Which small boats to consider? Wishlist included.

Started by captxtina, April 07, 2012, 12:09:59 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 4 Guests are viewing this topic.

s/v Faith

Let me know if you are interested in one of these.  I know someone in Pensacola with one that might be had for a good price.

Quote from: Jim_ME on April 07, 2012, 11:05:16 PM
Hi captxtina,

Here is one that might be worth looking at...

Cape Dory 25 sailboat with outboard motor - $3900 (Falmouth, MA)
http://capecod.craigslist.org/boa/2939852751.html

I have always liked these Cape Dory 25s (Allied Greenwich 24s). Large enough to be seaworthy, yet small enough (4,000 pounds and 3-foot draft full keel) to be reasonably trailerable.
http://sailboatdata.com/viewrecord.asp?class_id=366

Here is an example of one on a trailer...
http://triadtrailers.com/triad-trailer-gallery/sailboat-trailers/sailboats-25-30-feet/1321-2/

-Jim
Satisfaction is wanting what you already have.

Captain Smollett

#21
Quote from: captxtina on April 08, 2012, 09:33:52 AM

I think that as long as I'm comfortable on the boat and she and I are a good fit for one another, I'll be confident and my crew will be as well (and thusly, the heeling may become less of a thing for them).


Some thoughts...

"Use makes master."

Heeling is pretty scary to everyone when they just start out.  I think it really boils down to trust - trusting that the boat will "do her job" and not capsize.

Most displacement boats won't go over with the force of wind alone in ordinary sailing conditions (ie, not broaching, for example). But saying that to someone is "abstract."  Sitting in the cockpit when she starts to heel, and it just "feels" like she's going over, all that theory about what keeps her upright goes right out the window.

Saturday, my son was sailing by himself a dinghy in "decent breeze" for the first time, and as I was helping/coaching him back in, he heeled in the puffs a little more than he liked.  He was quite upset.  I got him to learn to play the mainsheet to keep things at his level of comfort - we were in no hurry to get anywhere.  

Puff came - he screamed!  "Ease the main,"  Better ride.

A mere few minutes later, another puff came and he heeled over even farther.  I said, "ease the mainsheet" and he replied, "why?  I'm fine."  He laughed when I told him he was actually heeling more than we was a few minutes before and screamed about it.

One trick you might try to help your crew get better 'acquainted' with heeling (if you have not done this already) is to let them handle mainsheet trim.  Let them keep it at their comfort level.  You can say "ease" and "trim" and gently try to persuade a little more heel/proper trim each time.

On a breezy day, keep things "calm" and mellow.  Talk about it before hand, and tell your crew "we are going to work on trusting the boat.  I KNOW this wind will not push her over."  Let 'em get a good hold on things, and when they are ready, go for some heel.  Work toward getting the rail in the water and keeping it there for a bit, just to show how stable she is at that point.  Show how you control that with the sail trim (and/or course changes)...it's not some mysterious thing that "just happens."

As I told my son...you control the boat, you sail the boat.  She does not sail you.  He laughed at that, too.

Once the basic, primal fear is addressed, then you can get into stuff like "well, excessive heeling is generally not good, anyway.  Not because it's uncomfortable, but because the boat does not sail well like that most of the time (depending on the boat, etc, etc).  So, all these things we practiced to keep it comfortable for you are also things that will help us sail faster and more efficient in the long run."

Viola!  Turning "fear" or "discomfort" into a positive.   ;D

Quote

I started to ask a couple people in the PHRF fleet I sail in if I can go out with them for a sail so I can get more experience feeling out different types of small cruising boats.


A most EXCELLENT idea!   :)

Quote

And, I fully accept that in part, it's the sailor (me), which is why I'm looking for a smaller (19-23'ish) boat that I can just go out and play around with -- test the sails, make adjustments, and really learn the boat and teach myself (like I have with dinghy-sailing),


Another excellent idea/approach.  Good stuff.

Given that (a) small boats tend to get used more and (b) a boat YOU are comfortable on will get used more, finding the "right" boat for you will definitely equal more sailing time and better experiences/memories.

Quote

Quote from: Captain Smollett on April 07, 2012, 08:41:39 PM
I think in the light stuff, it boils down to the skill, patience and will of the sailor.
).

Thanks. :)


I sort of learned this on a day when I had somewhere to be and motored the 16 or so miles round trip.  I had to drop off something at the other end of the lake I was on by a certain time, and I had to be back to the club we were in by a certain time (for a social function).

I rationalized motoring on the basis of "too little wind and too little time."

My rationalizations sometimes help keep me warm.

The problem was a fellow, let's call him JK, who was out on a Precision 18.  JK was the only one of us that sailed the whole way - both directions.

There was not too little time.  I was just not up to being "a sailor" that day.  JK was, and I learned a lot, spiritually I guess more than technically, that day from watching him.  It was simply beautiful how he just sat in the cockpit of his boat...right where he needed, and wanted, to be.

And he was not late for the social function.  I was surprised how close he was by the time I got my boat on the trailer and was done tending to 'boat stuff.'  I think we gave him an "award" at the social dinner for "Intrepid Sailor of the Day."

I have, since that day, made a real effort to improve my light air sailing and to try to not let "too little wind" be an obstacle to getting where I want to go (dang-nabbed schedules notwithstanding).  It is truly amazing how little wind it takes to give a boat steerage way.

Finally...Jim, thanks and grog for this post.  Very cool discussion (and linked article).
S/V Gaelic Sea
Alberg 30
North Carolina

Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn't do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.  -Mark Twain

PommyDave

Brilliant info. This is just what I need to learn to do myself. Thank you.
David, VK2DMH
s/v Persistance (Top Hat 25 ft Mk3)

Jim_ME

Welcome aboard, Dave.

I was not familiar with the Top Hat 25, probably since it is built in your area and perhaps few make it over to this part of the world...at least to the East/Atlantic Coast, where I live...?

So I checked it out...
http://sailboatdata.com/viewrecord.asp?CLASS_ID=6329

Looks like quite a stout smallish cruiser in the same size range as the Ariel 26 and Meridian 25...

Was amused to read that its keel, shown in the profile drawing with its attached rudder, is described in the specs as "Fin Keel". I would call that a full(ish, at least), yes with some cutaway forward. (Charlie noticed this same sort of keel type-oh on another design we were looking at a week ago or so.)

Nearly a 50% ballast-to-displacement ratio in a 4.25-foot deep keel, must add to its stoutness.

Also noticed that the first built was in 1955 and though 1984...almost 30 years... Says something that the design remained popular over such a long period.

Anyway, you have joined the right forum, where modest cruisers of this size are respected. This reminds me that I recently saw an ad for a 9000-pound Alberg 30 that described it as "a good daysailer"... Will go out on a limb and doubt that I'm the only one here that finds this kind of description amusing...   :D 

Frank

Thanks for the link Jim and welcome aboard Dave

Cool boat....very Ariel like but a seperate head....BONUS!!
No lifting Vberth cushions!!

Nice boat!
God made small boats for younger boys and older men

CharlieJ

#25
Yabut- not fond of that galley across from head. Much rather have it aft, at companionway, so heat, stem, odors etc go  out the companionway.

And I've found that the "head under the bunk" is really no big deal. mine only gets used once a day (usually) and properly serviced, has NO smell.

Rest looks great.

and yes, that's a full keel with a cutaway forefoot. Probably the best of the deal

Oh, and welcome aboard Dave. I've sailed with a few Auzzies, and they are nutso. But not as bat S**T crazy as the Kiwi's- THEY are insane. A very nice Auzzie sailor and I totally destroyed a 1.5 L of rum one night. Regretted next morning, but hey :)
Charlie J

Lindsey 21 Necessity


On Matagorda Bay
On the Redneck Riviera

Jim_ME

Quote from: CharlieJ on August 05, 2016, 10:41:49 PM
Yabut- not fond of that galley across from head.
Well you can cook...but for some others, it's a perfect layout to have the head directly across from the galley...  ;)