BoatBanter.com

BoatBanter.com (https://www.boatbanter.com/)
-   Cruising (https://www.boatbanter.com/cruising/)
-   -   buying houseboat, should also be able to cruise europe (https://www.boatbanter.com/cruising/91429-buying-houseboat-should-also-able-cruise-europe.html)

pantagruel February 26th 08 09:02 PM

buying houseboat, should also be able to cruise europe
 
Hi,

I've done some day sailing before but not really cruising, and not
anything difficult, I was thinking of buying a new houseboat and
cruising Europe with it, the boats I've got my eye on aren't really
suited to long journeys (most houseboats aren't although these
certainly function fine for short jaunts or going on rivers, lakes and
so forth, there's one I'm looking at that is but my girlfriend is also
casting a vote and she might negate that one) - for example going
directly from Denmark to England would be pretty risky (even waiting
clear weather) so I was thinking about basically doing fairly short
trips along the coasts on the supposition that I won't get into
conditions I can't handle, but obviously this is still somewhat risky,
even a day out can turn bad.
This would of course make a trip between various parts of europe
loooong (main parts that I am thinking of - (Norway, Denmark,
Amsterdam, Belgium, England, Portugal, Italy) as I have connections to
these. Obviously to do it the way I am thinking of would also
basically mean hitting every country in between for stopovers if
conditions were not good.

Obviously I realize I will have to do quite a lot of preparation to do
this. The question is whether I should nix the plan because it is just
too dangerous, I'm personally rating it not exactly dangerous but not
clever either, just a compromise between choices.

Any advice, including of course just buy the good boat, I could use
that to help convince my girlfriend of it. :)



Wayne.B February 26th 08 09:39 PM

buying houseboat, should also be able to cruise europe
 
On Tue, 26 Feb 2008 13:02:34 -0800 (PST), pantagruel
wrote:

Any advice, including of course just buy the good boat, I could use
that to help convince my girlfriend of it. :)


My advice would be to buy the boat in the country or region where you
want to do most of your cruising. Crossing the north sea or English
Channel in a typical houseboat could be a dangerous trip that will
require lots of preparation and experience if at all.


Don White February 26th 08 09:51 PM

buying houseboat, should also be able to cruise europe
 

"pantagruel" wrote in message
...
Hi,

I've done some day sailing before but not really cruising, and not
anything difficult, I was thinking of buying a new houseboat and
cruising Europe with it, the boats I've got my eye on aren't really
suited to long journeys (most houseboats aren't although these
certainly function fine for short jaunts or going on rivers, lakes and
so forth, there's one I'm looking at that is but my girlfriend is also
casting a vote and she might negate that one) - for example going
directly from Denmark to England would be pretty risky (even waiting
clear weather) so I was thinking about basically doing fairly short
trips along the coasts on the supposition that I won't get into
conditions I can't handle, but obviously this is still somewhat risky,
even a day out can turn bad.
This would of course make a trip between various parts of europe
loooong (main parts that I am thinking of - (Norway, Denmark,
Amsterdam, Belgium, England, Portugal, Italy) as I have connections to
these. Obviously to do it the way I am thinking of would also
basically mean hitting every country in between for stopovers if
conditions were not good.

Obviously I realize I will have to do quite a lot of preparation to do
this. The question is whether I should nix the plan because it is just
too dangerous, I'm personally rating it not exactly dangerous but not
clever either, just a compromise between choices.

Any advice, including of course just buy the good boat, I could use
that to help convince my girlfriend of it. :)


My brother-in-law owned a houseboat for three years . His insurance said he
had to stay in the harbour...or operate it on a lake. No open ocean
motoring allowed. Too bad because we have a whole string of beautiful bays,
coves & harbours each less than a days sail apart.



Marc Heusser[_2_] February 27th 08 12:50 AM

buying houseboat, should also be able to cruise europe
 
In article
,
pantagruel wrote:

Hi,

I've done some day sailing before but not really cruising, and not
anything difficult, I was thinking of buying a new houseboat and
cruising Europe with it, the boats I've got my eye on aren't really
suited to long journeys (most houseboats aren't although these
certainly function fine for short jaunts or going on rivers, lakes and
so forth, there's one I'm looking at that is but my girlfriend is also
casting a vote and she might negate that one) - for example going
directly from Denmark to England would be pretty risky (even waiting
clear weather) so I was thinking about basically doing fairly short
trips along the coasts on the supposition that I won't get into
conditions I can't handle, but obviously this is still somewhat risky,
even a day out can turn bad.
This would of course make a trip between various parts of europe
loooong (main parts that I am thinking of - (Norway, Denmark,
Amsterdam, Belgium, England, Portugal, Italy) as I have connections to
these. Obviously to do it the way I am thinking of would also
basically mean hitting every country in between for stopovers if
conditions were not good.

Obviously I realize I will have to do quite a lot of preparation to do
this. The question is whether I should nix the plan because it is just
too dangerous, I'm personally rating it not exactly dangerous but not
clever either, just a compromise between choices.

Any advice, including of course just buy the good boat, I could use
that to help convince my girlfriend of it. :)


There certainly are more experienced people out there in this group, but
I would not want to be out on the sea with a boat that's not built for
foul weather. Weather can change unpredictably not very often but if it
does, it is dangerous. Certainly being very cautious with regard to
weather and being well informed about it would be the cornerstone of
safety. Still some of the areas are known for rough weather at times.
I would not risk it.

HTH

Marc

--
remove bye and from mercial to get valid e-mail
http://www.heusser.com

back to the boats February 27th 08 03:26 PM

buying houseboat, should also be able to cruise europe
 
On 26 Feb, 21:02, pantagruel wrote:
Hi,

I've done some day sailing before but not really cruising, and not
anything difficult, I was thinking of buying a new houseboat and
cruising Europe with it, the boats I've got my eye on aren't really
suited to long journeys (most houseboats aren't although these
certainly function fine for short jaunts or going on rivers, lakes and
so forth, there's one I'm looking at that is but my girlfriend is also
casting a vote and she might negate that one) - for example going
directly from Denmark to England would be pretty risky (even waiting
clear weather) so I was thinking about basically doing fairly short
trips along the coasts on the supposition that I won't get into
conditions I can't handle, but obviously this is still somewhat risky,
even a day out can turn bad.
This would of course make a trip between various parts of europe
loooong (main parts that I am thinking of - (Norway, Denmark,
Amsterdam, Belgium, England, Portugal, Italy) as I have connections to
these. Obviously to do it the way I am thinking of would also
basically mean hitting every country in between for stopovers if
conditions were not good.

Obviously I realize I will have to do quite a lot of preparation to do
this. The question is whether I should nix the plan because it is just
too dangerous, I'm personally rating it not exactly dangerous but not
clever either, just a compromise between choices.

Any advice, including of course just buy the good boat, I could use
that to help convince my girlfriend of it. :)


First define what you mean by houseboat. The english narrowbats are
intended for 7 ft wide canals and although some 'nutters' take them
accross to France this is not advisable and insurance is impossible
for crossing an open seaway.
Classic dutch barges are capable of crossing seaways but are mainly
designed for cannal river and inland seas which can be very rough. If
you buy a sailing barge you will hav a lot of fun the old hulls are
that kind to the water they hardly leave a wake unlike any modern
motor boats.
Europe has many wide cannals from the Canal du Middi up to Holland if
you intend to go round the coast of Portugal Spain and Italy you will
need a proper sea boat which will reduce the 'house boat' option.
Several wide barges have crossed the North sea from the Humber to
Holland but on the return trip at least one was craned onto a lorry. A
few books have been written on taking barges (ie 14ft wide) and
narrowbaots from England to France and Holland. We looked at doing
this and had a few days on a skippered barge in preperation for the
French canal's ' driving licence'. One site to look at is blue flag
which is the magazine of the dutch barge group.


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 05:05 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 BoatBanter.com