NUTMEG
Well-Known Member
A while ago I sold my gaff cutter. Crew hated it, no standing headroom etc etc. I replaced it with a Colvic Watson 28 motor sailer. Crew love it. Warm, comfy, safe etc etc.
Problem is I still miss the old gaffer. The Colvic is great in many respects but she is a pig to manoeuvre in and out of berths, a very high freeboard to pick up moorings and not a great sailer in anything below F4.
I have the chance to buy a Heard 18' Mevagissey Tosher. Pretty, gaff rigged, bowsprit etc etc. She is my kind of boat.
The idea is to keep her on a drying swinging mooring (£100 per annum), a short dinghy row from where the Colvic is berthed on a pontoon. On nice days I could take her out on the tide for a sail.
So one boat to keep SWMBO and my old mum happy and the little Tosher to keep me happy.
My heart tells me to go for it, my head says don't be an idiot, I can only just afford one boat let alone two.
I guess I want everyone to say go for it, but, I would appreciate hearing from others that have gone down this path, successfully or not. Every boat is a compromise after all so is two the answer?
Problem is I still miss the old gaffer. The Colvic is great in many respects but she is a pig to manoeuvre in and out of berths, a very high freeboard to pick up moorings and not a great sailer in anything below F4.
I have the chance to buy a Heard 18' Mevagissey Tosher. Pretty, gaff rigged, bowsprit etc etc. She is my kind of boat.
The idea is to keep her on a drying swinging mooring (£100 per annum), a short dinghy row from where the Colvic is berthed on a pontoon. On nice days I could take her out on the tide for a sail.
So one boat to keep SWMBO and my old mum happy and the little Tosher to keep me happy.
My heart tells me to go for it, my head says don't be an idiot, I can only just afford one boat let alone two.
I guess I want everyone to say go for it, but, I would appreciate hearing from others that have gone down this path, successfully or not. Every boat is a compromise after all so is two the answer?
