jimbaerselman
Well-Known Member
Yachting Luddites come in many forms . . . just look at the number of new AWBs with CQR anchors (Good enough for Chichester and Hayman!).
Ford Transit
Maybe, the ideal is a modern (water proof and efficient) boat to a traditional design that is prooven to perform, with a few extra luxuries.
I'm with you all the way until you assume pretty and classic equals seakindly. It doesn't always work out that way.You should visit Antigua Classics week to see boats most people would give their eye teeth for. Our boat has done Classics three times and it's nothing to do with luddites just people who like sea kindly, pretty boats with character rather than GRP lookalikes. I wouldn't claim our boat is better just different and what we want. Horses for courses.
>they need to be comfortable in bad weather as they need a F7 to get going. The other thing is that they often take so much water into the cockpit from all directions, they sail through the water rather than over it.
It might be flippant and I'm not offended but that's nonsense. If you have sailed a long keel heavy displacement boat and what you claim is what you experienced then she must have been a dog.
What you say is not our experience.
I've never sailed a classic that could be considered a submarine going upwind.
I've been soaked by countless MABs, but one example that nobody will dispute: Contessa 32.
...and I haven't had any bad experiences of MAB's, they rock.
Yet a fair proportion of sailors seem to believe stongly that old long keel narrow gutted heavy old gaff rigged boats are way better than what is made these days.
Yachts do a huge range of things, depending on the owners' tastes, so it's no surprise that someone whose needs are best met by a modern plastic soapdish thinks that modern plastic soapdishes are best and someone whose needs are met by wooden icebergs prefers wooden icebergs.