference is it is a long keel which means trying to reverse in a marina is highly unpredictable. They are quite narrow by modern standards and most are now over 50 years old. They sail easily and if kept on a mooring, rather than in a marina, would be quite a good boat for a beginner provided they are happy with higher maintenance.The original Rustler is now called the Rustler 31 and is essentially a glass North Sea 24 or, to put it another way a big Twister. There is a very elegant counter stern version called the Northney 34 but they are quite rare, not because they are bad boats but because the moulds were lost in a fire.
Later Rustlers are larger; the 37 was the choice of most of those who finished the Golden Globe Race and I think HRH the Princess Royal now has a 44 having traded up from a 37.
There is also a 57... but the freeboard is a bit higher...
As usual the wide goalposts have allowed the forum to slip into standard mode of recommending the boats we have/approaches we took which is the forum’s favourite and default position. ‘Advice is a form of nostalgia’; caveat emptor.
Yes, that is the problem with these sort of threads. They start with one question and people pitch in with their own preferences but as more information comes in from the OP the question actually becomes very different.To be fair the OP asked a specific question about - for example - the difference between two slightly different models of the same yacht design, which I happen to have fourteen years' experience of. I indulged myself in answering him, giving a terse but essential summary of the design - but made no recommendations.
If I was starting now with £50k, I'd look for the youngest, best maintained, well-regarded, roomiest 30-32 footer I could find for £40k, keeping the remaining 20% in reserve for unexpected expenses, upgrades etc.
Personally I like heavier, longer-keeled, well-constructed types - but that's as much a romantic inclination as a practical one.
There are some nice option but I’m not limiting myself to UK type boats.Now we are narrowing choices to older UK type boats no doubt rustlers, Barbican’s and bowmans will be on your list . You might find with some research that some existing Storm owners have cruised round the Uk in manner proposed -might be worth a post on westerly owners website to see if any are members.