Wansworth
Well-Known Member
Go too fastI keep telling you a Strider would be perfect. 7.3 metres, shallow draught, party space in the middle, room for a loo. What are you waiting for![]()
Go too fastI keep telling you a Strider would be perfect. 7.3 metres, shallow draught, party space in the middle, room for a loo. What are you waiting for![]()
There’s no pleasing you, is thereGo too fast![]()
Hi Ylop, you've posed some great questions:
Towing would likely be a van or 4X4 - which I'll always have access to in some form.
I have a big yard, so would prefer to be able to take a boat home a reduce all storage costs. I own the swing mooring so its "free" (other than maintenance?).
I would step the mast using an DIY A-Frame - 2 man job for safety.
Yes the bigger the better is definitely better for comfort at sea - willing to compromise to meet other factors - but unsure as to where the balance should be??
There is a sadler 25.5 in Bradwell, complete with road trailer. Working engine, but running rigging is shot. Sails are Ok & there is a leaky window. Bit of a project, but you would get it for pennies & be able to tow it home & do any jobs on it. Sails like a witch.I would look for a Sadler 25 .....and pay the yard twice a year to launch and recover onto the trailer. The rest is free and you have a good, capable sailing boat with enough usable room for at least shorter trips away.
I have even seen a couple of Sadler 26's asking under 7k in the last year, luxury.
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In that case forget Hunter 19s etc and get the biggest thing you can trailer and tow,.and pay to have the mast stepped by crane. I know someone who takes his X99 home for the winter and keeps it on his driveput on a summer mooring then taking home for winter![]()
Is that such an issue in scotland? I thought that rocky shores were more vertical. Unlike sandbanksConsider what you can gain with a smaller yacht - a lift keel or twins opens up access to places fin keels can't go. Especially in NI and Scotland.
There are some anchorages where depth needs some thought or where shallow draft would let you get closer to shore (less rowing, space when the big boats are all swinging about in deep water).Is that such an issue in scotland? I thought that rocky shores were more vertical. Unlike sandbanks
Those pesky Dialecks would take up space!I think that @Wansworth needs to look no further than television for inspiration. There is technology first documented in 1963 that combines a small, readily transported exterior with a massive interior. Sadly, the exterior aesthetics may not match his desires, but I am sure the interior space of the Tardis would satisfy hi
True, but we also have isle of Eigg, Arisaig skerries and loch Moidart to name but a few in that neck of the woods where the ability to dry out on the sand / creep into super shallow water could be a real pleasure.Is that such an issue in scotland? I thought that rocky shores were more vertical. Unlike sandbanks
It's not an issue, just that shoal draft and the ability to take the ground opens up harbours and estuaries that are otherwise out of bounds. There are lots of places in the inner and outer Hebrides that offer drying or shallow anchoring.Is that such an issue in scotland? I thought that rocky shores were more vertical. Unlike sandbanks
Do many people who down size actually sail in those areas?There are lots of places in the inner and outer Hebrides that offer drying or shallow anchoring.
Usually see a few Wayfarers each season plus wee drascomb types. Last season there was a chap sailing a dinghy little more than a canoe - think he ended up in Norway. Often see some silly looking (normally French it seems) repurposed extreme racing boats often with husband, wife and children on board. Some reckless folk even sail Bavaria’s. Never though to ask them if they were at the start or end of their sailing careers though.Do many people who down size actually sail in those areas?