I'm with Chuck on this. A couple on the lake bought a Thistle (17ft open craft; very responsive and great in light air) for their first boat and on the second time out, they dumped it. Woman would never get back in that or any other boat.We learned in a Venture 21, a very cheap boat, but decent in light air and easy on/off the trailer. Pretty forgiving.Then got a San Juan 24 and realized what a difference a good boat makes in boat feedback, docking etc.Note the sailing schools use J24s, Colgate 26s and Solings (same size range & style).Get the 25, it's a great size to get things figured out with.Then get the 30 since it's fantastic!RonWild CheriC&C 30-1STL
From: Chuck Gilchrest via CnC-List <cnc-list@cnc-list.com> To: cnc-list@cnc-list.com Cc: Chuck Gilchrest <csgilchr...@comcast.net> Sent: Tuesday, August 29, 2017 4:22 PM Subject: Re: Stus-List considering 1981 C&C 25 For what it is worth, As a first boat I owned a 13' FJ dinghy that taught me nothing about sailing a 4000lb keelboat. Both that boat and my Laser made me realize that I like to sail and like to swim, just not at the same time.Our 25mk1 allowed us overnight accommodations for a young family and served as a stable and fun performing boat which we owned for 14 years before trading up to our current Landfall 35.Chuck Gilchrest Padanaram, MA Sent from my iPhone On Aug 29, 2017, at 4:46 PM, coltrek via CnC-List <cnc-list@cnc-list.com> wrote: If you REALLY want to learn how to sail , buy a 13 - 14 footer and sail for a year or two. You will learn so much quicker on a small boat. Sorry if I'm raining on your parade! Regards, BillColemanC&C 39
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