I bought Skipping Stone (Pearson 530) on the hard. I could check anything I wanted on the hard, and a sea trial would have added little to no more important information.
I'm sorry, but this post sends shivers down my spine. Not good ones either.To keep, rig the boat for ease of single handing. Install AP, perhaps self-tailing winches, windlass control from the helm station, lazy jacks, halyard parking bracket or winch on the mast, & a Wichard boom brake.
Other ideas. Wear a personal locator device, rig jacklines to use with a short tether (4 ft), clip a water-proof VHF hand-held to your belt when moving about the boat or getting into/out of the dinghy, leave your general float plan and itineraries with your wife, update along the way w/texting, if available.
General Float Plan: Will depart Alamitos Bay for Santa Barbara Island via the LA Gate morning of….; expect arrive to Landing Cove by dark (evening twilight) same day; anchor. Will depart Landing Cove for Alamitos Bay, Long Beach morning of ….; expect arrive at slip by 1700 same day.
Itineraries: Daily dinghy excursions along sheltered side of the island for fishing. Times not certain. Do not plan to go ashore.
Update: Will go ashore at Landing Cove morning of …; Plan hike to the weather side of the island; expect return to boat by 1600 same day.
I have not. Please explain. And no, one is not giving over safety to outside equipment. That might apply to self-driving cars. I mention only “aids” to safe piloting of the boat. Yours is like saying to use a lead line and not a depth sounder, use a chart plotter instead of half- hourly position plots on a chart. You’re seemingly telling us that going to the bow to weigh anchor in building weather with no one at the helm (and throttle) is “safer” than remaining at the helm and remotely controlling the windlass?, etc.Have you ever heard of enclothed cognition?
Going forward to raise the anchor w/no one on the helm is just plain safer, in my experience, than staying at the helm and pushing a button. The anchor (roughly 350#) below, came up wrapped in the middle of our chain, not on our anchor. Had no one been forward we certainly would have done serious damage, if not sunk our boat!I have not. Please explain. And no, one is not giving over safety to outside equipment. That might apply to self-driving cars. I mention only “aids” to safe piloting of the boat. Yours is like saying to use a lead line and not a depth sounder, use a chart plotter instead of half- hourly position plots on a chart. You’re seemingly telling us that going to the bow to weigh anchor in building weather with no one at the helm (and throttle) is “safer” than remaining at the helm and remotely controlling the windlass?, etc.
Sorry, you’ve lost me. Maybe you can detail which of my suggestions increases risk of loss or harm, in your experienced estimation.
I take it you’ve not equipped your boats with auto pilot?
Absolutely correct. I've been singlehanding my Catalina 34 for 27+ years.34' Is not at all too big for singlehanding.
I routinely sail my 36' boat singlehanded. Last year I sailed and motored from Annapolis to Brunswick GA single handed, including anchoring and docking.Absolutely correct. I've been singlehanding my Catalina 34 for 27+ years.
Some, Jean-Yves Terlain for instance, might consider a 34' footer a dinghy for his boat, Vendredi 13, which he sailed solo across the Atlantic. But, in reality, just about any competent sailor could have sailed the 128-foot (39m) three-masted schooner. She had three boomed stays'ls which were pretty much self tending, and she would have been wonderfully stable in all but the most extreme weather. However, IMO her greatest feature would have been the pleasure of jumping into a bunk with crisp, clean, dry sheets any time I wished. Not the same bunk twice, but literally a different clean, fresh, dry, made up, bunk34' Is not at all too big for singlehanding. I had a cat that size for many years. It's actually a great size for singlehanded cruises.
That said, I downsized ~ 10 years ago, mostly because my kid was grown and I had lost the cruising bug. The F-24 is just a little easier to singlehand (not as much difference as you would guess--things happen faster), but the big difference is maintenance. Fewer systems, and everything is lighter and smaller. Cheaper too, so I worry less about justifying my habit (though I have more money than I will spend) and resale value (but I do keep it well and do upgrades).
In my case, the F-24 is a good light air boat. Also, being retired, I pick days with just the right wind!