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"txmxrider" wrote in message
Please forgive me for asking a newbie question. I'm considering getting a smallish (19'-23'), swing keel, water ballast, sailboat for family recreation on local lakes. IMHO that's a great idea! For budget reasons I prefer not to have to rent a slip and would like to keep my boat at home and trailer to the lake on weekends. And you've figured the price of fuel for your tow vehicle into this calculation? Anyway, it's a big advantage to keep the boat at home. .... In all of my years of boating I have never seen anyone trailer a sailboat to the lake, raise the mast, and launch. Every sailboat I have ever seen either came from a slip or at the very least, was sitting on a trailer stored at the marina with the mast up Yeah, so? That doesn't mean it can't be done, just that the guys in your neighborhood don't. Maybe they don't know how, or maybe there are other reasons (more below). Obviously it would be more involved than launching say a bass boat, but really, how much trouble is it? Is the idea totally impractical? Are some models easier than others to launch? Yes MUCH. Although it's a rule that every single trailerable sailboat is claimed by the owner to take "about 15 minutes" to rig / unrig, actual times vary by hours. The skill & attitudes of the owner also have big impact on the procedure. FWIW, it's fully possible to have a reasonable sized trailerable sailboat that can be rigged & launched in less than 15 minutes, by one reasonably skilled person. I've personally owned two such boats, and proved this many times... in fact, one potentially hostile witness timed me, intending to burst my claims... turned out it took me eleven minutes, from ready for the highway to ready to hoist sail. And i was holding a cold drink in one hand for much of that interval ![]() Although I'm not a lazy guy, far from it actually, I'm still very concerned that a boat with a poor work-to-fun ratio will sit in the driveway and not get used that much. Right on the money there. It's true of the vast majority of all boats in America, not just trailerable sailboats. "Silver K" wrote: The only problem with trailering a sailboat is the amount of time it takes to rig the mast and attach the sails and other gear. I trailered a Hunter 23 for a few years and it would take an hour by the time I was ready to sail or drive away. Ah, an honest man! The Hunter 23 is a nice boat but it's not the most effective design for trailerability. The newer Hunter 23.5 and H240 are better in that respect. .... I had to raise the mast, tension the stays and shrouds, attach the boom, run the halyards and sheets, raise the jib on the furler, run the jib sheets, attach the main, put the anchor on the roller, attach the dodger, launch the tender, attach the outboard Did you ever realize that much of this was redundant & unnecessary labor? .. I had an eight foot extension on the tongue that allowed me to back the boat in further and guides on the trailer that helped to align the boat when loading it back on the trailer. A shallower boat that sits low on the trailer is a necessity for easy & quick launching. But all boats are a compromise, the Hunter 23 will sail rings around many water-ballasted & shallow draft boats that are more easily trailered. Brian Whatcott wrote: I fitted a staff to the trailer winch post, with a second winch and a block somewhat higher than the topsides. If you get the post high enough, you don't need babystays. I cut this process short by choosing a smaller boat with a mast I could lift by hand. At the ramp, I fit a crutch in the rudder gudgeons, and set the foot of the mast in a tabernacle hinge and rest the top in the transom crutch. Why not put on a bracket to set the mast crutch in place, and leave the rudder in place? Eliminating unnecessary steps makes it much quicker to rig & unrig. I can launch a ski boat off a trailer single-handed and dry foot, paying out a long painter, which I walk round to the jetty. That takes about 30 times less time and effort than sailboat rigging, no doubt. That's a big reason why motorboats are so much more popular than sailboats. But it's possible to simplify... and can be rewarding too. I know a fellow who used to trailer a small full-keel classic sloop, with a keel-stepped mast. He had invented a tripod arrangement with a winch that would raise the mast into place, but of course it took about half an hour to assemble. He spent about two hours rigging up every time, and apparently enjoyed the process. His boat was beautiful and most people walking by would compliment her. So it doesn't have to be all about hurrying to get on the water. Fresh Breezes- Doug King |
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