Porthandbuoy
Well-Known Member
Have a look at a Nicholson 26. Plenty headroom for someone of your height. Ditto the berths. Not bilge keel though.
I would add the Mirage 26 and 28 to the list.
Just an incidental follow-up. I'd like to hear from anybody who managed to sleep doubled-up on a Sadler 25's 'converted dinette double berth'![]()
We did try.
It was okay as long as you both laid on your sides and didn't need to roll over in the night. If you did try to roll over mayhem ensued, generally with one of us falling out of bed. Hahaha, what fun.
Tricia
the bloke says he wants something that will take the ground and loads of people come back suggesting boats that will fall over when the tide goes away.
completely useless when they meet east coast mud
Not particularly good at drying moorings for the OP; nice sometimes neglected boat though.
I've always thought the Nic 26 a sort of high quality grp SCOD with the high coachroof, deepish keel & relatively narrow beam; would you say that fair ?
I've nothing useful to add, but I understand your problem.
I'm 6'3" and didn't even think about this problem. I have a Corribee, and for all it's famously low headroom - the forward bunks are pretty generous. The guy I bought it off was 6'6".
When we chartered in the summer, I made the mistake of assuming a bigger boat would have full size bunks. I very nearly chartered something with only 5'10" double bunks forward.
I had to sleep in the aft cabin and she had to sleep in the forecabin. No berth was long enough or wide enough, so we both needed doubles to fit in.
you make an interesting point
but
completely useless when they meet east coast mud
I have yet to meet a person who relishes using them
big, heavy, hard to stow, ineffective on anything other than hard shingle
Which of you is the tall one ... ?
No substitute for personally testing berths, I'm afraid!