Oyvind
Member
I've just come back from the Eastern Med, where I went to look at a 40+ foot ketch that's been for sale for some time. I was pleased with what I saw, and will probably make an offer.
The yacht is of a particularly sturdy and good build, with oversize rigging. A good, thing, since I'm moving with my family to Svalbard, which is as far north as you can possibly move on this planet and still keep your kids in school, and intend to keep the yacht in Longyearbyen.
In short, I'm looking for a yacht suitable for arctic cruising.
The yacht, like most these days, is rigged with a roller furler. I'm seriously contemplating whether to keep the roller furling and fit a Solent stay for a storm jib, or simply ditch the roller furler and go for good old hank-on foresails?
Any opinions? The keywords for the high Arctic is reliability and simplicity. This is an area where you're pretty much OYO, and you simply can't call the lifeboat service and expect them to help you if something goes wrong - because there isn't any lifeboat service up there.
The yacht is of a particularly sturdy and good build, with oversize rigging. A good, thing, since I'm moving with my family to Svalbard, which is as far north as you can possibly move on this planet and still keep your kids in school, and intend to keep the yacht in Longyearbyen.
In short, I'm looking for a yacht suitable for arctic cruising.
The yacht, like most these days, is rigged with a roller furler. I'm seriously contemplating whether to keep the roller furling and fit a Solent stay for a storm jib, or simply ditch the roller furler and go for good old hank-on foresails?
Any opinions? The keywords for the high Arctic is reliability and simplicity. This is an area where you're pretty much OYO, and you simply can't call the lifeboat service and expect them to help you if something goes wrong - because there isn't any lifeboat service up there.