mikhalis
Active Member
The Vivacity is a great little boat but I'd only recommmend the project if it is the DIY that you enjoy. It could well be some time and expense before she's seaworthy. I'm speaking from a little experience here. Nearly a decade ago I got a cheap Alacrity project (the slightly smaller sister to the Vivacity). Guess what; it's still a project, semi sinks on its mudberth regularly from deck leaks and basically is a shell. All the interior is trash and I've really only used it as a shed to store other boat junk in as I have a smaller 15' boat, which is dry and useable, in the same berth. The Alacrity has sails, mast, boom and roller furling for the genoa so it is relatively complete but still not really a justifiable project. Just for the timber for framing, ply, GRP resin, paint and new standing rigging would cost the wrong side of £500 before even starting to think about niceties like cushions. Even so it would still only be a lake boat and would require significant further expense to make her safe on the sea. Putting this into context, like the others say you can get some real small boat bargains if you shop around, ones that are fundamentally sound and require only minor work. In the previous two seasons I've bought a 21' Jouster (fin keel) and a Snapdragon (bilge keeler slightly shorter than the Viv). Each of these cost just over £500. The Snapdragon came with a good 8hp outboard, tillerpilot, VHF, loads of good sails, recent standing rigging and decent cushions inside - in other words ready to go in the water for little more than the Alacrity would have cost me in materials to renovate the hull alone. The Vivacity is a lovely and well respected boat but I'd only take it on if a)you want to do the work b)you know that the money won't be recouped and c)if you want to go sailing then get a big dinghy aswell for your sanity. Although some people are able to give a renovation job most of their time, a lot of us can only get to the boat and do jobs sporadically. In this case you can count on it becoming a longer project than originally envisaged and there is nothing worse than watching others set off on a sunny day while you are up to your eyeballs in glassfibre dust.

