Ahoy Bob and Scotty
"Capt" Rob wrote:
Doug, maybe in your neck of the woods Oday and Catalina owners pretend
they have Baltics, but not here.
So, it's only you that blabbers continually about how you
have the perfect boat?
... Most people I meet seem to know what
kind of boat they have along with strengths and weaknesses.
So how come you don't?
Furthermore, and better illustrating your ignorance and dufus
mentality, these Seaward boats are a nich type design
Really? Like what?
Discuss, for example, the reserve stability & reserve
bouyancy of the Seaward hull designs. Then if you feel like
a challenge, the foils.
Well then, please shut the hell up and get back to us when you've
watched a Seaward built from Day One and can comment with any authority
on it's quality.
Have you watched a Seaward built from Day One?
For that matter, have you ever been in a boatbuilding plant?
Or built a boat yourself?
... In the meantime, the words of some happy owners aint a
bad place to start.
A better place would be some former owners. They have less
of built-in agenda.
No one has said that owners opinions are the end-all for learning about
build quality, so you're just trying to create a lie here again
That was pretty much the only definite thing you mentioned.
Inspection of construction details was absent from your
posts. So it appears you don't believe in looking carefully
at any boat to judge for yourself... presumably because you
don't know how.
.... We looked closely at the Seaward Eagle and I
found it to be a nicely finished boat.
One boat is "nicely finished." Hooray.
How about the structural elements & tabbing? Hatches
integrity & strength? Wiring? Plumbing? Rig?
... You still have provided
nothing but vague hints.
I have provided nothing except the opinion that one should
look for oneself, and a statement that I have done so.
I was sailing today, Doug and doing more tomorrow on a J29.
Doubt it. And when are you going to post a picture of that
J-29s bulbs keel? When are you going to learn to fly a
spinnaker?
DSK
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