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Absolutely correct. You can get experience on diff boats without renting.
However, we were talking about renting, which is a good way to do it, especially if it's not feasible to get a ride otherwise. -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com "Donal" wrote in message ... "JG" wrote in message ... "Donal" wrote in message ... Renting would be a very expensive way to choose a boat, unless you have already narrowed your choice down to two or three. Why would you say that? It seems to me that it's far cheaper to rent a dozen or two dozen different boats, rather than buy a boat you end up not liking because of something you'd discover if you had rented it first. I think that you can get experience of different boats without renting. If it was a straight choice between buying from the brochure and renting, then I would agree that renting would make sense. However, there are loads of people who need crew. They are willing to take people out sailing for no more than a share of expenses. If you have narrowed your choice, then you shouldn't really need to test sail all of them - because their performance will all be similiar. At that point, the important thing will be the layout of the boat - which you can judge as soon as you step aboard. It's a bit like buying a house - you have some basic requirements (no. of bedrooms, garden, parking, etc), but after that you know the right house as soon as you walk into it. Similar is not the same. There is enough difference between manufacturers that it's worth sailing the boats to find out. By the time you have narrowed your choice to two or three boats, the performance will be very similiar. People who like Westerley, will also look at Moody or Bowman. People who like a First will look at X-Boats and Dehler. You shouldn't need to try very many boats. I crewed on many different boats(24ft Westerly Centaur, First 42, Etap 29 & 34, Moody 34) before I was ready to buy. The crewing experience taught me about my sailing preferences. I wanted as much performance as I could get in a family cruiser. When I came to choose my boat I only had about three boats to choose from. In the end, I only needed to test sail one boat. Doesn't this contradict what you said at the top? You tried a bunch of boats, narrowed the search to a few, then made a choice. My opening comment was that *renting* would be an expensive way to choose a boat. I don't think that I have contradicted myself. I only rented one boat (a holiday in Greece) before I bought my own boat. All my crewing was free apart from shared expenses - mooring fees, food and hire of liferafts. These add up to about $15 a day. You cannot rent a boat for that sort of money, even if you are sharing. Regards Donal -- |
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