ari
Well-Known Member
I think it's brilliant. Could do with being angled a little further over the water maybe, otherwise a great place for it.
"Pointless" is the adjective I would suggest.anybody else think that BBQ looks impractical,daft, dangerous, select your own adjective
Nothing is going to stay on top of that thing unless the boat is ashore. You also need to stow that contraption, after you have allowed it to cool down and removed all the goo and lumps.. No doubt this job will fall to the underdressed young lady. Must surely come to bits. If my table with similar pole-ina-hole deck fixing is anything to go by , it could all also be a tad wobbly. The BBQ, not the young lady.I think it's brilliant. Could do with being angled a little further over the water maybe, otherwise a great place for it.
anybody else think that BBQ looks impractical,daft, dangerous, select your own adjective................. the wash from a duck in a hurry is going to have the entire grill contents either over the side or over the crew.Photo possibly from the same outfit that gave us the "Carry On up the MDL" video.
anybody else think that BBQ looks impractical,daft, dangerous, select your own adjective................. the wash from a duck in a hurry is going to have the entire grill contents either over the side or over the crew.Photo possibly from the same outfit that gave us the "Carry On up the MDL" video.
It's a gas BBQ and the young lady is no doubt engaged in a health & safety discussion whilst lying on top of a...petrol engine. What could possibly go wrong?
Seeing more Fibraforts in the south of Spain btw....
"Pointless" is the adjective I would suggest.
I wouldn't mind some inherent risks (I've got a gas bottle onboard), if I could get some delicacies as a result.
But here, we are talking of a BBQ, for crissake - something unsurprisingly very popular in the US of A, which from a culinary viewpoint is fair to call a third world Country.
That's the best way known to mankind for creating high glycotoxins content in food, which is silly.
It's not even worth thinking which is the best place for BBQs on a boat.
Much better to leave them gathering dust in The Home Depot or wherever they sell them... :ambivalence:
In the Medway obviously your sausages would roll off the side into the brown/grey gloop that passes for water, however in Brazil, where this boat is made, its always BBQ conditions and all the girls look like the one in the pic.
Absolutely, and the boat is probably really at home in one of the vast inland lakes they have in the States. If people's idea of boating is lying a round in the sun with a few ribs or burgers bbq'd for lunch then who are we to criticise them!
Here, fixed it for you - Philistine my a*se...!Absolutely, and the boat is probably really at home in one of the vast inland lakes they have in the States. If people's idea of boating is lying a round in the sun with a few ribs or burgers bbq'd for lunch, getting even fatter in the process and contributing to the pretty high position in diabetes ranking statistics of their Country, then who are we to criticise them!
Sorry for that, but they aren't MINE aspersions.I take utmost umbrage at your aspersions to the nature of the BBQ
I take utmost umbrage at your aspersions to the .....
Putting BBQ's to one side, I think the question of "S23; S25 what went wrong" actually need to go further. I'd ask what happened to the S23, the S28, the S34 and the S37 (plus their counterparts from FL, Pr and S/S). OK Sealine might make a C330 and FL will be making an F-Line 33 but none of these offer an equivalent replacement for the boats above (open top, two cabins, galley downstairs). All of these boats sold in their droves, where did the buyers go? Is it really the case now that anything under 40 foot will be a villa owners day boat?