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#41
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"Bruce in Bangkok" wrote in message
... On Mon, 14 Apr 2008 14:01:58 -0700, "Capt. JG" wrote: wrote in message ... On Apr 14, 2:49 am, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: The reason I always tell people that they need a forty foot boat isn't because it takes forty feet to keep two people's head above water. It takes forty feet to keep two people AND all the tools, spares, parts, cooking pots, clothes and the Banjo above water. Curiously, stuff seems to accumulate to fill all the available space. Lots of couples live aboard full time and cruise widely in 35 ish feet of moderate displacement. I tend to think that 36' is close to the magic compromise in terms of space and cost and workability for a voyaging couple on a monohull. I'd take ten feet off that for day- sailing and the occasional extended weekend. Cats need a bit more size offshore. But, YMMV big time. -- Tom. I find my 30-footer the perfect size for "extended" day cruising and several overnights. It's big enough to be comfortable, yet it's small enough to make single-handing a breeze in most conditions. My point exactly. But you don;t have two year's supply of engine spares, a spare propeller, a complete set of mechanics tools, a fair sized chest of carpenter's tools and all the other bits and pieces that you "might need" if it breaks in PagoPago, or some other remote place. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct email address for reply) At least not on the boat! -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com |
#42
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"Jere Lull" wrote in message
news:2008041422092150878-jerelull@maccom... On 2008-04-14 17:01:58 -0400, "Capt. JG" said: I find my 30-footer the perfect size for "extended" day cruising and several overnights. It's big enough to be comfortable, yet it's small enough to make single-handing a breeze in most conditions. Pat and I find our 28' comfortable for about a month at a time, our max cruise so far. Pat thinks Xan's satisfactory for 2-3 months at a clip, but time will tell. -- Jere Lull Xan-à-Deux -- Tanzer 28 #4 out of Tolchester, MD Xan's pages: http://web.mac.com/jerelull/iWeb/Xan/ Our BVI trips & tips: http://homepage.mac.com/jerelull/BVI/ I have yet to do anything approaching that on my Sabre. Too much going on with teaching and other non-sailing activities. At some point, I'd like to take a more extended trip. I would not hesitate to take her to Mexico (as far as reliability goes), but would probably not do more than coastal cruise to get there vs. non-stop or similar. -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com |
#43
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On Tue, 15 Apr 2008 01:45:07 GMT, Jere Lull wrote:
On 2008-04-14 13:27:55 -0400, "Wilbur Hubbard" said: Because they all ARE! It's a biological fact that the elderly are much diminished from their mental and physical capacites they embodied in their prime. It's nothing to be ashamed of but it IS something that should be taken into consideration. To deny aging equates to diminished capacity is to deny reality. But to assert that they are incapable is to deny reality as well. It's not an either-or, but a "both" solution. My wife can't manhandle systems on our boat the way I do. She needs winch handles, for instance, and couldn't easily haul our current anchor and chain by hand. She's a little girl and never had that sort of strength. But she can handle a properly set-up 46' cat as easily as our pocket cruiser once she learns the systems. All it takes is adapting your systems and techniques to the available skills. Sometimes the system needed *is* a smaller boat. We have a few people on our docks who aren't old or particularly incapable, but don't go out single-handed. They should have smaller boats. (Some got sailing dinks for knocking around.) Jere I know a couple sailing a 65 foot sloop. Just the two of them. He is a retired scientist, I'd guess about 70, and she is a few years younger. I met them in Phuket and they were on the way to the Med and then back to the east Coast. No crew, just them. The boat in the next slip to me is a fifty foot sloop and the couple that own it sailed it from Seattle. I knew a chap that was 80, he decided to go to America. Sailed north, alone, to Japan and turned right. The last I heard from him he had made Midway Island and the US Navy had a party for him. Even square riggers with their large crews weren't adverse to making things easier. There was a "patented" topsail that could be reefed in two sections. The last of the cargo schooners carrying lumber from Maine to New York sailed with amazingly small crews by using a gasoline engine powered windlass to haul the lines. I can probably go on but the point isn't age it is rigging the boat so that YOU, or YOURS, can sail it. The much maligned Tristan Jones sailed a boat with no legs at all. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct email address for reply) |
#44
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On Mon, 14 Apr 2008 19:47:32 -0700 (PDT), "
wrote: On Apr 14, 3:19 pm, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: I've been aboard some of those 35 ft. cruising boats that have been sailing for several years. The ones that entertain guests in the cockpit because there isn;t room down below for four people to sit down. Well our experience here differs. I've enjoyed a good number of dinners served below by cruising couples in their 30 something foot boats. Some on small 30 something boats. We sat six to dinner one night in Tonga on a 32 foot boat cruised by a couple. Four of us had dinner below on a 25' Pacific Seacraft that was half way between Hawaii and Oz with a couple aboard... I've got two sets of particularly dear friends who've fed us many times in their 36 and 37 foot boats and both pairs of them have been cruising very seriously for over 20 years. One of them is a professional boat builder and a talented sculptor and he keeps an extraordinarily complete set of tools and spares and there's still plenty of room below. Two folks can live and cruise full time on a moderate displacement monohull of 35 feet in some comfort (eg. with a computer, tv, books &c) and still have a place to entertain below, stow a few grand-kids for the occasional week or two and carry a lot of spares. If you absolutely refuse to ever take anything off the boat you'll eventually be entertaining on deck no matter how big your boat is. Of course, bigger boats can carry more, are generally faster, safer and more comfortable at sea, have more privacy, berths that are kinder to old backs and so on. The trade offs are that they're more expensive to keep, and either harder to work or more complex... So, there's an engineering compromise that juggles money, crew strength, tech ability and so on. There are also many aesthetic questions. For instance, I think its good for people to live on boat that gives them a buzz to behold. Some folks want to live with a Zen like simplicity and others want to be reminded of oak and tar... One size does not fit all. But, IMO, all things considered, 36 isn't a bad number. By the way, Pago is civilization. Heck Apia is civilization. They have currier service, hardware stores, engineering shops, you name it. I've had a broken boat in Apia. -- Tom. The boat before this one was a 35 footer and I was quite happy on it. My wife somewhat less so. She is a dedicated cook and she felt that the two burner kerosine stove was: (1) an antique, (2) hard to light, (3) the heat was hard to control, (4) prone to get stopped up midway through preparing a meal, and (5) would be far better on the bottom of the ocean. Well, I sold the boat and got a forty footer with a gas stove. The galley is better but could have been bigger. I don't remember what I wrote about PagoPago or Perth, but the meaning was somewhere that you can't get whatever it is that you want. I've been on those 35 foot boats that actually look bare down below. I've also been on 50 footers that you can't get into the forward compartment. Some people have more discipline then others. But as I originally said cruising means different things to different folks. For some people a week trip to Bangor is a cruise to others a bi-annual none stop trip from Phuket to Australia is cruising. Or the three week sail to India that a mate just made. Or a two week trip up th Malacca Straits. I don't believe that there is a correct definition of "cruising" so no correct definition of a "cruising boat". Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct email address for reply) |
#45
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posted to rec.boats.cruising,alt.sailing.asa
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On Mon, 14 Apr 2008 21:53:44 -0700, "Capt. JG"
wrote: "Jere Lull" wrote in message news:2008041422261877923-jerelull@maccom... On 2008-04-14 19:58:04 -0400, Bloody Horvath said: 35 lbs. is hardly more than a sixteen pound bowling ball in each hand. If you can't handle that... shape up or ship out. My sixteen year old nephew can pull up the anchor. Don't forget the chain. We are a size (or maybe two) big on 30' of chain, so have an additional 30# to haul up. Mud can weigh a bit, too. I just imagine most 5'2" 125# women trying to haul that by hand. Yeah, we can lighten our anchor & chain, but would first get a windlass, as we sleep better with what we have mounted. -- Jere Lull Xan-à-Deux -- Tanzer 28 #4 out of Tolchester, MD Xan's pages: http://web.mac.com/jerelull/iWeb/Xan/ Our BVI trips & tips: http://homepage.mac.com/jerelull/BVI/ Jere... he doesn't actually sail and he certainly has never had to deal with an anchor/chain combo. 30 feet of chain ain't nuthin if you have a all-chain rode. Try 200 ft. of chain....... Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct email address for reply) |
#46
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On Tue, 15 Apr 2008 17:29:25 +0700, Bruce in Bangkok
wrote: Try 200 ft. of chain....... With a 120 lb anchor and a 100 lb mud ball. Even the windlass grunts. |
#47
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On Tue, 15 Apr 2008 09:01:40 -0400, Wayne.B
wrote: On Tue, 15 Apr 2008 17:29:25 +0700, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: Try 200 ft. of chain....... With a 120 lb anchor and a 100 lb mud ball. Even the windlass grunts. On my next boat I'm going to about 50 - 100 ft. of chain and a nylon rode. Actually the rope is stronger then the chain and you don't have to rig a snubber every night. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct email address for reply) |
#48
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On Tue, 15 Apr 2008 21:08:51 +0700, Bruce in Bangkok
wrote: On my next boat I'm going to about 50 - 100 ft. of chain and a nylon rode. Actually the rope is stronger then the chain and you don't have to rig a snubber every night. That will certainly work but all chain has its advantages also: - less scope required for average conditions - resulting smaller swing radius - almost no chance of being cut by an errant prop on an other boat Nylon also loses a great deal of its original strength when it is wet, abraded, or as it ages. I regard rigging a snubber as an advantage because it off-loads the bow pulpit and lowers the effective freeboard height. |
#49
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![]() "Gogarty" wrote in message ... I agree with all of the above. I recall traying to anchor in ten feet of water, a sand bottom and a strong current with a Fortress. Took 300 feet of rode before it would bite. Our primary is a Delta 35. Never fails. Backup is a Fortress 23 and also a lunch hook a Fortress 11. The 11 will hold the boat very well if it sets. Yes, of course it will. But to drop anchor and hold your breath to see if it will set is no way to go even for a lunch hook |
#50
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On Apr 14, 7:30 pm, Bruce in Bangkok wrote:
I don't believe that there is a correct definition of "cruising" so no correct definition of a "cruising boat". Amen. -- Tom. |
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