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Janet O'Leary November 21st 08 05:23 PM

Another opinion ?? Sabre 28 ..
 
Still working on the escape plan..

What do ya'll think of this one?



cavelamb himself[_4_] November 21st 08 05:27 PM

Another opinion ?? Sabre 28 ..
 
Janet O'Leary wrote:
Still working on the escape plan..

What do ya'll think of this one?



google is your friend...

http://www.boatus.com/jackhornor/sail/Sabre28.asp

http://madmariner.com/vessels/sail_r...E_28_051108_VS

http://www.sailamerica.com/halloffame/sabre28.asp

--

Richard

(remove the X to email)

The democracy will cease to exist when you
take away from those who are willing to work
and give to those who would not.

Thomas Jefferson

Wayne.B November 21st 08 06:30 PM

Another opinion ?? Sabre 28 ..
 
On Fri, 21 Nov 2008 17:23:50 GMT, "Janet O'Leary"
wrote:

Still working on the escape plan..

What do ya'll think of this one?


It's a great boat but too small for a full time liveaboard in my
opinion. Make sure you get one with the 13 hp diesel, preferably the
Westerbeke because Volvo parts are extremely expensive and the smaller
diesels that were offered are under powered for the boat.

Please tell us something about your sail experience and your plan for
living aboard. The lifestyle is not as easy as you might think,
especially on a small, minimally equipped boat. You should not even
consider it unless you have sufficient funding to stay at a dock with
power, water and laundry facilities.

We met a waitress in Key West 2 years ago who was living aboard a 30
ft sailboat, anchored out, and with a pre-teen daughter to care for.
The engine had long since failed so she had no battery charging
capability or funds to get the engine repaired/replaced. She was was
bringing her batteries ashore in a dinghy every other day and charging
them up at the restaurant where she was trying to eke out a living as
a part timer.

Be careful what you ask for.


Capt. JG November 21st 08 06:31 PM

Another opinion ?? Sabre 28 ..
 
"Janet O'Leary" wrote in message
...
Still working on the escape plan..

What do ya'll think of this one?



I own a Sabre 30. You can't go wrong, assuming the survey comes back with
most things in good order. They're fantastic boats.

--
"j" ganz @@
www.sailnow.com




Capt. JG November 21st 08 06:52 PM

Another opinion ?? Sabre 28 ..
 
wrote in message
...
On Fri, 21 Nov 2008 10:31:31 -0800, "Capt. JG"
wrote:

"Janet O'Leary" wrote in message
...
Still working on the escape plan..

What do ya'll think of this one?



I own a Sabre 30. You can't go wrong, assuming the survey comes back with
most things in good order. They're fantastic boats.


You own a boat that doesn't exist? g



?? Don't get it.... not enough coffee this morning I guess..

--
"j" ganz @@
www.sailnow.com




Capt. JG November 21st 08 07:23 PM

Another opinion ?? Sabre 28 ..
 
wrote in message
...
On Fri, 21 Nov 2008 10:52:18 -0800, "Capt. JG"
wrote:

wrote in message
. ..
On Fri, 21 Nov 2008 10:31:31 -0800, "Capt. JG"
wrote:

"Janet O'Leary" wrote in message
...
Still working on the escape plan..

What do ya'll think of this one?



I own a Sabre 30. You can't go wrong, assuming the survey comes back
with
most things in good order. They're fantastic boats.

You own a boat that doesn't exist? g



?? Don't get it.... not enough coffee this morning I guess..


Go look up the word "fantastic"



define: fantastic

contextual meaning - extraordinarily good or great

--
"j" ganz @@
www.sailnow.com




Vic Smith November 21st 08 08:36 PM

Another opinion ?? Sabre 28 ..
 
On Fri, 21 Nov 2008 13:30:38 -0500, Wayne.B
wrote:

On Fri, 21 Nov 2008 17:23:50 GMT, "Janet O'Leary"
wrote:

Still working on the escape plan..

What do ya'll think of this one?


It's a great boat but too small for a full time liveaboard in my
opinion. Make sure you get one with the 13 hp diesel, preferably the
Westerbeke because Volvo parts are extremely expensive and the smaller
diesels that were offered are under powered for the boat.

Please tell us something about your sail experience and your plan for
living aboard. The lifestyle is not as easy as you might think,
especially on a small, minimally equipped boat. You should not even
consider it unless you have sufficient funding to stay at a dock with
power, water and laundry facilities.

We met a waitress in Key West 2 years ago who was living aboard a 30
ft sailboat, anchored out, and with a pre-teen daughter to care for.
The engine had long since failed so she had no battery charging
capability or funds to get the engine repaired/replaced. She was was
bringing her batteries ashore in a dinghy every other day and charging
them up at the restaurant where she was trying to eke out a living as
a part timer.

Hope you're a good tipper.

--Vic

Frogwatch[_2_] November 23rd 08 02:30 AM

Another opinion ?? Sabre 28 ..
 
On Nov 21, 3:36 pm, Vic Smith wrote:
On Fri, 21 Nov 2008 13:30:38 -0500, Wayne.B



wrote:
On Fri, 21 Nov 2008 17:23:50 GMT, "Janet O'Leary"
wrote:


Still working on the escape plan..


What do ya'll think of this one?


It's a great boat but too small for a full time liveaboard in my
opinion. Make sure you get one with the 13 hp diesel, preferably the
Westerbeke because Volvo parts are extremely expensive and the smaller
diesels that were offered are under powered for the boat.


Please tell us something about your sail experience and your plan for
living aboard. The lifestyle is not as easy as you might think,
especially on a small, minimally equipped boat. You should not even
consider it unless you have sufficient funding to stay at a dock with
power, water and laundry facilities.


We met a waitress in Key West 2 years ago who was living aboard a 30
ft sailboat, anchored out, and with a pre-teen daughter to care for.
The engine had long since failed so she had no battery charging
capability or funds to get the engine repaired/replaced. She was was
bringing her batteries ashore in a dinghy every other day and charging
them up at the restaurant where she was trying to eke out a living as
a part timer.


Hope you're a good tipper.

--Vic


C'mon everyone. How wrong could you go on an older 28' boat unless
she had serious probs and its a Sabre too. I am sure the price is
within reason unless she is getting suckered. A Sabre 28 for a couple
or even for 3 would be a great starter boat. If you dont mind
roughing it a bit she'll be great. You can afford to do more with a
smaller boat than with a larger one and if it doesnt wok out it isnt a
financial disaster. How many larger boats do you see that never go on
that big cruise? I say, go small and you have a greater chance of
actually doing stuff. Even if NOTHING but the sails work it'll work
out.

Janet O'Leary November 23rd 08 01:37 PM

Another opinion ?? Sabre 28 ..
 


C'mon everyone. How wrong could you go on an older 28' boat unless
she had serious probs and its a Sabre too. I am sure the price is
within reason unless she is getting suckered. A Sabre 28 for a couple
or even for 3 would be a great starter boat. If you dont mind
roughing it a bit she'll be great. You can afford to do more with a
smaller boat than with a larger one and if it doesnt wok out it isnt a
financial disaster. How many larger boats do you see that never go on
that big cruise? I say, go small and you have a greater chance of
actually doing stuff. Even if NOTHING but the sails work it'll work
out.


Just finished reading a couple of books I got from the library,, one
by Mr Daniel Spurr .. he wrote just about what you have::

That is:; a good "small" boat that is seaworthy, will allow the new
owner to have money left over after the purchase to outfit the
boat more completely.

His example is a solid, full keel, cruising sailboat,, where the hull, deck,
etc is in good condition. Then, he goes on to write about how he
would replace old sails, running and standing rigging, life lines,
add comfort touches,, add a dinghy/inflatable which can be stored on
deck, or davits ... and on and on..




Wayne.B November 23rd 08 02:26 PM

Another opinion ?? Sabre 28 ..
 
On Sat, 22 Nov 2008 18:30:07 -0800 (PST), Frogwatch
wrote:

C'mon everyone. How wrong could you go on an older 28' boat unless
she had serious probs and its a Sabre too. I am sure the price is
within reason unless she is getting suckered. A Sabre 28 for a couple
or even for 3 would be a great starter boat. If you dont mind
roughing it a bit she'll be great.


It would be fine for cruising but living aboard full time has a
totally different aspect to it, especially if she is inexperienced or
doesn't understand the down side of the liveaboard lifestyle.

There's a strong possibility that the whole thing is just a troll.


Wayne.B November 23rd 08 02:35 PM

Another opinion ?? Sabre 28 ..
 
On Sun, 23 Nov 2008 13:37:11 GMT, "Janet O'Leary"
wrote:

That is:; a good "small" boat that is seaworthy, will allow the new
owner to have money left over after the purchase to outfit the
boat more completely.


That's an excellent point and most people totally underestimate the
cost of outfitting a boat and the ongoing maintenance costs. Almost
everyone I know that lives aboard does almost all of the maintenance
work themselves. The parts alone are expensive enough.

Perhape Larry would be kind enough to repost his "liveaboard
simulator" one more time for your benefit. There's a lot of truth to
it unfortunately.


[email protected] November 23rd 08 03:46 PM

Another opinion ?? Sabre 28 ..
 
On Nov 23, 6:35�am, Wayne.B wrote:
On Sun, 23 Nov 2008 13:37:11 GMT, "Janet O'Leary"

wrote:
That is:; �a good "small" boat that is seaworthy, will allow the new
owner to have money left over after the purchase to outfit the
boat more completely.


That's �an excellent point and most people totally underestimate the
cost of outfitting a boat and the ongoing maintenance costs. � Almost
everyone I know that lives aboard does almost all of the maintenance
work themselves. � The parts alone are expensive enough.

Perhape Larry would be kind enough to repost his "liveaboard
simulator" one more time for your benefit. �There's a lot of truth to
it unfortunately.


people are getting to soft, I don't see how living on a small boat can
be much different then living in a small camper.
I am very interested in what expenses might be for living on a small
boat all summer. And what are normal port cost on east coast?

I bet turning one of the diesel engines to run off cooking oil would
bring cost down, might be a little more work but i'm thinking if all
the lights were led and not needing electricity all that much (im not
a tech person). I have a small stove/refigurator that works off
propane.

I'm not trying to act like I know it all but it doesn't seem like it
would be much different then the cost of one of my VW campers (excpt
Vw's are getting very costly and so is the gas to get there)


Wilbur Hubbard[_2_] November 23rd 08 03:59 PM

Another opinion ?? Sabre 28 ..
 

"Wayne.B" wrote in message
...
On Sat, 22 Nov 2008 18:30:07 -0800 (PST), Frogwatch
wrote:

C'mon everyone. How wrong could you go on an older 28' boat unless
she had serious probs and its a Sabre too. I am sure the price is
within reason unless she is getting suckered. A Sabre 28 for a couple
or even for 3 would be a great starter boat. If you dont mind
roughing it a bit she'll be great.


It would be fine for cruising but living aboard full time has a
totally different aspect to it, especially if she is inexperienced or
doesn't understand the down side of the liveaboard lifestyle.

There's a strong possibility that the whole thing is just a troll.


Why the constant pre-occupation with "trolls?" Makes no sense at all. What
difference does it make if a "troll" starts an on-topic discussion versus a
non troll? Is it not the discussion that one should be concerned with rather
than who started it? Some people around here should grow up and realize
that the universe doesn't revolve around them alone.

Wilbur Hubbard



Gordon November 23rd 08 04:00 PM

Another opinion ?? Sabre 28 ..
 
wrote:
On Nov 23, 6:35�am, Wayne.B wrote:
On Sun, 23 Nov 2008 13:37:11 GMT, "Janet O'Leary"

wrote:
That is:; �a good "small" boat that is seaworthy, will allow the new
owner to have money left over after the purchase to outfit the
boat more completely.

That's �an excellent point and most people totally underestimate the
cost of outfitting a boat and the ongoing maintenance costs. � Almost
everyone I know that lives aboard does almost all of the maintenance
work themselves. � The parts alone are expensive enough.

Perhape Larry would be kind enough to repost his "liveaboard
simulator" one more time for your benefit. �There's a lot of truth to
it unfortunately.


people are getting to soft, I don't see how living on a small boat can
be much different then living in a small camper.
I am very interested in what expenses might be for living on a small
boat all summer. And what are normal port cost on east coast?

I bet turning one of the diesel engines to run off cooking oil would
bring cost down, might be a little more work but i'm thinking if all
the lights were led and not needing electricity all that much (im not
a tech person). I have a small stove/refigurator that works off
propane.

I'm not trying to act like I know it all but it doesn't seem like it
would be much different then the cost of one of my VW campers (excpt
Vw's are getting very costly and so is the gas to get there)


Propane refer on a sail boat? G

Jere Lull November 23rd 08 04:25 PM

Another opinion ?? Sabre 28 ..
 
On 2008-11-23 10:46:00 -0500, " said:

people are getting to soft, I don't see how living on a small boat can
be much different then living in a small camper.


Depends upon how they live on the boat. Vast difference between staying
at a dock vs. anchoring out, moving from place to place.

I am very interested in what expenses might be for living on a small
boat all summer. And what are normal port cost on east coast?


See above. Anywhere between $2+/ft/night to free for docking; all
restaurant for meals to eating what you catch, and so forth. Can be
near-zero or megabucks, in other words.

Our boat's fairly similar to the Sabre and we're still doing the
work-a-day. No boat payments, dockage and winter storage is about
$3k/yr. Would be less if we didn't haul. No surcharge here for us for
electricity, but we hardly use any. Liveaboards are often not allowed,
but are winked at if they're good neighbors the places we know.

Away from the dock, a past poster's sig rules: "A small boat and a bag
of cash beats a big one tied to the bank every time." Our Xan is simple
and tough, every new item cruising quality, so maintenance is zilch,
operating expenses also while cruising (= not rushing). Eating like the
locals keeps food costs way down.

Best part: with so limited space, there's a real disincentive to buy "stuff".

And the best part: Getting to know the locals, priceless.

--
Jere Lull
Xan-à-Deux -- Tanzer 28 #4 out of Tolchester, MD
Xan's pages: http://web.mac.com/jerelull/iWeb/Xan/
Our BVI trips & tips: http://homepage.mac.com/jerelull/BVI/


[email protected] November 23rd 08 04:33 PM

Another opinion ?? Sabre 28 ..
 

� Propane refer on a sail boat? G- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


it will also run 4 hours of a fully charged battery,

Wayne.B November 23rd 08 04:45 PM

Another opinion ?? Sabre 28 ..
 
On Sun, 23 Nov 2008 10:59:29 -0500, "Wilbur Hubbard"
wrote:

Why the constant pre-occupation with "trolls?" Makes no sense at all. What
difference does it make if a "troll" starts an on-topic discussion versus a
non troll? Is it not the discussion that one should be concerned with rather
than who started it? Some people around here should grow up and realize
that the universe doesn't revolve around them alone.


If you enjoy playing in the world of make believe, and there is a fair
amount of evidence that you do, then go for it.


Wilbur Hubbard[_2_] November 23rd 08 09:47 PM

Another opinion ?? Sabre 28 ..
 

"Wayne.B" wrote in message
...
On Sun, 23 Nov 2008 10:59:29 -0500, "Wilbur Hubbard"
wrote:

Why the constant pre-occupation with "trolls?" Makes no sense at all. What
difference does it make if a "troll" starts an on-topic discussion versus
a
non troll? Is it not the discussion that one should be concerned with
rather
than who started it? Some people around here should grow up and realize
that the universe doesn't revolve around them alone.


If you enjoy playing in the world of make believe, and there is a fair
amount of evidence that you do, then go for it.


You act like THIS is reality? Get a grip, dude!

Wilbur Hubbard



Frogwatch[_2_] November 23rd 08 11:50 PM

Another opinion ?? Sabre 28 ..
 
On Nov 23, 4:47 pm, "Wilbur Hubbard"
wrote:
"Wayne.B" wrote in message

...

On Sun, 23 Nov 2008 10:59:29 -0500, "Wilbur Hubbard"
wrote:


Why the constant pre-occupation with "trolls?" Makes no sense at all. What
difference does it make if a "troll" starts an on-topic discussion versus
a
non troll? Is it not the discussion that one should be concerned with
rather
than who started it? Some people around here should grow up and realize
that the universe doesn't revolve around them alone.


If you enjoy playing in the world of make believe, and there is a fair
amount of evidence that you do, then go for it.


You act like THIS is reality? Get a grip, dude!

Wilbur Hubbard


My wife and I spent 3 months in a backpacking tent when we were
married and still spend at least a month each year sleeping in a tent
so when we spend time on the 28' boat, it is luxury by comparison.
Try it, that 28' boat will not cost you and arm and leg and will allow
you to figure out if you like it. Will probably need to replace the
standing rigging on most older boats and the 28' wont break you
toooooooo much. You can also find reasonable used sails for her.
Throw away the old alcohol stove and get one of the Magma gas grills
so you can cook off the stern. Throw away the old marine head and
replace it with a good porta potti and then your life becomes much
simpler.
I dunno where the poster lives but such a boat could cruise all over
any of our coasts and to the Bahamas or the Caribbean or Mexico, etc.
Do it, do it, do it (if she's in good shape).

Capt. JG November 24th 08 12:47 AM

Another opinion ?? Sabre 28 ..
 
"Frogwatch" wrote in message
...
troll sh*t removed
My wife and I spent 3 months in a backpacking tent when we were
married and still spend at least a month each year sleeping in a tent
so when we spend time on the 28' boat, it is luxury by comparison.
Try it, that 28' boat will not cost you and arm and leg and will allow
you to figure out if you like it. Will probably need to replace the
standing rigging on most older boats and the 28' wont break you
toooooooo much. You can also find reasonable used sails for her.
Throw away the old alcohol stove and get one of the Magma gas grills
so you can cook off the stern. Throw away the old marine head and
replace it with a good porta potti and then your life becomes much
simpler.
I dunno where the poster lives but such a boat could cruise all over
any of our coasts and to the Bahamas or the Caribbean or Mexico, etc.
Do it, do it, do it (if she's in good shape).



Depends on the alcohol stove. My Origo (low pressure) works fine. I also
have a propane grill on the stern.

--
"j" ganz @@
www.sailnow.com




Wayne.B November 24th 08 02:09 AM

Another opinion ?? Sabre 28 ..
 
On Sun, 23 Nov 2008 16:47:16 -0800, "Capt. JG"
wrote:

"Frogwatch" wrote in message
...
troll sh*t removed
My wife and I spent 3 months in a backpacking tent when we were
married and still spend at least a month each year sleeping in a tent
so when we spend time on the 28' boat, it is luxury by comparison.
Try it, that 28' boat will not cost you and arm and leg and will allow
you to figure out if you like it. Will probably need to replace the
standing rigging on most older boats and the 28' wont break you
toooooooo much. You can also find reasonable used sails for her.
Throw away the old alcohol stove and get one of the Magma gas grills
so you can cook off the stern. Throw away the old marine head and
replace it with a good porta potti and then your life becomes much
simpler.
I dunno where the poster lives but such a boat could cruise all over
any of our coasts and to the Bahamas or the Caribbean or Mexico, etc.
Do it, do it, do it (if she's in good shape).



Depends on the alcohol stove. My Origo (low pressure) works fine. I also
have a propane grill on the stern.


Yes, and cooking breakfast at the stern on a cold rainy morning will
have little appeal.



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