Tranona
Well-Known Member
The market is changing: people now mostly seem to come into cruising sailing via sailing schools, a few weeks on 36-38 ft boats with full standing headroom, double berths, hot water, full electronics, powerful engines that start on the button, etc. In about 1970 I don't think I was that untypical in just buying a small cruiser after sailing dinghies and getting on with it - Friday afternoon row out to the mooring (that I laid myself) and off down channel for the weekend, week or month. Sitting headroom, primus stove, a Seagull as auxiliary power, and to start with just charts, a compass and leadline.
You can still do that in a sub £2k Anderson 22 or many other boats dating from the 1970's when that was considered aspirational. As you say, times change and the number of people prepared to do that has declined and no longer enough to support the large stock of such boats.