Listers

During the past couple of days, our web hosting company was doing some 
maintenance and it did affect the messages getting through.

Looks like we are back up and running now.

Stu

From: Ronald B. Frerker 
Sent: Wednesday, May 29, 2013 10:05 AM
To: cnc-list@cnc-list.com 
Subject: Re: Stus-List Bigger Boat Question-Warning, a little long winded!

      Message to Stu, 
      I've not been receiving many of these messages; been that way since 
sunday.
      Didn't even get my own response to one from yesterday when I mentioned my 
problem the first time.
      While I'm not a ludite, I'm not real computer literate.
      I've checked my spam mail folder but none there.  What's my next step?
      Ron
      Wild Cheri
      C&C 30
      STL


      --- On Wed, 5/29/13, djhaug...@juno.com <djhaug...@juno.com> wrote:


        From: djhaug...@juno.com <djhaug...@juno.com>
        Subject: Re: Stus-List Bigger Boat Question-Warning, a little long 
winded!
        To: cnc-list@cnc-list.com
        Date: Wednesday, May 29, 2013, 7:49 AM


        Hi Mark,

        When I decided to move up from my O'Day 22, I started looking at 27' 
boats.  Then at the encouragement of my wife we decided to consider even larger 
boats.  Then at the advice of some seasoned boaters, which was to go as big as 
you feel comfortable with, started looking at even larger boats.  So, we 
started shopping for a boat, on and off, for probably 2 years.  We saw a lot of 
peoples garbage they wanted us to pay to have the privilege of removing for 
them, we saw boats grossly overpriced, we looked at boats out of our price 
range to see what you get for your money.  We discovered you simply cannot take 
anyone at their word on condition.  (after all, these people are emotionally 
attached to their boats and probably in denial, not so much dishonest) In the 
end, we decided to go up to a 34' boat because that was largest boat allowed at 
the marina where I kept the O'Day...(No we aren't there anymore, we ended up 
keeping Lolita at the same marina where we found her, we love it there!)

        What happened for me is, I became more familiar with bigger boats by, 
reading about them and visiting them.  I discovered things that bother my wife 
and I and things that weren't such a big deal.  Some things she felt more 
strongly about and vice versa.

        Then, one day, after looking at about 7 or 8 boats including an O'Day 
32, a Rhodes 30, a couple of Pearsons a C&C 32, among others, we were thinking 
that there were about 3 boats we could potentially be happy with.  The O'Day 
seemed roomy and pretty modern, the Pearsons were 2 ends of a spectrum, one 
seemed more modern and the other a solid boat in good condition with no frills. 
 The C&C felt out of our price range, a little over priced but, we might try 
negotiating with the guy...

        Then we went to look at a Viking 33 and the Rhodes 32 at the same yard. 
 We found the Rhodes, but couldn't get inside, it looked okay.  Then we found 
the Viking.  I had read up on Vikings before we came and found them to be 
reputable, well respected and of good construction, not to mention the C&C 
design aspect.  I was pretty hopeful about this boat so, I was a little biased. 
 

        It was pretty cool how it went;  We were tired and ready to give up the 
search for the day.  I said "well I'm going aboard" and Karen said, "I'm only 
going up the ladder if it is really worth it."

        So, I climb aboard, looked around, went below, come back out and say, 
"I think you should come up."  She's like, "really, is really worth it?"  I 
say, " I think you should come up."  This went on for about 5 or six rounds.  I 
started walking on the deck, looking for soft spots and there were none, it had 
some old electronics and I was impressed because my last boat had none.  It had 
wheel steering, full, almost new canvass and she did not feel overwhelmingly 
big.  She is pretty narrow and I think that is what made her feel more 
manageable from a scale perspective.  

        I said again, "I think you should come up."  So, finally, she did, The 
thing had peeling paint all over the place below and the head was disgusting.  
But, somehow the boat was still appealing to us.  Karen knew what kind of 
restoration work I was capable of after the O'Day 22 experience and was able to 
see past the cosmetics and agreed this was probably the happy medium we'd been 
looking for, (I should mention, we both wanted a boat that was considered 
fast).  Well, we made an offer, did the survey which came back great and we 
bought the boat.  At this point I wish I could say it was all rainbows, fair 
winds and beautiful sailing...  However, she was a severely neglected girl, and 
needed everything we knew about, plus new sails and a new engine.  It took me 
all spring and pretty much the whole summer to get her launched, (needless to 
say, wifey was none too happy about my having "wasted the whole summer" working 
on her and she is very gun shy about it happening this year!).

        Lolita is a good, solid, and fast boat and I know her inside and out 
now.  She ended up costing me well over my initial budget but, in the end I 
think I have the investment right around market value, maybe somewhat more than 
the market would bear but, i do have brand new sails, rigging, motor, canvass 
and this year, electronics!  So, that would be the upgrades of a normal used 
boat, (or so I like to believe!)

        I guess my point, in all this, is that searching for and buying a used 
boat seems to be a process, an ever changing search for something that seems to 
fit your needs.  You really start to change your perspective as you look at 
boats and talk to they're owners and yacht broker and begin to really define 
what you're looking for.  

        Old boats are an investment of time, money and emotions.  Some would 
say I must be nuts to put in the efforts to such an old boat, but, then we have 
this pack of wing nuts who advise, encourage, compliment and give smack up side 
the head once in while that help keep us all feeling sane, and helped.  I could 
never have accomplished all the work I did alone and you won't have to either.  
There are all kinds of sources to explain processes in fixing boats.  there are 
all kinds of brand specific groups (none to equal this group of course!) I 
think if you are prepared to do the work in fixing all that is wrong to begin 
with and the proper maintenance, you'll be a better sailor and happier person.  
But, thats just me!  LMAO  ...and I'm not all that stable!!

        Then, you could always buy the boat that has been all updated and well 
maintained, pay the market value and have the yard do all the work.  Oh to 
dream...

        Anyway, I hope this helped a little!  It was kind of therapeutic for 
me!!!  LOL

        Danny
        Lolita
        1973 Viking 33
        Westport Point, MA
         

        ---------- Original Message ----------
        From: Russ & Melody <russ...@telus.net>
        To: cnc-list@cnc-list.com
        Subject: Re: Stus-List Bigger Boat Question
        Date: Tue, 28 May 2013 21:29:21 -0700

        Hi Mark,

        As you already know there is no simple answer. 

        But here are the dimension for the perfect boat: 
          Cocktails for 6 
          Dinner for 4 
          Sleeps 2
        Seriously, 30' is ideal for light sailing with a weekend & a bit away. 
Bigger gets more toys tolerated and comfort underway (especially if you 
actually go sailing if it's windy). For 20 grand your best bet is the one that 
has been maintained (vs say, size weighted consideration) so to get the best 
value. Good sails can be the difference in the bargain... only 3 new cruising 
sails are a minimum 6 grand from the orient.

        Personally I went from a 60' cruising cutter to a 35 mk-1 and love her. 
However I have a 40' motor-sailor sitting in the back yard awaiting my 
semi-retirement where I can spend 4 5 months aboard, cruising the west coast.

        Your mileage may vary. Enjoy the hunt.

                Cheers, Russ 
                Sweet 35 mk-1

        At 09:01 PM 28/05/2013, you wrote:



          I'm still looking at boats, reading emails from this list and 
learning lots.  Right now I'm sitting back, watching the market, looking to new 
boats that come up, and trying to figure out where I want to end up.  
          Maybe some more experienced listers can offer some thoughts (on or 
off list).

          I know that everyone has there own criteria - but I'm trying to 
figure out the right boat for me.  My Mirage 24 is quite small - 5ft of 
headroom (only my 8 yr old can stand up), not enough space to sleep 5 (me and 4 
kids), lacks an enclosed head, no functional galley, noisy and smelly outboard.
          I envision wanting to do some more sailing - little further out of 
the harbour, some overnights (effectively boat camping with the kids), maybe a 
long weekend away with the girlfriend.

          But we've all heard the cracks "2 best days in a boater life - the 
day he/she buys their boat, and the day they sell it", or "A boat is a hole in 
the water you pour money into" - not really encouraging. So, why, if they are 
so terrible does everyone get 2 foot itis?

          Feel free to espouse on why did you end up with the boat you have? Do 
you wish you stayed smaller/cheaper/simpler?
          What would you say to yourself if you could go back and offer advice? 
Was this the best decision ever?  If you could make a change what do you want? 
A bigger galley? Bigger cockpit?

          My temptation was to find a 29-30 foot boat that would work, thinking 
that would last me for years with the kids and still be a manageable size when 
they are off.  Keeping costs reasonable, maintenance manageable and enough boat 
to venture further afield.

          Right now I could buy a local C&C 33 (with and Atomic4), or a local 
C&C 30 (diesel), or there are 29's, 30's and 34's within reach - the prices are 
similar.  I plan on climbing aboard a few different boats to get a feel for 
size and space, but I'm trying to figure out what I'm getting into without 
having to learn the painfully hard way!  I'm leaning towards a diesel (only 
because that seems to be common opinion and gas on my current boat has it's 
downsides), wheel steering and something fairly stable (so kids and girlfriend 
aren't barfing over the side -- which I gather eliminates the 29's from the 
list).  Price wise I'd like to stay below $20000.

          I have the cash set aside to buy the boat, but clearly bigger is not 
always better, the maintenance and insidious upkeep costs can add up quickly.  
I was able to do a quick sand and bottom paint on my M24 in 2.5 hrs.  Assuming 
the cost and workload multiply with the displacement I'm guessing a 30ft (being 
twice the displacement) would be double the effort, a 34ft 3 times the work.  
At what point is it more work and you wish for a smaller/cheaper boat?

          Thanks in advance for the advice,

          Mark







          -- 

          ---------------------
            Dr. Mark Bodnar
          B.Sc., D.C., FCCOPR(C)
          Bedford Chiropractic
          www.bedfordchiro.ca
          ---------------------

          There is no cure for birth and death save to enjoy the interval.
            - George Santayana


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