30 to 35-foot boats, days used?
Thought of a few others.
In article , Peter Wiley
wrote:
Heh. I was thinking much the same thing about my 12' daysailer. Or my
kayak.
PDW
In article , Scott Vernon
wrote:
I could buy a jetski and make the same statements that you did, only then I
wouldn't really be sailing, and neither will you.
SV
"Jim Cate" wrote in message
...
Am I going to be swamped? Is my Mac going to sink to the bottom of the
bay? (Actually, no. The Mac has enough flotation to keep the boat and
multiple passengers afloat.)
..... and you'll never take it into deep water.
Am I going to have to spend $5,000 for blister treatment and bottom
refinishing? (Nope. Not if the boat is out of the water most of the time.)
..... because it'll sit on the trailer 364 days p/a rotting from ozone.
Am I going to have stuck through-hulls, and rising water from an unknown
leak in a hose connected to one of the throughull valves? (Nope. The
hull doesn't need them.)
..... because it has no galley sink, shower or head. IOW it's a
daysailer.
Am I going to have to spend $5,000 overhauling the diesel? (Nope. It
comes with a new outboard.)
..... which has 1/4 the life expectancy of a diesel engine while using
4X the fuel. Great economics there.
Is the boat going to capsize, or is the standing rigging going to come
loose such that the boat founders or flips over? (I haven't seen many
news reports this year about any Mac sailors losing their lives.)
Ah, there's a copout. Still, I expect the answer's no, because it won't
get used as a sailboat when you find out what it's like.
Am I going to go aground, and is the boat going to flip over on its
side and require expensive rescue services? (Probably not, since it can
float in 12 inches of water or can be motored onto a beach if desired.)
Also, it's on a trailer in the yard.
Am I going to be stranded off-shore in unexpected weather conditions? -
No, because you'll never go offshore.
(Actually, since the boat can motor back at 18 mph,
in a flat calm.....
it has a better
chance of getting back to shore faster than a displacement boat. - I'll
also pay careful attention to weather conditions, of course, and intend
to be more conservative about going out in marginal conditions.)
..... because the Mac can't take any weather.
Do I need to plan on loosing lots and lots of money from depreciation of
the boat? (Perhaps. But demand for the new model continues to greatly
exceed the supply. By comparison, most of the displacement boats we
looked at had depreciated over 80% to 90%, when adjusted for inflation.
Also, less money is being committed in the first place, so there is less
on the table that could be lost.)
If you can't afford to lose money on a boat, you can't afford a boat.
Simple.
If you can't afford a real boat, you buy what you can afford. If you
can't fix an older boat, that reduces your options. If you really want
a motor boat but like to pretend you're going sailing, I guess you do
what you've done. Seems a lot of people here are getting amusement at
your expense, and you think you're going to win? There's nothing to
win, certainly not a longest thread competition or something equally
idiotic. Shortly this will get x-posted to alt.vampires or similar. We
ran those losers off as soon as their entertainment value ran out but
they're probably good for something. You'll spend your life answering
posts from even bigger losers than Horvath. Or, by your own
definition, you'll get run off. Whatever.
Of course, it's also possible that the earth may get hit in the next few
months by an invisible space ship heading our way from somewhere in the
Virgo constellation, initiating a new 1,000-year ice age. - Gee. Hope my
luck holds out and I can get some sailing in before the impact.
Off you go, then. See if you can find Neal somewhere out there.
PDW
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