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The_navigator©
 
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Default Best entry level pocket cruiser



DSK wrote:

The navigator© wrote:


C'mon Doug!

A bolger micro is not a "sea worthy" craft. It is fine for pottering
about on fine days or on ishore waters. In my opinion it would be lethal
in a gale in unprotected water



Well, your opinion (in this case) goes against established fact, since they handle
rough weather as nicely as anything twice their displacement. Some of them have made
short passages.


Even Phil Bolger wrote this in his fiction story about his boat:

" If they had passed the strait they would almost certainly have lost
the boat. The Libeccio, a southwest dry gale, blew up out of a clear sky
as they neared Cap Corse, and even under the lee of Corsica they got the
scare of their lives and just made it into Bastia with deep-reefed
mainsail and motor wide open. They came close to being blown over to the
Italian coast. If they'd been on the west coast of Corsica, they would
have piled up on the lee shore.that a gale would risk "

You still want to maintain this is seaworthy!

What depresses me is that you should be able to look at the design and
_know_ it is NOT seaworthy.

Cheers MC





.... having a very low angle of vanishing
stability.



I bet anything you care to name that they have a higher LPOS that anything else in
their size range.



If you want a salty boat look for something along the lines
of a Cornish crabber or Tamarisk (if you can find/build the latter you
will have a gem).


Don't know what a Tamarisk is, but the Micro has a higher LPOS than the Cornish
Crabber and will make ground to weather in conditions that will have the Crabber
scudding off to leeward.


And what is the LPOS of the MICRO Doug?

?The Micro is not "salty looking" in fact it's quite
unconventional.



But it is very practical and sails a lot better than one might think,
certainly better than a big yacht scaled down to the same size.


I don't think it will sail any better that I think that's for sure.

I rather like the Cornish Crabber and if we'd seen them before getting the Hunter 19
we might have had one of those instead, but I doubt we'd have been as happy with it.
They are indeed salty looking and they are fairly practical to trailer, but woefully
slow and not at all as roomy or comfy as our little boat.


Thisd is true but the Crabber is a good seaboat.


Come to think of it, we've sailed the Hunter 19 thru weather that had 35 foot crab
crushers huddling at the dock.


There are even bigger boats that huddle at docks. When the crabber hull
was designed it was based squarely on working boats that went out in
gales. I have sailed a very similar design through a severe gale in the
english channel.


 
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