Our New Toy
Our New Toy
As reported, we are not splashing the C-22 this year and are actively trying to find a buyer. In the interim we found a new toy:
.
17 feet, wooden, trailer included (great now we have three trailers!) we pick her up on Saturday. Another Ebay find. Hopefully she looks good in person as well as the pics. She will really fit our needs better. We have not been using the C-22 up to her potential. We are more day sailors then cruisers. The new boat is truly a trailer sailer, we can tote her around and not stress our tow vehicle, a Dodge Caravan. The cock pit looks nice and roomy. She's been out of the water for several years, always a concern with a wooden boat, but we will splash her on Sunday and see if she is water tight.
.
17 feet, wooden, trailer included (great now we have three trailers!) we pick her up on Saturday. Another Ebay find. Hopefully she looks good in person as well as the pics. She will really fit our needs better. We have not been using the C-22 up to her potential. We are more day sailors then cruisers. The new boat is truly a trailer sailer, we can tote her around and not stress our tow vehicle, a Dodge Caravan. The cock pit looks nice and roomy. She's been out of the water for several years, always a concern with a wooden boat, but we will splash her on Sunday and see if she is water tight.
- CaptainScott
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Re: Our New Toy
She's been out of the water for several years, always a concern with a wooden boat, but we will splash her on Sunday and see if she is water tight.
Fran,
My husband and I have a large wooden boat, and you will be amazed at the difference in the ride of a wooden boat vs fiberglass. One piece of advise: when you splash her for the first time, leave her on the trailer for an hour allowing the wood to swell slowly since she has been on hard so long. Have a wonderful adventure!
Cheers,
Dena
Fran,
My husband and I have a large wooden boat, and you will be amazed at the difference in the ride of a wooden boat vs fiberglass. One piece of advise: when you splash her for the first time, leave her on the trailer for an hour allowing the wood to swell slowly since she has been on hard so long. Have a wonderful adventure!
Cheers,
Dena
Dena
Kali Zoi
1975 C22
Kali Zoi
1975 C22
Re: Our New Toy
Thanks Dena, that's our plan to take her to the boat ramp on Sunday and float her for a while. Im intrigued by your ststement re; differences between wooden and fiberglass boats, what do i have to look forward to?DenaP wrote:She's been out of the water for several years, always a concern with a wooden boat, but we will splash her on Sunday and see if she is water tight.
Fran,
My husband and I have a large wooden boat, and you will be amazed at the difference in the ride of a wooden boat vs fiberglass. One piece of advise: when you splash her for the first time, leave her on the trailer for an hour allowing the wood to swell slowly since she has been on hard so long. Have a wonderful adventure!
Cheers,
Dena
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- EmergencyExit
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I'll bring the camera. We think its home built. The guy we bought it from used it for lake sailing, from the looks of his location.EmergencyExit wrote:Fran, looks great in the pic, any idea what she is ? When I picked up my giveaway Rhodes Bantam I was hoping it was wooden, but was a later 'glass model.
More pics when you pick her up ?
We've owned a wooden boat before, one that my husband built, so we know what we are in for. As for big water... it was never anything I particuarlly enjoyed anyway. I have to admit that Im becoming more of a fair weather sailor these days. We tend to get real light air around here in the summer so I think it will be OK.Chrysler20%26 wrote:It looks good,BUT it is not a Chrysler, an you in for a lot of up keep. An you are not going to be a happy sailer, you now have a com-water boat. Get in big water, you will wish you had your 22, look at my C-20 as a day sailer.
Well we got her home. No real adventures in transit to report except if you count the fact that we drove through Manhattan on the way back because the G. Wwashington Bridge was backed up. We were quite a sight crossing Manhattan to the Midtown Tunnel.
On inital inspection she is in very good shape. The owner bought her in 1994 and did a complete refurb. The bright work is lovely. She is fiberglass over wood with a lug sail rig. He stepped the mast before we got there and taking it down was so simple it was almost funny to us, given our usual adventures in mast rasing. The trailer is in great shape, worth the price of the boat alone.
The owner didn't really know the name of the boat, thought it might be a Great Pelican but the bow is wrong. Its some kind if Chesapeake Flatie design.
More later
On inital inspection she is in very good shape. The owner bought her in 1994 and did a complete refurb. The bright work is lovely. She is fiberglass over wood with a lug sail rig. He stepped the mast before we got there and taking it down was so simple it was almost funny to us, given our usual adventures in mast rasing. The trailer is in great shape, worth the price of the boat alone.
The owner didn't really know the name of the boat, thought it might be a Great Pelican but the bow is wrong. Its some kind if Chesapeake Flatie design.
More later
Ah a wooden boat. They are so smooth, they just feel good when you sail them. It was a 1950's boat from the Seatlte Wooden boat musium that I sailed that convinced me to get a sailboat of my very own. I sailed her for about 2 hours on lake Union. But the work, oh no, not for me.
I'll look at them a drool, sail them when offered but own one. No you need a good job to pay for it and then there is the full time job working on her.
Okay, I only know New York from movies and TV. You trailered the boat through downtown and off the island through a tunnel... under the river. Now that is Ironic. You sailed/drove her under the river on the way home. I like that story!
Thanks
Alan
I'll look at them a drool, sail them when offered but own one. No you need a good job to pay for it and then there is the full time job working on her.
Okay, I only know New York from movies and TV. You trailered the boat through downtown and off the island through a tunnel... under the river. Now that is Ironic. You sailed/drove her under the river on the way home. I like that story!
Thanks
Alan
It's a good life on the
Honu, 1976 C-22
My Chrysler Sailing Photos: http://s1297.beta.photobucket.com/user/ ... ry/Sailing
Honu, 1976 C-22
My Chrysler Sailing Photos: http://s1297.beta.photobucket.com/user/ ... ry/Sailing
Ah, the story in my mind was much grander, but it's still good.
Thanks
Alan
Thanks
Alan
It's a good life on the
Honu, 1976 C-22
My Chrysler Sailing Photos: http://s1297.beta.photobucket.com/user/ ... ry/Sailing
Honu, 1976 C-22
My Chrysler Sailing Photos: http://s1297.beta.photobucket.com/user/ ... ry/Sailing
Now that's dedication!NYCSAILOR wrote:manhattan sailors.....
Frans.... I once saw a guy Hoseing off his 26 foot powerboat that was sittingon a trailer in a parking spot on west 31st street.
what was so funny was the hose he was using to hose her off was connected to his apt out a window some 5 stories up and then down to the street!