Tranona
Well-Known Member
I think your views are coloured by where you sail. In the south west, the bristiol channel and on the east coast, drying harbours and estuaries are still the most common berths / stopovers. I was sat in the cabin of my boat in Helford last week looking at places to visit between the Lizard and Rame head and there were loads of little interesting places I could not visit like Polperro for example. Lots of places beginning "Porth".
And there arent lots of bilges available except lots of old knackered Brit boats. There's just a few like Legend ( would you buy one?) and that froggie wooden thing RM.
My guess is that the issue is going to get more important because our planning laws usually prevent the building of new marinas. Already we are seeing the bilge version of a boat selling for more than the fin.
Well, I sail in Poole where we have plenty of mud and quite a few drying moorings.
The point I was making is that the overall market for cruising yachts is no longer UK centric and the vast majority are sold where drying is not an issue.
So the UK requirement is but a tiny bit of the overall demand, so manufacturers aren't interested. The Legends made a big thing of offering twin keels, but actually sold very few, for the same reason that you can't buy many new boats under 30ft - the new price is disproportionate to the cost of (arguably) superior used boats. Why pay £50k+ for a new 30ft Legend when you can get a fine Sadler 29 for less than half that?
Maybe there will be a resurgence in demand for new twin keel boats - but I doubt it. There is even less likelihood of expansion of shallow moorings than there is of marina berths, so it is only ever going to be replacement of existing boats, which stubbornly refuse to die!