emsworthy
Well-Known Member
These guys seem to fit the brief.
Last year at East Head.
Last year at East Head.
I don't see it in the Solent though. the misses and I at 32 are always usually the youngest in the marina
Messed up country this. Rools is rools, and the only winners were the kids who were good liars.
For some, maybe not.swallows, amazons, coote club.... they never existed either
I fear that some of us remember a halcyon time of wooden boats and freedom that never existed
D
For some, maybe not.
But isn't there the problem that unless you keep taking your boat home, the cost of parking it will depend only on length and not on how basic or cheap it is?
Mike.
That has hit the nail firmly on the head.
Few houses have sufficient safe parking for cars for parents and kids cars and a boat and once you're getting up to 22 foot that's a lot to tow around regularly.
There is a disconnect between the sailing industry and younger, connected people. People in their fifties didn't have the option when they were in their twenties to just google cheap moorings and see what came up. You had to go to the river, visit yards, clubs, ring up. Someone who can't imagine a pre google life knows that everything is online so will research online what cheap mooring is and will only come up with the larger places that invest in t'internet and are therefore not cheap. So unless you know that cheap clubs /yards exist the casual enquirer would go away with the impression that keeping a boat (especially in the south east) will cost several hundreds a year if not several thousand. Buying a £1k boat is not a problem, for some youngsters it's less than their car insurance. Spending the same again on mooring is a problem.
Can see a real role here for someone like BMIF to hold an online, searchable list of mooring providers, costs, locations, phone numbers etc to make it easy for casual enquirers to work out if they can run a boat.
Also think clubs that want to survive need to do more. Saw the hamble clubs do something new this year of a joint drive to attract new blood but do think more of that is needed. Young people are not attracted to a club that gives off the impression of being run by a group of stuffed shirts. So to be welcomed by the message that of course you can join - you just need to have an interview with the rear commodore cruising that's him in the blazer and then approved by a vote would make many young people run for the hills thinking what a stuck up bunch of prats, I'll take my money elsewhere - again, younger people are used to a customer friendly agenda where the customer is right, not where they will decide if the customer is good enough to be in their gang.
Lots of housing developments have such covenants. Some are to maintain the designed street-look. Some are as a result of the land freeholders. We owned in a house built on Trinity House land on North Ferriby in East Yorkshire.
Basically if you weren't an accountant or doctor (professional) you couldn't fart in your own property.