pmagowan
Well-Known Member
But I can't issue the death certificate...
I'm your huckleberry!
I am biased as I have grown up on and now own a long keeler. I know, first hand, the things that are sacrificed in this design. For a start, space. I am not so concerned with the reputation about useless maneuverability as I don't see it that way. I have never had a problem getting my boat to do exactly what I want it to do and at times I am thankful that she is not as skittish as others in a confined space. She moves slow and steady and you need to understand about how and where you have control. I think too many people think about boats like driving a car and then panic when it doesn't respond to the tiller. With a combination of prop walk, inertia and using blasts of forward and reverse I can get my boat to spin on a dime (as the yanks say), while the long keel prevents her being blown across the marina.
In sailing performance I have no doubt that we will not win against a modern design. We are heavy and there are only a few conditions where our advantages would outweight the disadvantanges. But then I don't race competitively, only for fun and informally often against boats that don't even know they are racing. My boat is designed for cruising and she sails comfortably, safely and at the same time looks the way I want her to look. She lacks cabin space and I wouldn't mind another 10 feet but such is life. Every boat has its pros and cons, its advocates and its critics. In the end what matters is that we are safe and sailing.