Resolution
Well-Known Member
Wow. About 20000 miles and never sailed a dinghy. How did I do it??
Ditto. "Think big" can be a good motto for life.
Wow. About 20000 miles and never sailed a dinghy. How did I do it??
I am considering a similar approach - either a small (21-25ft) weekender or large dinghy/dayboat. Both types were pretty conspicuous by their absence at SIBSI've sold my big expensive boat, mainly because my crew has slowly disappeared for various reasons. Now I notice many largish boats, around 40 ft or more, languishing in various marinas for the same reason, there is nobody to sail them. Solitary owners, or sometimes with reluctant wives, using nice boats as weekend cottages and going home on Sunday evening having done nothing at all. I think the industry has done a good job of persuading us to buy boats that are far too big.
Maybe the solution is to downsize to something that is easily sailed single handed and maybe even trailerable to new waters ?
Swallow and Cornish Crabber both had nice day boats on display. Swallow are, reportedly trailerable. Lovely little boats but too small for a live aboard.I am considering a similar approach - either a small (21-25ft) weekender or large dinghy/dayboat. Both types were pretty conspicuous by their absence at SIBS![]()
As opposed to those who have learned on a larger boat and totally lack experience of doing it any other way. So are simply not qualified to have an opinion, as you see it also gives them a sense of undeserved superiority![]()
Since no one can have experience of both no one can be qualified to comment one way or the other - so I shall carefully avoid doing so.
Not sure what point that is; I suspect I could handle your cruiser rather more easiliy than you'd have a chance in my Osprey dinghy, and for a performance boat it's a remarkably forgiving design...
There are notable exceptions who started on big yachts, like Sir Francis Chichester; but he was a great navigator, not a great sailor ( and maybe not great pilot either ).
As a comparison a fighter pilot can easiliy fly an airliner, but not vice versa.
Just came back from the show. That is the earliest I've every been back. I think I went round every stand, there seemed to be a lot missing. There were very few on the stands that were welcoming but it was very cold. The show just lacked buzz. The children were bored as dispite what they say the events were aimed at the very young. And not many freebies to fill their bags. Only upside was meeting Dave Selby again and getting ripped off buying his book (don't mean it Dave, thanks for a good chat!)
Same way as others. Nothing difficult about learning to sail on bigger boats, or later in life.
The only people who say you need to sail dinghies first to be capable are those who did it that way. They totally lack experience of doing it any other way so are simply not qualified to have an opinion. as you see it also gives them a sense of undeserved superiority!
As a comparison a fighter pilot can easiliy fly an airliner, but not vice versa...
In my experience people who have sailed dinghies first tend to be more sensitive to wind shifts. It's not invariably the case, of course, but you can get away with more in a bigger boat and it tends to show.
I don't think there is any real risk of getting sued. The reality is the price of the mag covers its print and distribution costs. Advertisers are where the money is. Articles that fail to say it as it really is, are more likely worried about losing the advert revenue or that the vendor will no longer offer boats (etc) for testing [on one level that is bad for the mag as it needs a stream of stuff to write about - on a more cynical level it is bad for the journo's as they need toys to play with].The sailing magazines who put these forums up are going straight down the tubes, partly because printed media is failing, but also because they fail to connect with their die-hard followers, instead featuring fancy big new boats few of us are interested in let alone can afford - and fence sitting ' mustn't get sued ' reviews.
Is there any sense on trying to appeal to both* markets? If I am looking to buy a dinghy or cheap trailer sailer with a budget of < £10k, I am not going to buy a £100k yacht instead, and vice versa. There is already a dinghy show. There are second hand boat shows. They attract a specific audience, with much smaller footfall, but that is a keen audience. Be under no illusions, the boat shows are self serving, they don't exist either to support the public or the industry. Even a small stand will cost thousands - you need to sell a several dinghies to cover the cost of the floor space, the transport costs for the demo boats, the stand graphics, the staff, the travel and accom etc. If you sell shiny expensive yachts you may only need to sell one!We need a real boat show, with dinghies and smaller cruisers - this may well involve secondhand boats - as well as the silly expensive new large jobs; no sailor worth their salt didn't do their time first on dinghies, and people on moderate incomes need to know there's a way to realise their dreams without a lottery win.