westerly24
New Member
I only got to the boat last night around an hour before sunset. I had been in ill health , and secondarily waiting for calmer weather to make the journey across to the boat possible on my small tender. As it's quite tough for a new sailer getting tied on and climbing aboard in rough windy weather with choppy wavey waters. Going back today or tomorrow failing today. I expected only maybe some damage to the canopy or water in bilge , but neither of these happened.The bit that honestly confuses me is that you've been out to the boat but not hauled the mast out of the water, just left it there. Quite apart from the indesirability of having a mast and rigging that youmight want to re-use at least part of left underwater, leaving it in the water risks it scraping the hull with the sharp broken section, in extremis holing the hull, and then you really are in trouble.
I also think the insurance bit is probably moot. I cannot imagine a marine insurer who couldn't point to a failure in maintenance etc when the mast just falls down. However windy it was.
Here I agree with Tranona. If you can source a replacement second hand mast, then great. But your bills won't stop there with a re-rigging. Otherwise, as much as it might pain you, the better financial option is probably to scrap this boat and look for another. The market is such that older small boats are almost being given away.