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Wayne.B
 
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On Thu, 21 Oct 2004 16:48:46 -0400, "Scott Vernon"
wrote:

"Wayne.B" wrote

If you like being on and around the water, and cruising to different
places, there's little difference whether you do it by sail or

power.

Wha???

===============================================

I know, I know, heresy, heresy...

I cruised under sail for many years and enjoyed it enormously. I
raced under sail for many years, enjoyed it a lot, and had a fair
amount of success at it. Been there, done that. All by way of
explaining that I've been on both sides of the issue. I can tell you
with a great deal of certainty that there is much to enjoy about
cruising under power. Try it some time, you might find you like it
also. For creature comforts, protection from the weather, room for
more toys, and extended range on limited time, there's nothing like
it. And don't forget to enjoy the view from the flybridge. :-) All
kidding aside, it's quite a different perspective, and not a bad one
at that.

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Florida Keyz
 
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jax lives in a trailer. a small trailer.


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rhys
 
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On Thu, 21 Oct 2004 20:14:53 -0400, Wayne.B
wrote:

On Thu, 21 Oct 2004 16:48:46 -0400, "Scott Vernon"
wrote:

"Wayne.B" wrote

If you like being on and around the water, and cruising to different
places, there's little difference whether you do it by sail or

power.

Wha???

===============================================

I know, I know, heresy, heresy...

Not really, to judge by the number of sailors in their late '50s and
early '60s who start to drool over trawlers at boat shows.

I think a slow-turning trawler (8 knots or so max. speed, but with
1,500 nm range) is a good compromise unless you can find a true
motorsailer that can still actually sail.

Not for me, but I have no problems with former sailboaters moving into
power, particularly if they are respectful of their former wind-borne
colleagues. It's usually the assholes in the speedboats that send
their wake across your foredeck, anyway. Those guys are beyond reason.

R.
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Wayne.B
 
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On Sat, 23 Oct 2004 20:38:35 -0400, rhys wrote:

Not really, to judge by the number of sailors in their late '50s and
early '60s who start to drool over trawlers at boat shows.

I think a slow-turning trawler (8 knots or so max. speed, but with
1,500 nm range) is a good compromise


=====================================

Hope so, just bought one. :-) Actually it's a bit faster but can be
throttled back for close to that kind of range. We looked at a few
motorsailers but didn't really find anything we liked. Our former
Bertram was no long range cruiser but it sure did spoil us for
creature comforts and roomy living.

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