![]() |
On Wed, 06 Jul 2005 09:24:33 -0400, HarryKrause
wrote: Shortwave Sportfishing wrote: On Wed, 06 Jul 2005 08:14:19 -0400, DSK wrote: ~~ snippage ~~ Sounds like a great trip... you missed a lot of scenery in between. But smart to skip going around Cape Hattaras outside. You picked a good time to get out of Florida, Dennis is still deciding which way to go and there's E,F, & G waiting out there in the on-deck circle. Speaking of slow boats, you seem to be the sail guy around these here parts - what's a good, no frills, sail boat that isn't hard to sail for somebody with some movement and strength problems - large enough to carry, say four/five people in relative comfort for just day sailing? Gaff-rigged, Cape Cod catboat. Single sail, large cockpit, no need to go forward or jump around the decks, typically a centerboarder, and for your crowd, you probably want a 18-20 footer. There should be some small shop builders in your area. Easy to put a small outboard on the stern, in case you run out of air. I actually had one of those once when I was a kid - I sold my Townie to a guy at the Boston Yacht Club and bought the catboat that the next door neighbor had for sale. Took some repair, but I sailed that boat for a summer before I went into the service. That's a good thought - I might look around for one. |
On Wed, 06 Jul 2005 13:58:21 GMT, Red Cloud©
wrote: On Wed, 06 Jul 2005 13:10:45 GMT, Shortwave Sportfishing wrote: On Wed, 06 Jul 2005 08:14:19 -0400, DSK wrote: ~~ snippage ~~ Sounds like a great trip... you missed a lot of scenery in between. But smart to skip going around Cape Hattaras outside. You picked a good time to get out of Florida, Dennis is still deciding which way to go and there's E,F, & G waiting out there in the on-deck circle. Speaking of slow boats, you seem to be the sail guy around these here parts - what's a good, no frills, sail boat that isn't hard to sail for somebody with some movement and strength problems - large enough to carry, say four/five people in relative comfort for just day sailing? Trailerable, or kept in the water? Either. |
On Wed, 06 Jul 2005 09:56:33 -0400, HarryKrause
wrote: ~~ snippage ~~ They're really easy to handle. There's a guy where you boat, if he's still alive, that makes a small one: http://www.stur-deeboat.com/sturdeecat.htm The old guy who owns the place was one of my father's suppliers. I talked to him a couple years ago, and he remembered my dad. In those days, though, Stur-dee only offered wood dories. They were nicely made. I've seen those boats somewhere. As I remember, they were nicely made. |
Shortwave Sportfishing wrote:
Speaking of slow boats, you seem to be the sail guy around these here parts - what's a good, no frills, sail boat that isn't hard to sail for somebody with some movement and strength problems - large enough to carry, say four/five people in relative comfort for just day sailing? The catboat is a good call... there are a lot of them out there, my pick would be either a new ComPac (easily trailerable) http://www.com-pacyachts.com/com-pacsuncat.php .... or a Sanderling (not so trailerable, but you can bring it home at the end of the season). BTW the cabin looks bigger than it really is, the cockpit is huge. http://www.smallcraftadvisor.com/boa...anderling.html Another trailerable choice would be a Flying Scot. http://www.flyingscot.com/ A little bigger and not trailerable: Sea Sprite 22 http://www.affordableyachting.com/archives/E443.HTM Ensign http://www.ensignclass.com/graphics/...ifications.gif The last two might be the best choice for a person with movement & strength problems, they will be much steadier on the water and easier to work... especially if some attention has been paid to the running rigging. It will still presnt some challenges. If you really want the first-class option, easiest to sail with least likely pain & difficulty, good performance, and don't mind spending the money, put one of these under the Christmas tree http://www.wdschock.com/harbor20/ I haven't sailed one myself, but have sailed in company with them. They're very easy to handle, intelligently rigged, stable, and capable of fun sailing in a wide range of conditions... more so than any boat listed yet. There is a one-design fleet of these racing down near Wilmington, I watch them when I'm J-24 racing. Hope this helps... it would be interesting to hear what you decide and how it works out. Fresh Breezes- Doug King |
wrote in message oups.com... Here's a link to an op-ed piece about the philosophy of slow-boating. http://groups-beta.google.com/group/...5618b7fc9c9df7 It's a trend. There's a slow eating organization that originated in Italy, of all places. |
On Wed, 06 Jul 2005 13:03:05 -0400, DSK wrote:
Hope this helps... it would be interesting to hear what you decide and how it works out. Thanks man - I'll check them out. Appreciate it. |
It was a good trip, weather was good to excelent the entire way, and we
had no major boat issues. We were very impressed with the scenery in North Carolina above Beaufort, almost made me reconsider our retirement plan in SWFL but that is just about written in stone at this point. Oriental is a wonderful little town that we are glad we stopped at, likewise Charleston, SC. We had a fantastic, albeit expensive dinner at the Charleston Grill right in the downtown area that was the equal of anything I've had elsewhere. The Charleston City Marina is also a first class operation which I would recommend to anyone. |
Thanks. We made it just fine, even had a chance to get reacquainted
with ham radio along the way via Winlink/Airmail/APRS, etc. APRS was a real crowd pleaser with the friends and relatives back home who could track our progress and position along the way. Meanwhile I've worked about half a dozen countries from the boat in the last couple of weeks on 20M SSB. Winlink, Airmail and APRS are all fantastic systems and a real credit to the guys who put it together and made it work. |
If I am going to be slow boating, I prefer sailing. It is the most
economical and the quietest. wrote in message oups.com... Here's a link to an op-ed piece about the philosophy of slow-boating. http://groups-beta.google.com/group/...5618b7fc9c9df7 |
On 6 Jul 2005 13:38:10 -0700, "
wrote: Thanks. We made it just fine, even had a chance to get reacquainted with ham radio along the way via Winlink/Airmail/APRS, etc. APRS was a real crowd pleaser with the friends and relatives back home who could track our progress and position along the way. Meanwhile I've worked about half a dozen countries from the boat in the last couple of weeks on 20M SSB. Winlink, Airmail and APRS are all fantastic systems and a real credit to the guys who put it together and made it work. They did a hell of a job didn't they? |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 06:35 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 BoatBanter.com