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![]() "Wilbur Hubbard" wrote in message anews.com... Don't buy anything until you NEED to buy something. Rid yourself of your female shop until you drop mentality. Here's what you need to do. 1) Give the boat a good cleaning inside and out. Inspect everything real good while you clean and polish. 2) Move aboard and attempt to stow all the unnecessary crap that most women feel they can't live without. 3) Put the remaining 90% that won't fit into storage. 4) Stock up on food and make sure your stove has plenty of fuel. 5) Then learn how to sail the boat. 6) Start a list of things that are broken, don't work well enough to suit your needs, are worn to a dangerous or unserviceable point, etc. Buy all the Coast Guard required safety things like life jackets, flares etc. 7) Replace things as needed depending upon how and where you cruise and anchor. 8) If you don't have a nice little rowing dinghy you need to buy one. For you a Walker Bay 8 would probably be just the ticket. Avoid inflatables as they tend to get a flat tire at the worst of times and you can't row the dammed things in anything but a flat calm even when they don't have a flat. 9) Make sure you have no fewer than three serviceable anchors and rodes. Learn how to use them properly. 10) Buy a new GPS if the boat doesn't already have one. Get the kind that displays a chart. In other words don't go out and spend 15 grand just for the sake of spending fifteen grand. Wait until you learn enough to spend it on things you really need. And to discover what you really need you must first use the boats as you intend to use it. Oh, and don't listen to the others who responded. They can't see the forest through the trees. Few, if any, are long term, liveaboard cruisers like me. Wilbur Hubbard I would second most of Wilbur's advice, though you might have trouble fitting a Walker Bay 8 on deck. Towing a dink is okay in protected waters, but for any real passage-making, it should be properly stored on deck, upside down where it can't hold water. You may, or may not, have the available space on that boat where it will both fit and not hinder crew movement. And, of course, I would have to dismiss the advice not to listen to advice from other posters. And finally, what Wilbur considers "unnecessary crap that women feel (we) can't do without" is more necessary than he comprehends. We do have to remain women, after all. |
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