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Peter S/Y Anicula wrote:
Don't you think that the discomfort has more to do with the size of the boat than the design? Depends on how much bigger. Not only are bigger boats roomier with better stowage and more comfortable access & cabin layouts, but their very size makes them more seaworthy and less bouncy underway (all else being equal, of course). Or was it leaking as well, even if it wasn't it must have been wet? Was it an old-fashioned wood open cockpit folkboat? I'm thinking that in 1968 it would have to have been wood. The Kings Cruiser was a lovely boat. It was cramped for a 29 footer, especially by modern standards. For example, the Hunter 290 we recently sailed had an aft cabin where the Kings Cruiser didn't even have a place. And even with the doghouse, they don't have standing headroom for an average size adult... but unlike the Folkboat, you can at least stretch out enough to get your pants on. We raced the KC29 in a PHRF fleet for a couple of seasons... compared to the average mass-produced racer cruiser of that era, it was't slow except hard on the wind... and then if it was choppy, that evened things up. one of the benefits of the old fashioned narrow hull is that it goes thru steep waves much easier. Of course it would not take off and fly off the wind like a modern boat will. But of the short-keeled attached-rudder heavy disp boats I've sailed, it was one of the most mannerly (or is it my memory looking back with rose-colered glasses?). It was a great boat... but I'm not really tempted to go that way again, even for nostalgia. Fresh Breezes- Doug King |
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