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Sailboats vs powerboats
On Jun 15, 6:57*pm, "Don White" wrote:
"Frogwatch" wrote in message ... Took the Tolman out yesterday. *Went far up the Ocklocknee River from Ocklocknee River State park to where it looked like the river scenes from Apocalypse Now. *Side channels all over, swampy, muggy as hell and gators everywhere. *Stopped at an isolated landing way up there and looked around. Later, my wife remarked that although ti had been fun, she was bored when I drove the boat for a long time and she did not like driving it. *She thinks she does a lot when we go sailing, in reality, she is mostly an encumbrance when we sail but she thinks she helps. This got me thinking about the two forms of boating and realized they have entirely different motives. *Sailing is ussually about the act of boating, ie the actual sailing whereas powerboating is mostly about using the boat to go places. *We go sailing for a day without going anywhere, just back and forth across Apalachee Bay or just out-as-far- as-we-can-go. *We always use the powerboat to go someplace cool (ok, in this case really hot). If I had to choose one over the other, I do not know which it would be. No doubt in my mind. Trouble is, a minimal crew is needed for any kind of a sailboat.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You bet, you can't get one untied from the dock without at least a crew of one! |
Sailboats vs powerboats
On Jun 16, 12:39*am, "Calif Bill" wrote:
"Don White" wrote in message ... "Frogwatch" wrote in message .... Took the Tolman out yesterday. *Went far up the Ocklocknee River from Ocklocknee River State park to where it looked like the river scenes from Apocalypse Now. *Side channels all over, swampy, muggy as hell and gators everywhere. *Stopped at an isolated landing way up there and looked around. Later, my wife remarked that although ti had been fun, she was bored when I drove the boat for a long time and she did not like driving it. *She thinks she does a lot when we go sailing, in reality, she is mostly an encumbrance when we sail but she thinks she helps. This got me thinking about the two forms of boating and realized they have entirely different motives. *Sailing is ussually about the act of boating, ie the actual sailing whereas powerboating is mostly about using the boat to go places. *We go sailing for a day without going anywhere, just back and forth across Apalachee Bay or just out-as-far- as-we-can-go. *We always use the powerboat to go someplace cool (ok, in this case really hot). If I had to choose one over the other, I do not know which it would be.. No doubt in my mind. Trouble is, a minimal crew is needed for any kind of a sailboat. Yup, a crew of at least one.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - GMTA! |
Sailboats vs powerboats
mmc wrote:
"jim 0010" wrote in message ... Frogwatch wrote: On Jun 15, 4:48 pm, HK wrote: Frogwatch wrote: On Jun 15, 3:54 pm, Vic Smith wrote: On Mon, 15 Jun 2009 12:40:20 -0700 (PDT), Frogwatch wrote: Took the Tolman out yesterday. Went far up the Ocklocknee River from Ocklocknee River State park to where it looked like the river scenes from Apocalypse Now. Side channels all over, swampy, muggy as hell and gators everywhere. Stopped at an isolated landing way up there and looked around. Later, my wife remarked that although ti had been fun, she was bored when I drove the boat for a long time and she did not like driving it. She thinks she does a lot when we go sailing, in reality, she is mostly an encumbrance when we sail but she thinks she helps. This got me thinking about the two forms of boating and realized they have entirely different motives. Sailing is ussually about the act of boating, ie the actual sailing whereas powerboating is mostly about using the boat to go places. We go sailing for a day without going anywhere, just back and forth across Apalachee Bay or just out-as-far- as-we-can-go. We always use the powerboat to go someplace cool (ok, in this case really hot). If I had to choose one over the other, I do not know which it would be. What you've said is probably a good reason the Mac 26 is so popular. --Vic I believe that boats like the Mac 26 are the future of sailboat sales. When you consider the cost of keeping a boat in a slip, few young couples can afford it. The Mac26 makes having a reasonable sized boat affordable. I will also argue that if used as intended, the Mac26 is probably safer than most other sailboats because she can quickly get back to port when it gets nasty out there. Her trailerability makes her far more useful than most heavy boats. Unfortunately, Macgregor has reputation for poor quality due to their old line of Venture boats. I do not know how their reputation for quality is right now. A decently built sailboat of that size and style sells for twice as much as the Mac, and I'm not talking top-drawer, either - just ordinary construction, like, say, a 27' Hunter. -- The modern GOP is little more than an army of moral absolutists led by a gang of moral nihilists. I was never impressed by Hunters. I'd like to see a truly dispassionate evaluation of the Mac26 quality but mention them on any sailing site and you instantly get flamed. Hunters are nice light air sailors. But they will test your metal in anything over 20 kts. I set out to buy a venture 23 but ended up with a Hunter 25 instead. That was my last sailboat before I switched to power and I never looked back. From the models I've been on (22, 27, 36) I think Hunter is the best moderately priced manufacturer for interior layouts (great use of space) and are great for in and near shore. That said, I wouldn't hesitate to take a 27 to the Bahamas unless the weather was crap and who'd want to go then anyway? The 27 is a different boat. My experience was with a 25 which is much smaller and lighter. I believe it's taller too. I've had some pretty interesting sails with it mostly due to my own inexperience and stupidity. |
Sailboats vs powerboats
On Mon, 15 Jun 2009 12:40:20 -0700 (PDT), Frogwatch
wrote: If I had to choose one over the other, I do not know which it would be. The ideal would be to have 2 or 3 of each type because no one boat is suitable for everything. |
Sailboats vs powerboats
On Jun 16, 1:22*pm, Wayne.B wrote:
On Mon, 15 Jun 2009 12:40:20 -0700 (PDT), Frogwatch wrote: If I had to choose one over the other, I do not know which it would be. The ideal would be to have 2 or 3 of each type because no one boat is suitable for everything. * Yep... on a lake you need a pontoon, a ski boat, and some kind of runabout. Or just a performance tri-toon! |
Sailboats vs powerboats
On Tue, 16 Jun 2009 07:48:32 -0400, Jim22 wrote: Steve wrote: On Mon, 15 Jun 2009 21:39:41 -0700, "Calif Bill" wrote: "Don White" wrote in message ... No doubt in my mind. Trouble is, a minimal crew is needed for any kind of a sailboat. Yup, a crew of at least one. Not even. My sailboat would continue along just fine if I fell off while singlehanding. Do you have wheel steering? Yes |
Sailboats vs powerboats
Steve wrote:
On Tue, 16 Jun 2009 07:48:32 -0400, Jim22 wrote: Steve wrote: On Mon, 15 Jun 2009 21:39:41 -0700, "Calif Bill" wrote: "Don White" wrote in message ... No doubt in my mind. Trouble is, a minimal crew is needed for any kind of a sailboat. Yup, a crew of at least one. Not even. My sailboat would continue along just fine if I fell off while singlehanding. Do you have wheel steering? Yes It would be much harder to do with tiller steering. |
Sailboats vs powerboats
Don White wrote:
"Frogwatch" wrote in message ... Took the Tolman out yesterday. Went far up the Ocklocknee River from Ocklocknee River State park to where it looked like the river scenes from Apocalypse Now. Side channels all over, swampy, muggy as hell and gators everywhere. Stopped at an isolated landing way up there and looked around. Later, my wife remarked that although ti had been fun, she was bored when I drove the boat for a long time and she did not like driving it. She thinks she does a lot when we go sailing, in reality, she is mostly an encumbrance when we sail but she thinks she helps. This got me thinking about the two forms of boating and realized they have entirely different motives. Sailing is ussually about the act of boating, ie the actual sailing whereas powerboating is mostly about using the boat to go places. We go sailing for a day without going anywhere, just back and forth across Apalachee Bay or just out-as-far- as-we-can-go. We always use the powerboat to go someplace cool (ok, in this case really hot). If I had to choose one over the other, I do not know which it would be. No doubt in my mind. Trouble is, a minimal crew is needed for any kind of a sailboat. You are very minimal, dummy. Go sail...away. |
Sailboats vs powerboats
On Tue, 16 Jun 2009 18:39:15 -0400, Jim wrote: Steve wrote: On Tue, 16 Jun 2009 07:48:32 -0400, Jim22 wrote: Steve wrote: On Mon, 15 Jun 2009 21:39:41 -0700, "Calif Bill" wrote: "Don White" wrote in message ... No doubt in my mind. Trouble is, a minimal crew is needed for any kind of a sailboat. Yup, a crew of at least one. Not even. My sailboat would continue along just fine if I fell off while singlehanding. Do you have wheel steering? Yes It would be much harder to do with tiller steering. Not really if you tie the tiller off, something that's common for singlehanders to do if they need to leave the tiller for a bit. There's even a knot called a tiller's hitch just for that purpose. And if you have a tiller pilot, all bets are off. |
Sailboats vs powerboats
Steve wrote:
On Tue, 16 Jun 2009 18:39:15 -0400, Jim wrote: Steve wrote: On Tue, 16 Jun 2009 07:48:32 -0400, Jim22 wrote: Steve wrote: On Mon, 15 Jun 2009 21:39:41 -0700, "Calif Bill" wrote: "Don White" wrote in message ... No doubt in my mind. Trouble is, a minimal crew is needed for any kind of a sailboat. Yup, a crew of at least one. Not even. My sailboat would continue along just fine if I fell off while singlehanding. Do you have wheel steering? Yes It would be much harder to do with tiller steering. Not really if you tie the tiller off, something that's common for singlehanders to do if they need to leave the tiller for a bit. There's even a knot called a tiller's hitch just for that purpose. And if you have a tiller pilot, all bets are off. Right on both counts. What I had in mind is setting sails to give you a neutral helm. I wasn't able to do it too often but when conditions are right you can hold a course for a long while. I think it involves running wing on wing but it's been so long, I really don't remember. |
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