neptis
Active Member
Ticks everything.Sadler 290
see
Sadler - 290 in Hampshire, South East - Expired | Boats and Outboards If its still available this is light years ahead of most of what is mentioned.
Ticks everything.Sadler 290
see
Sadler - 290 in Hampshire, South East - Expired | Boats and Outboards If its still available this is light years ahead of most of what is mentioned.
25 year old 32ft boat not sold for 50 grand....There are a couple of Parker 325s for sale at the mo - both at around the £50k mark. If OP is interested in Sadler 290, you could say the Parker boats are not dissimilar in that they're shoal draft, fast and very well put together. Similar interior to the Sadler 290 too.
PSSA > For Sale > Parker 325/335 > Blue Moon, £55,000
PSSA > For Sale > Parker 325/335 > LazyDays, £47,995
Also, Moody S31 and S336 worth a look if you're after a bilge keel that sails well. Most are fin keel. Very spacious and well made boats
Hunter Channel 31 about half that price and a much better boat - sails like a witch in either fin or twin keel variant
Doesn’t match my experience, especially when the wind buildsParker would outsail the Hunter AND get you to places up river the Hunter couldn't though. There's a reason why they cost what they do.
Don’t know these. Realistically with a budget of £50k I would be unlikely to spend all that on a purchase. Even something very good will need a bit of attention.There are a couple of Parker 325s for sale at the mo - both at around the £50k mark. If OP is interested in Sadler 290, you could say the Parker boats are not dissimilar in that they're shoal draft, fast and very well put together. Similar interior to the Sadler 290 too.
PSSA > For Sale > Parker 325/335 > Blue Moon, £55,000
PSSA > For Sale > Parker 325/335 > LazyDays, £47,995
Also, Moody S31 and S336 worth a look if you're after a bilge keel that sails well. Most are fin keel. Very spacious and well made boats
When I bought my boat new in 2003 I included about 5% of extras. By the end of the year those "extras " went to over 25% of the new price.Don’t know these. Realistically with a budget of £50k I would be unlikely to spend all that on a purchase. Even something very good will need a bit of attention.
Really can't see any evidence to support the idea that old "quality" boats break down less than modern boats whose crews are then at greater risk . I can accept that you and many others (most of whom seem never to have owned a modern boat) might prefer boats from their youth but to try and justify that by saying modern boats are dangerous, poorly made, unreliable, don't last etc just flies in the face of all the evidence around us - if you care to look.
Really pleased I was able to get to my boat yesterday for the first time since December. Reminded me of the fact that everything fits, lots of locker space, handholds, well engineered systems (all of which work) no condensation, dusty dry bilges, engine starting instantly, - indeed nothing to do except for one locker door sticking. Two minutes work with a screwdriver to adjust the hinges. Of course it is only 5 years old.
Wasn't he the lead singer of Jethro Tull? Played a mean flute!
You ask why the sales of Westerly's fell off a cliff. Well they constructed in a traditional way with bonded bulkheads and the hull deck joint. They had wood interiors that were hand made. In comparison many of the continental yards had governement support and tax breaks to assist charter sales, which no British yard had. Many of the continental yards went into factory production (land to expand was much cheaper to aquire and develop) and using numerous agents to sell their boats. They benefitted from economies of scale making their boats cheaper. The final nail in the coffin was an exchange rate that was making continental boats even cheaper. That is why we now have virtually no major yards building yachts in bulk.
So what happens if the OP wants to cruise the Dutch canals from Amsterdam to Breskens then visit the southern Channel ports right through to the CIs at the height of the holiday season? Going to be very popular with HMs , isn't he![]()
Ticks everything.
Not quite right in your summary. I remember looking at the Dufour Arpege when it was introduced and it could not be further in design from modern designs. The solid bulkhead separating the galley and chart table from the main cabin might be fine for night racing, but not good for social conversations. The concept for many years in French boats was to cram as many berths as possible in their boats.No, it was nothing to do with Johnny foreigner playing dirty tricks with government subsidies. It was your tricky Jonny foreigner actually being better at market research, boat design and marketing and realising what the late 20th century public wanted and giving it to them. People were looking for comfy family cruising boats and not a cramped narrow hull where some old geezer cooked beans on a single ring and took a dump in a bucket. The french designers realised that even 99% of the old farts who sat eating their beans straight from the pan on a bucket only ever ventured a single fair weather day sail away from their home marina and so the market did not need ridiculously over engineered boats that could cope with F12 storms. So, the French designers introduced wide bodied boats with plenty of comfort that could withstand most weather that you will get outside the Southern Oceans. And cheaper! And they didn't leak! That is why they were successful.
Westerly, and others, belatedly introduced French designers to catch up but they left it too late. They died.
Not when you are laying in bed looking at your toes, whilst waiting for the angel Gabriel thinking, " I wish i had bought that 40fter"Retired , Fit and Wealthy is better![]()
Might be a few ,"ex British owned", available soon. But being retired one might want more than 90 days sailing a year. I can never understand one wanting the hassle of booking & travelling back & forth on planes etc. to get to one's boat every time one wants to go for a sail. Lugging gear etc half way across europe.I like sailing in warm waters and if you have time/circumstance for extended stays I would consider buying a boat in Greece/ Croatia or even Portugal unless having it local to enjoy the pleasure of working on it is more important!