We have a C&C lister in Mexico right now. He sailed there in a Landfall 38.
Anyone heard from Wally lately?

Joe
Coquina



From: CnC-List [mailto:cnc-list-boun...@cnc-list.com] On Behalf Of Shawn Wright 
via CnC-List
Sent: Wednesday, April 24, 2019 3:06 PM
To: cnc-list@cnc-list.com
Cc: Shawn Wright <shawngwri...@gmail.com>
Subject: [EXTERNAL] Re: Stus-List C&C as offshore boat?

Thanks, Dave.

I think there is probably a big difference between going down the Pacific coast 
to Mexico, and going offshore to Hawaii or the South Pacific, mainly in that 
the former is limited to 3-5 days offshore between safe ports, vs 20+ days for 
the latter, meaning weather windows are easier to hit. At this early stage, I 
really don't know if we'll go offshore, but if things go well, I'd like to go 
down the coast to Mexico at least, without having to search for another boat. 
If I already had enough experience, I'd probably just fly to California and 
find a boat there, then sail it to Mexico, and have the advantage of 10x as 
many boats to choose from. But I want to sail our local waters first, something 
I've wanted to do since I was a kid. I grew up around powerboats and fishing 
boats, and always looking longingly at the sailboats as I endured the drone and 
smell of the engine...

Your accounting of your purchase is quite interesting; thanks. Does that 
include moorage/storage, insurance, etc.? If so, that is very good value. What 
do you think she would sell for today? If we had done this a few years ago when 
I was still working, I would just spend the money on a nicer boat, or not worry 
about fixing it up. But being only a few months into retirement, and with my 
wife still working but soon to retire also, the uncertainty of our real living 
expenses going forward are a significant factor. Moorage is at least $4K/year 
here, unless we can join a club, or put it on a mooring buoy, but winter storms 
are an issue with a buoy. Lots of spare parts on the beaches this winter from 
all the boats washed ashore...



On Wed, Apr 24, 2019 at 9:45 AM Dave Godwin 
<dave.god...@me.com<mailto:dave.god...@me.com>> wrote:
Shawn,

Been watching your rumination on buying that 35-II.

I’ve delivered a C&C 34 from Fort Lauderdale to Port Royal, Jamaica, no stops. 
It was fine for that but all we had to deal with was constant headwinds for 
days on end.

I’m flying into Ponta Delgada, Azores on May 4 to assist my friend on the final 
leg home to Gosport, England from Antigua. They just spent 48 hours in Force 7 
conditions mid-Atlantic. I would not have wanted to be in my boat in those 
conditions. His boat is an Oyster 485. Big difference.

I consider my boat to be a good coastal cruiser. I’d go to Bermuda with 
(hopefully) a good weather window. IMO, C&C’s are quite strong but have their 
limits if extended offshore passage making is the desire.

Of course, the French regularly pile entire families on Beneteaus and cross 
oceans just fine.  ;-)

Regards,
Dave Godwin
1982 C&C 37 - Ronin
Reedville - Chesapeake Bay
Ronin’s Overdue 
Refit<https://protect2.fireeye.com/url?k=e669f07f-baffb335-e669d908-0cc47adca76a-5f307ec7f13618c9&u=http://roninrebuild.blogspot.com/>

P.S. Back to your purchase decision thread. We bought our boat in 1997 as a 
bank repo. The description of the 35-II sounds much better compared to the 
condition of our boat when we purchased it. One thing to consider is the 
average cost to own over time. Despite replacing/rebuilding or adding 1) engine 
rebuild, 2) all wiring, 3) plumbing, 4) cushions, 5) roller furling, 6) sails, 
7) electronics, 8) below deck autopilot, 9) stove, 10) distribution panel, 11) 
windlass, 12) fixed ports (2x), 13) opening ports (2x), 14) cabin sole (2x), 
15) Harken self-tailing deck winches (2x), 16) Harken mainsheet traveler system 
(2x), 17) all new rod and running rigging, well, I’ll stop there. No, wait. 
Completel Awlcraft paint job, hull and topsides. Whew!

But here’s the deal; I keep detailed records as part of my rebuild “hobby” and 
the yearly average costs over time is $7,000.00 U.S. Includes everything with 
the exception of the $25,000 that we paid for it.

I will be interested in your decision. Good luck!


On Apr 24, 2019, at 11:21 AM, Shawn Wright via CnC-List 
<cnc-list@cnc-list.com<mailto:cnc-list@cnc-list.com>> wrote:

I'm going to switch things up a bit from the gloomy topic of my current boat 
purchase: how many of you have taken your C&C offshore, and if so, which boat, 
where to, and how did it manage the conditions? If you have not gone offshore, 
what are the worst conditions you've experienced in a C&C, and how would the 
performance of the boat in these conditions make you feel about taking it 
offshore?

One of the very first boats we looked at was a Westsail 32 (don't laugh), 
partly because they are proven world cruisers, and the boat has been from BC to 
NZ and back. But with our fickle air in the summer here, a good light air boat 
seems like a better choice, but I also want something that can take a beating 
without worrying about our safety.

--
Shawn Wright
shawngwri...@gmail.com<mailto:shawngwri...@gmail.com>
_______________________________________________

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--
Shawn Wright
shawngwri...@gmail.com<mailto:shawngwri...@gmail.com>
_______________________________________________

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