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From what I gather you have a two-year-old son and you have your own
sailboat. I assumed that you are presently raising a family and working full time. Would that give you enough time to use a 43-foot bluewater yacht with an 8-foot draft. To only use such a bluewater yacht on week ends and may be two weeks a year could be a waste of time and money. At this time the market appears to be a little slow. The other thing is how fast can you sell you present sailboat and how much can you end up getting for it. To buy a sailboat (not to mention the 8 foot draft and hidden wear and tear) at a low cost with the intent of selling it with a profit is, at this time, a little far stretched. "krj" wrote in message . .. Charlie Morgan wrote: On Tue, 31 Oct 2006 17:24:51 -0500, krj wrote: Charlie Morgan wrote: On 31 Oct 2006 09:55:56 -0800, "Capt. Rob" wrote: So....here's the dilemma. My wife and I currently sail a Beneteau First 35s5 on the Long Island Sound. We love the boat, though it's our first season with her. She's great in all kinds of air and quite comfortable for our daysails and overnighters with our two year old son. Down the road we planned to buy a more serious cruiser and of course I recently got a heads up that a Baltic 43 was going to be set for auction in Florida. The boat, already surveyed two months ago, is in excellent shape. She's a 1987 and loaded with gear, sails and upgrades added last year to the tune of 75K. Only..it was never paid for and now the boat belongs, in part, to the yard run by a friend of mine. Long story short: I can own the Baltic 43 for 145K, plus another 4K to ship it here. That's a huge chunk off of what they typically sell for. The problem....obviously a unique deal and obviously too much boat for us at present. Do we jump on it for the deal. We WOULD sail her, she just wouldn't get the kind of use a boat like that should. That's not to say you can't daysail what you want, but a Baltic 43 is a true bluewater yacht. Some of our friends say "you don't buy the right boat at the wrong time and good deals be damned." Others say, JUMP! I think the latter group just wants to sail her! I'd be interested in what YOU would do if presented with this opportunity. Oh, and we are not really permitted to flip the boat. The offer is for us to BUY and keep her for a while. My friend could easily sell her for more without my help! Thanks Robert & Suzanne 35s5 Heart of Gold NY This boat would be a HUGE mistake for you Rob. It draws over 8 feet! That is a major drawback in your home waters. M-A-J-O-R. Unless you plan to cut your ties to land, and head out for the Med almost immediately, with no plans to return, this is about as wrong as you could go. It won't work well for the Carribean, either. ICW? Bwhahahahahaha! Really... forget it. It would kill sailing for you. CWM Charlie, Just where in the Caribbean couldn't you take an 8 foot draft boot other than some areas around Belize? The shore of most islands in the leewards and windwards have a steep dropoff. krj That must be why boats with less than 5 foot draft are so popular... CWM Boats with 5' draft are popular in the Florida Keys and the Bahamas but that's not in the Caribbean. Most boats I've sailed in the Caribbean had 5.5-6' draft krj |
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