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hey, rhys, NO one suggested you were forced to buy the "Japanese Standard" in
condoms. You wanted a center cockpit boat, you got one. Live with it. Motor with it. Enjoy the large aft stateroom/small salon. It was your choice. Wendy, however, was asking about a serious bluewater boat she could singlehand. Different criteria she has than you had. If she had said she wanted to motor down/up the ICW twice a year, "sail" over to the Bahamas, tie to a dock for extended periods of time, drink iced drinks starting at 3 in the afternoon and running til sundown people would have given her different advise. But Wendy didn't ask for that type of boat, she asked for a genuine bluewater sailor 30' 40' she could singlehand. I say, Good for Wendy. btw, rhys, have *you* ever purposely spun an airplane?(indeed, do you even know how?) Wendy has, for the fun of it. She will do just fine as a sailor. (JAXAshby) wrote: a.) it was condescending to women, Only in your fevered mind, apparently. b.) all lines led aft both dramaticly increases friction and the chance of failure in high wind conditions, it also makes one psychologically unable to go forward under conditions when one HAS to go forward, and It can, but usually doesn't unless there are a number of unnecessary turns. Internal halyards aren't usually carried away by the wind, and if it's that high, tearing out your Spinlock is the least of your worries. If what you were saying had much validity, we wouldn't have roller furling. Almost all cruisers do. I don't, and thus have that "real world" experience you so rarely believe others except yourself to possess. c.) the center cockpit vs aft cockpit is a far more serious discussion that to say it is better for the "little lady to see over". Well, it's also better for the little man, I suppose, but my five foot tall wife is quite happy on the tiller of my 34' C&C design in 35 knots. Other stronger, taller women and any number of men wouldn't be. The preference is as much personal as practical. These days, Mini Me can drive a Volvo 60 with the right equipment...so physicality is no obstacle. Attitude and comfort levels are. Ellen MacArthur is five two, after all, and she's probably in the top five ocean racer list. The reason people like cc boats is that they get a full width aft stateroom. That's *one* reason. To get that aft stateroom they get a lower performing boat, and a boat that usually can not have an effective windwave set up. I'll have to tell my center-cockpit ketch owning buddy to return that Voyager windvane, then. He obviously doesn't know when he's being steered effectively. Wendy has stated she wants an ocean going boat to go ocean going (trying to cross serious bluewater without a windvane is kinda dumb, unless one is motoring the entire way. Also, electric auto pilots have serious reliability issues, burn LOTS of hard to replace amps, and don't steer well as the winds pick up, just the area where wind vanes come into their own). I actually agree with you, JAX. Windvane and autopilot fill each others' gaps, as last month's Cruising World article putting the two devices head-to-head in ocean conditions demonstrated. Where I differ is in positing that self-steering and a center-cockpit boat are necessarily opposed. They aren't. She also wants something under 40 feet (ALL cc boats under 40 ar Ugh Lee, and really poor performers to boot), and perhaps as small as 30 feet (only really weird duck boats have cc's under 35 feet). ALL of them, eh? That sailing simulator you own is some piece of work, JAX. Anyway, thanks for being the gallant arbiter of insult to females everywhere. I'm sure you are in many prayers tonight. |
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