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27 Foot cruising sailboats
On Jan 17, 2:57 pm, Alan Gomes wrote:
... Yes...sigh! In fact, I've often thought that a Cal 36 would be the next (and probably last) boat I'd want to own. They are really sweet--like a mini-Cal 40. And they are (occasionally) on the market at reasonable prices. But the beam issue is a real turn off. ... I think Wayne is onto something good with his fix for this. It may be hard to justify money wise, but if you're in love... :) I assume you liked the boat otherwise, including how it sailed? ... Yes, I like the way she looked and she was always a joy to sail. She had a surprisingly good turn of speed all things considered and she was wonderfully mannerly and dry. She had a spade rudder but my standard reefing procedure was to drop the tiller walk up to mast, tuck in the reef and walk back to the tiller. She'd just steer herself. Certainly, the rudder didn't work at all in reverse, but I was able to get her in and out of a tight cross wind slip at the base of a valley with strong and gusty trades by myself routinely. I sold her because the man who approached me to buy her really wanted to put the time and money into her that she deserved and I was looking at an offshore boat for an extended cruise... She's been fixed up nicely and I have a new wonderful boat but I still have a very fond place in my heart for that Cal 36. -- Tom. |
27 Foot cruising sailboats
Wayne.B wrote:
The steel beam on my old Cal-34 was galvanized as I recall and it was holding up fairly well when I sold it about 10 years ago. The boat, a 1968 model, is still going strong although it is no longer being raced. I worked on a 40-something foot X-Yachts boat that had a massive galvanized steel beam structure crisscrossing right through the bilge area. Apparently they guarantee the boat can withstand up to an 8 knot collision against a rock with the keel without damage to the hull. A different boat I know the owner of ran into a rock with the keel at about 6 knots and nearly tore the bottom out - $85K damage to the hull. Maybe steel ain't so bad... Red |
27 Foot cruising sailboats
On Jan 13, 10:48 am, Gordon wrote:
Why haven't I seen mention of any Pearsons on this thread? Gordon Cuz Pearsons are East-coast boats - scarce as hen's teeth out here in the NW. (Same reason YOU've never heard of a Crown...) druid http://www.bcboatnet.org |
27 Foot cruising sailboats
"druid" wrote in message
... On Jan 13, 10:48 am, Gordon wrote: Why haven't I seen mention of any Pearsons on this thread? Gordon Cuz Pearsons are East-coast boats - scarce as hen's teeth out here in the NW. (Same reason YOU've never heard of a Crown...) druid http://www.bcboatnet.org They're not scarce in the SF bayarea. -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com |
27 Foot cruising sailboats
On Jan 18, 10:03 am, "Capt. JG" wrote:
"druid" wrote in message ... On Jan 13, 10:48 am, Gordon wrote: Why haven't I seen mention of any Pearsons on this thread? Gordon Cuz Pearsons are East-coast boats - scarce as hen's teeth out here in the NW. (Same reason YOU've never heard of a Crown...) druid http://www.bcboatnet.org They're not scarce in the SF bayarea. The OP is in the Pac NW (as am I). I looked into buying a boat in CA and trucking it North - turned out despite the lower prices it just wasn't worth it. (And yes, I looked into SAILING it north - pretty much Universal Opinion on this board was I would be nuts to do so!) Nope - we've got lots of really nice boats up here, so we don't have to go to the ends of the earth to get one. druid http://www.bcboatnet.org |
27 Foot cruising sailboats
druid wrote:
On Jan 13, 10:48 am, Gordon wrote: Why haven't I seen mention of any Pearsons on this thread? Gordon Cuz Pearsons are East-coast boats - scarce as hen's teeth out here in the NW. (Same reason YOU've never heard of a Crown...) druid http://www.bcboatnet.org Maybe, maybe not. I know of 4 Pearsons (3 P365's and a 26) in the Port Angeles marina alone. There are probably more and none are for sale! Gordon |
27 Foot cruising sailboats
Subject
Get a 30 ft boat. Double the room, easy to single hand if necessary, easy to find a dock when on cruise. Will have an inboard engine. Low cost to purchase, probably not much more than a 27, if you are patient, easy to sell when finished. I personally don't like them, but as a coastal cruiser, the Catalina 30 is probably the most popular boat out there. Lew |
27 Foot cruising sailboats
"druid" wrote in message
... On Jan 18, 10:03 am, "Capt. JG" wrote: "druid" wrote in message ... On Jan 13, 10:48 am, Gordon wrote: Why haven't I seen mention of any Pearsons on this thread? Gordon Cuz Pearsons are East-coast boats - scarce as hen's teeth out here in the NW. (Same reason YOU've never heard of a Crown...) druid http://www.bcboatnet.org They're not scarce in the SF bayarea. The OP is in the Pac NW (as am I). I looked into buying a boat in CA and trucking it North - turned out despite the lower prices it just wasn't worth it. (And yes, I looked into SAILING it north - pretty much Universal Opinion on this board was I would be nuts to do so!) Nope - we've got lots of really nice boats up here, so we don't have to go to the ends of the earth to get one. druid http://www.bcboatnet.org Well, it wouldn't have been totally nuts, just partially nuts. LOL -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com |
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