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![]() Rick Morel wrote: I've come to agree that smaller is better. How small? Well, guess it's up to the person or persons. SNIP On Tue, 13 Feb 2007 22:43:28 GMT, Don W wrote: Interesting post Rick. I'd never get my wife to go cruising in our Catalina 27, and she thinks the Irwin 38 is too small. For myself, I think the 38 is ok for two people, but crowed for three or four. To each their own I guess. Also, it depends on how long you are out for. Don W. Thanks Don. I think... In each case I mentioned there was no set time limit. Well the first sorta' was. Back then by the time one turned 18 there was a choice of continue education and get a deferment, join the military or shortly get drafted. Not to get political, but I think one of the worst things that happened in this country was shutting down the draft. Yes, to each their own. But honestly, how much space does one really require? Another thing to think about is how that limited space is set up. For instance a place to sleep. Very important. If you have to squeeze in and contort life ain't gonna be pleasant. If it's hard and/or wet a lot life ain't gonna be pleasant. One boat comes to mind. An S2 30-ft center cockpit. The aft cabin and passage way back is "hunkered over" headroom. Minus #1. The berth is pretty comfy but, and a big BUT, it's crosswise. So that means the aft person has to get in first and out last, or crawl over the forward person. Minus #2. Both sound kind of minor and are if we're talking a weekend or vacation cruise, but try it day in and day out. On the other hand, the Coronado had a KING-SIZE aft berth and jumping-jack headroom. As mentioned before the Morgan has an adequate sized vee-berth with good cushions and our memory foam pad will be put on it when we sail off. We've spend 2 years worth of 3-day weekends, plus the night before, aboard quite comfortably. The Southcoast 22 also had a 2-adult sized vee-berth that did fine for a year. The king-size Coronado berth really was no better. Just bigger which actually was a disadvantage heeled over in rough seas. Think about it. One more thing. It seems the manufacturers think it a big selling point to sleep many. The Morgan stock sleeps 7. Now other than the space this takes up, where in heck are you going to put 7 people on a 30-foot boat when they're not sleeping? In the stateroom, bedroom, sleeping area, whatever you want to call it, you do need some drawers and an adequate size hanging locker. How much depends upon your fashion tastes. If you really-really-really need that walk-in closet at home with the 150-shoe rack, then you're gonna need a bigger boat. Seriously, if you have to live out of a duffel bag it's going to get old pretty fast (well, not to some, but to most). We actually passed on buying one 33-footer because the two hanging lockers were each about 8-inches wide! Ya gotta eat. So that means you have to have a place to keep the food, prepare and cook it. And something with which to cook it. A stove with oven beats the heck out of a stove-top only. A gimbaled one with rails and clamps beats a fixed one. I've left soup cooking on its own, in a pressure cooker with the pressure thingy off, in 10-ft seas on the latter. Oh yes, propane is the way to go. A microwave is nice. Yes it takes about 100-AMPS at 12V from the inverter to run it, but it doesn't run that long, so figure 10 to 20 AMP-Hours max per "cook". Sufficient counter-top space. Actually kind of hard to obtain, but then that's the complaint in a lot of houses. A deep sink. Stowage for pots and pans that you don't have to kneel down and dig every time. Why is it in these cases what you want is always waaaay back at the bottom of the pile? How many of said pots and pans do you really need and use? I've seen folks with four sizes of skillets for different things. Par that down to just one, or maybe two? Enough cabinet for the food-stuffs you're going to use in the next few days. Enough stowage for food you're going to use in the next ???? days, months. If you're like us and like to go off into the wilds for months at a time it takes a lot, but not nearly as much as most folks think. We could cram about a year's worth under the vee-berth for two average folks. This of couse assuming you like or can live with things that survive at room temperature - canned, rice, dried beans, pasta. Amazing how one can learn to spiff up stuff from a can so that's it's a bit more then edible and sometimes pretty good. Again, to each his/her own. A hint: Crisco is the same thing as margerine without the yellow color. It, and margerine for that matter, will keep well at room temperature. So will fresh eggs if you turn them once a day. Other than room temperture I've become spoiled by a fridge. Had an icebox conversion in the Coronado and plan to do the same in the Morgan. This takes up less space. A stand-alone wouldn't be bad either if one has the space, and it should be able to be found. Then one can use the icebox for food or other stowage. In either case, space is limited so after a while you will run out of things that need to be kept cold until the next grocery stop. Of course that leaves more room for the fish and stuff you catch. Anyway, all are doable in most cases. A place to consume all that conveniently prepared food. It gets old very fast to most folks to have to balance a plate, glass and stuff while crouched on a settee; or trying to use a table that has to be lowered or raised each time and is more designed to fit the mast or bulkhead than a couple of adult human's tableware. Some kind of fixed dinette arrangement is really a must. Just plop the plates and stuff down, sit and proceed. It's okay if it's convertable to a berth for those rare guests, but when the table is a table it has to be SOLID. It's also useful for sitting and reading with coffee, or rum n coke, working/playing on the laptop, carving beautiful scrimshaw, rebuilding the waterpump, whatever. Okay, after comfortably preparing and consuming all that good food the time will come when you have to clean up and get rid of some of it. We found the best way, for us, is to have a raw water faucet in the galley and head. We washed dishes and first-rinsed with raw, then rinsed with fresh. Now we come to the head. Pretty much okay as it comes. If you have a not-energy-wastful way to run the waterheater while away from a marina, that's good. We really didn't on the Coronado. Got a Solar Shower Bag and extended the hose. If sunny heated the water that way; if not or in a hurry heated some water on the stove. Hung it up and used it in the shower. Worked fine. BTW, you can FORGET about those nice, long showers except when at a marina with showers. Well, unless you have a really big boat and spend a lot of time getting water or have a large watermaker and don't mind the fuel cost to run it. As an aside, we did have a "nice long" shower arrangement on the tiny Southcoast. I took one of those round, galvanized washtubs (we had room to stow it under the cockpit and it never did rust much), a square frame made of pipe, a hose and shower head mounted to the pipe, a shower curtain and a small bilge pump. Hang the pipe/showerhead/curtain from the boom, either over the hatch or cockpit; put the washtub under with a gallon or so of stove-heated water. Step inside and turn on the bilge pump. Viola! A recirculating shower. Sure, the water does get soapy but not really that much unless you go really crazy with the soap. Hmmmm... Might do a variation of that in the morgan. put a Y-valve to select overboard/shower on the sump pump. Do a final rinse with fresh. Okay, now we get to repleshing that water we have to conserve. Once someone asked us what we missed most about living ashore. My ex said, "Not moving!", meaning of course the motion of the boat, not moving from place to place. My answer was, "Being able to waste water!" There are other things of course, but these were the honest number ONE for each of us. There are five basic ways to get water: Tank up while fueling at a marina (most won't allow you to tie up and top off your water tank without topping off the fuel); Dinghy in with jerry cans and find some somewhere; Buy it from the dock (you have to do this in some countries even if you do fuel up);Some arrangement to collect rainwater (Not too reliable); Make your own from what you floating in. This is my choice. It is so wonderfull to not have to worry about running out or have to spend sometimes days to get to a source. Again, we are out-of-the-way-spend-months-there folks. To me a watermaker is worth it's weight in gold. Good thing because they certainly seem to be priced that way! Somewhere in the archives here should be a long piece I wrote about it, but suffice now to say rig up a silty water arrangement, size it so it runs a few hours a day, and no mater where you are and what kind of water you're floating in, top your water tank(s). You still have to conserve water - you don't want to run the thing 24/7 to keep up. Of course on a big boat with no concern for energy conservation you can do it. IOW, if you're a member of the $10,000-a-month crowd. Finally (Is it about time? I seem to get a bit windy, don't I?), you have to have an energy source. Others and myself have covered this, but basically you take how many AMPS each thing draws and multiply by the number of hours a day they're used. Add it all up and you have how many AMP-hours you need. Size your house bank to be able to supply it for 3 or 4 days. Run your engine daily to put it back or get sufficent solar panels to put it back daily. If you have room. Depending on where you are and the cloud cover or lack thereof, the AMP-hour output of the solar will be the Wattage divided by 4, 3 or 2. Figure on 4 for worse case. Yes, if you live aboard and especially live on the hook, there are things in life you have to give up. But you also gain a lot more. Maybe. The trick is to find what works for you and yours. If half of the couple is doing it because the other half wants two, it'll turn out really bad. No ifs, ands or buts. Well unless she or maybe even he in those rare cases is a saint. If you've never really spend a lot time aboard, do what you can, charter, borrow, whatever and try to spend a couple weeks or preferably a month living aboard away from the dock. If you return home with the urge to cruise make THE PlAN. If either or both of you are so relieved to get back home you're in a state of euphoria, then maybe life ashore with weekends aboard is the life for you. We're all different. Our choice of an ideal floating home is about a 75-foot motor yacht with all the bells and whistles, capable of crossing oceans. That ain't gonna happen, buddy! Not unless we win the lottery. Chances of that are 1 in 45-million. If you buy a ticket. Our chances are 0 in infinity because it ain't worth the buck with those odds. The small boat we got. The suitcase full of money. Well not quite. But I've done it before and I can do it again, by golly! Rick |
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