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MBruns for President
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I hear you Ed - things are slow with our business too - Figured I could go 9 miles off - and open up a casino or something -
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Current Whip: - 2003 996 Twin Turbo - 39K miles - Lapis Blue/Grey Past: 1974 IROC (3.6) , 1987 Cabriolet (3.4) , 1990 C2 Targa, 1989 S2 |
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Registered
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: South of the Mason-Dixon Line
Posts: 3,722
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Nice boat Ed.
I sail a Catalina 30 (1988 Mark II) and although the Capri and the Catalina 30 only share deck hardware, fittings and electronics, the Capri is strictly race and designed for speed. We have several Capri 25's here that are beamy and slick sailors. They give the "J" boats stiff competition during racing events. Nice vessel, but your going to miss that Hunter 37 if your thinking of cruising and over-nighting. Catalina builds excellent boats and I always felt a notch or two above Hunter (no offense of course). The Capri line has a big following in the racing community, parts are readily available, great factory support and proud pedigree. She looks like a beautiful ship. Congrads. Fair winds Bob "Breezin II" Lake Lanier, GA |
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Ed Hughes 2015 981 Cayman GTS 6 speed,Racing Yellow Past:1984 911 Targa (Ruby), 1995 993C2 (Sapphire), 1991 928S4 |
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Registered
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: New Brunswick, Canada
Posts: 5,472
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Nice! I almost bought a thunderbird a few years ago, but found some bad rot along the seams. There are two moored beside each other down the road... one is beautifyul and one is a complete dog. They're one of those designs that can look DRASTICALLY different with different colors and details. The brightwork on yours really draws the eye "up", looks way better than ones where the cabin & splash guards are painted to match the topsides.
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Jake Often wrong, but never in doubt. '81 911 euro SC (bits & pieces) '03 Carrera 4s '97 LX450 / '85 LeCar / '88 Iltis + a whole bunch of boats Last edited by notfarnow; 02-19-2009 at 05:06 AM.. |
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resident samsquamch
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Cooterville, Cackalacky
Posts: 6,815
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Quote:
![]() BTW, I love the lines on that Capri!!! Please don't banish me to PARF Island...
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-jeff back in the saddle: '95 993 - just another black C2 *SOLD*: '87 930 GP White - heroin would have been a cheaper addiction... "Ladies and Gentlemen, from Boston Massachusetts, we are Morphine, at your service..." - Mark Sandman (RIP ![]() |
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MBruns for President
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Here's a good site I just discovered that helps you keep track of ship traffic - I thought it was cool enough to share
http://www.marinetraffic.com/ais/
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Current Whip: - 2003 996 Twin Turbo - 39K miles - Lapis Blue/Grey Past: 1974 IROC (3.6) , 1987 Cabriolet (3.4) , 1990 C2 Targa, 1989 S2 |
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Air Medal or two
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: cross roads
Posts: 14,081
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The Thunder bird has the Cruising House on it, makes it a little more fun for a few.
When I bought it was in Lake Washington (Seattle) water to the top of the bunks !! And full of Mushrooms ! Took it home gutted it, Keel off, decks and house thrown away Started a new. I bought the blue prints from the T. Bird club so it is still in racing form and legit even with the cruising house Makes a race boat real comfortable with heater stove,and all
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D troop 3/5 Air Cav,( Bastard CAV) and 162 Assult Helicopter Co- (Vultures) South of Saigon, U Minh Forest, Delta, and all parts in between |
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Bandwidth AbUser
Join Date: Nov 2001
Location: SoCal
Posts: 29,522
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Jim R. |
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Registered
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: South of the Mason-Dixon Line
Posts: 3,722
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Sign of the times for many sailors.......................
In the restroom at our marina is a list that was posted last week for several boats that are up for auction. All brands, all sizes. Apparently the owners gave them up maybe because of high dock payments no longer affordable or priority from being down on their luck and out of work. In my 45+ years of sailing I have never experienced anything like this. If you look at Craigslist - Atlanta - Boat - "sailboats", some very decent 25-30 foot sailboats are going for next to nothing! Incredible buys. My wife and I said that if all hell broke loose with the economy and our jobs, we would leave it all behind, take the Catalina and haul it to Savannah and cruise the ICW for a year!!!! In a crazy way, I actually welcome that.......... before I ever give up my boat, they will have to pry my dead cold hands from the wheel!!!!!!!!!! ![]() Bob |
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MBruns for President
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Funny Bob - my wife and I talked about that same exact exit strategy. It's the same way around here
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Current Whip: - 2003 996 Twin Turbo - 39K miles - Lapis Blue/Grey Past: 1974 IROC (3.6) , 1987 Cabriolet (3.4) , 1990 C2 Targa, 1989 S2 |
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Bandwidth AbUser
Join Date: Nov 2001
Location: SoCal
Posts: 29,522
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Bob, how dry is Lanier nowadays?
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Jim R. |
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Registered
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: South of the Mason-Dixon Line
Posts: 3,722
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Lanier has come up to 1057 feet amsl (full pool is 1071 ft). Danger for me, where I cannot get safely out into the lake from the marina is 1054 ft. or so. We have one major marina with a do-it-youself-yard where you could pull out for transport that can accomodate a boat like mine with a draft of 3'10" (winged keel), but requires a depth at 1057 ft. CLOSE!!!!!!!!!
We have had some good rains in north Georgia but the drainage basin for the lake is small. It has to rain north of Lanier for any benefit to the lake. Last year was horrible!!! It appears though we are doing better and good spring rains could take us to 1060 ft. or higher. The severe drought area is moving north-northeast away from Lanier. Worst scenario, if folks in dire straits had to escape to their boats in this economic climate the ICW could be a real nightmare; marina's gouging on prices, cities and counties charging higher fees for mooring and the waterway jammed.....crazy to think what could be. |
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No Band
Join Date: May 2007
Location: The Casino
Posts: 3,901
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Nice Boats Guys! Congrats!
While I have navigated the world's oceans in large vessels and was a master helmsman, I am planning on taking a sailing course locally... What sailboat recommendations would you give me for the following: I am not interested in speed, prefer something built strong almost tank like. Thinking 25-30ft good for over nighting... 1 man operation on sails.... swing keel / trailer-able....
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No Band
Join Date: May 2007
Location: The Casino
Posts: 3,901
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PS- Any of you guys frequent Sailnet.com?
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"HEY A$$MAN!!!" ![]() |
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Air Medal or two
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: cross roads
Posts: 14,081
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I would truly think the swing keel though...in design a great idea...they seem to accumulate problems when you need them the most jmo
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D troop 3/5 Air Cav,( Bastard CAV) and 162 Assult Helicopter Co- (Vultures) South of Saigon, U Minh Forest, Delta, and all parts in between |
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Registered
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: South of the Mason-Dixon Line
Posts: 3,722
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Bill, I will assume your sailing is inland or coastwise? I owned two Catalina 25's over the years and they are easy to singlehand, were shoal draft, had the amenities you are seeking for overnighting, which would include a "pop-top" that provide an extra 6-10 inches of headroom, head, galley, quarter berth (for storage) and even a shore power package. These vessels are outboard powered (go for 10-15 hp) if your coastal cruising. A swing keel model was available.
The Catalina 25 is a very popular boat with probably over 3,000 hulls built since the late 70's. The 1980's models are to me the best because they are rich in teak inside and out, are excellent sailors and very trailerable. You'll find the 25 a very stable vessel; however, the limits of where you want to go is up to: 1) ballz and 2)seamanship skill! Unless you have a "mast lift" system on a larger vessel (over 25) the 25 footer is all you need for a trailerable vessel thats not too hard to rig. The newer boats are pricey and many use the water ballast system. So many great manufacturers are gone but research these brands (Cal, Ericson, Pearson, O'Day and Hunter), as they are still around, were workhorses, are excellent values and great sailors. Your not going to find many swing keeled models over 25 but shoal draft boats (3-4') are not that tough to launch. Figure a very decent mid-80's Catalina 25 with trailer under 10K. Great buys on the market now. Check out the Catalinaowners.com website for everything on the Catalina line. Good luck Bob |
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Bandwidth AbUser
Join Date: Nov 2001
Location: SoCal
Posts: 29,522
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I agree with Bob. 25' is pretty much your trailerable limit. Other brands to look at in addition to Catalina are Cal, O'Day, S2, Precision, Beneteau.
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Jim R. |
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Registered
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Interesting tidbit on the economy, the SDYC is still quoting about a 2 year wait for slips in the 30' range. Larger slips are out to 5 years. That could change overnight, literally, but all is well there. Most public marinas have slips in the $10-12/foot range-although I suppose that is negotiable.
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Ed Hughes 2015 981 Cayman GTS 6 speed,Racing Yellow Past:1984 911 Targa (Ruby), 1995 993C2 (Sapphire), 1991 928S4 |
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Vafri
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Worldwide
Posts: 2,144
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I have an O'Day 26, with shoal keel and we trailer it. We've sailed L. Michigan and all over Puget Sound. We love it. Lake Fly-Er in this photo.
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Bandwidth AbUser
Join Date: Nov 2001
Location: SoCal
Posts: 29,522
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nice looking boat.
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Jim R. |
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