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"Jere Lull" wrote in message ... In article .com, "tt" wrote: Is there a trailerable( I never want to be at the mercy of a marina again) sailboat that is suited to long distance cruising and extended periods of living? By the way I am retired and not a rich man. Depends on what you mean by "suited". And what you mean by "trailerable", I supposed. Our Tanzer 28 (below) is, IMO, perfectly suited, and she can be *moved* by trailer --a couple of of our sister boats are moved twice a year-- but the required tow vehicle would pay for a few years' marina fees. When you're looking, I would look for two things: Standing headroom and a permanent berth suitable to your needs. Not being able to stand up to put your pants on gets old fast, but that pretty much requires a boat over 26' or it gets too boxy for proper sailing. Most any boat will have a sleeping dinette or something, but making it up and putting it down each day gets old even faster. If you want to self-launch, you pretty much limit yourself to a centerboard boat. Just thought: you might look into the trailerable trawlers like the Nimble series. Only 8'6" wide and relatively light, but great for getting out and about for pretty fair distances. -- Jere Lull Xan-a-Deux ('73 Tanzer 28 #4 out of Tolchester, MD) Xan's NEW Pages: http://web.mac.com/jerelull/iWeb/Xan/ Our BVI FAQs (290+ pics) http://homepage.mac.com/jerelull/BVI/ There are always the McGregor Water Ballast boats, which have plenty of room for their size and are quite trailerable -- though I wouldn't recommend one to an enemy. I consider their ballast to be inefficient and too high, creating a negative righting moment upon capsizing. This would probably not be an issue in protected sailing conditions, though, so it may well be suitable for purposes of inland, near-shore, and ICW sailing. Flicka's are trailerable, with a decent-sized tow vehicle (F250 or so I think would do it), and are proper sea going pocket cruisers. There are also the Pearson Ariels and Tritons, though I think the Triton is pushing it as a "trailerable" boat. I have seen them on trailers, though, in Southern California. Then there are West Wight Potters -- the 19 could suit these purposes, though I wouldn't want to live on one with another person for more than a day or two. Karin |
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