Robin
Well-Known Member
We spent ages deciding on the right boat for us and have been very happy with our fin keel Seahawk. Many posters on these forums seem to think that their own priorities should apply to everyone else. No doubt many would disagree with ours.
For us the principal features required, in order of priority, were:
1. A comfortable aft cabin with good headroom and a double berth, to minimise back problems.
2. A new engine with ample power, as the boat was expected to spend a large proportion of its time under power.
3. Enough space to accomodate occasional overnight guests with their own privacy.
4. A small and well sheltered cockpit with wheel steering.
5. Adequate sailing ability and sail handling.
6. Renewed fiitings including Origo cooker, freshwater flush vacuum heads plus holding tank, chartplotter and radar, revised electrical installation.
I consider our boat to be a motorsailer (as defined by Dag Pike).
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Whizzy sailors will no doubt despise us but we're very happy with our boat. Without tripling the capital cost there's nothing else I'd rather have.
P.S. I have no idea how close to the wind the boat will sail. We simply use the engine to motorsail when needed.
Sorry if I was a bit scathing but I didn't pipe up initially on the other thread until someone else did first. As you rightly say the Seahawk fits your priorities very well and that was indeed the case also with the one that our friends had but which I criticised performance wise when compared to the Westerly 33 we then owned (and had for 14 years).
All boats are a compromise and no two people will have the same priorities, so inevitably we all end up favouring the boats we picked. This is what makes recommending one to someone else so difficult, because if you point out the less good bits, you offend someone and yet if you don't then it is not giving a true opinion as asked. Catch 22.