Then what do you do under the cockpit Frog?They’re particularly fun with no wind and a hotchick sailing with you. Turn turtle and swim under the cockpit. PFD required.
Sam
Then what do you do under the cockpit Frog?They’re particularly fun with no wind and a hotchick sailing with you. Turn turtle and swim under the cockpit. PFD required.
OH yes- my ex, at 110 pounds was sailing her sunfish in a race when we got hit by a 45 mph thunder storm.. I was on a Dolphin Sr, saw it coming and managed to get the sail down and lashed- watched her take off like jet propelled, bounce across about 4 waves and stuff the bow- PITCHPOLE!! Unhurt, as was the boat, but she sensibly just stayed in the water, capsized til wind abated. Shoulda heard her yelling!!...until the breeze gets up around 25-30 knots. Then they try to pitch-pole. That's a REAL interesting experience. Alternating reaches can keep you out of that little trap.
Someone gave me one. It was wood and weighed a ton. Not a car top! I used it once and I couldn't stay on it. I would slide off tacking. Not to mention the near de-capitation that could occur with the boom. I donated it to a local kids sailing program. The instructors were grateful. I'm glad I haven't been charged with endangerment of minors.Sailfish is even wetter without a cockpit. Real easy to slid off the deck....
My only real memory of sailing a sunfish, though I've sailed two, was of the one at the condo where I was visiting my best friend when I was 16. These two girls asked me if I would take them sailing, My friend, Matt wasn't around so it was just the three of us. The wind died about 300 yards off the beach and the Gulf was glass calm. The two girls decided they wanted to go back in and started giving me a "boat load" for not being able to make the sunfish go. I decided to show them how to get to shore by jumping in the water and started swimming for it. They screamed and implored and promised not to yell at me any more. Not wanting to loose a perfectly good sunfish, I relented and managed to catch enough wind to finally end the ordeal. So, maybe Kermit is right about one "hotchick" but not with two 16 year old "hotchicks" or maybe Kermit just has a more practical definition of "hotchick"hey’re particularly fun with no wind and a hotchick sailing with you.
Tell you what... take Cindy in a Sunfish someday and try it. I’m pretty sure something will come to mind. I have faith in you. Or at least in Cindy.Then what do you do under the cockpit Frog?
Sam
Kermit has FINALLY admitted he'd rather be a turtle than a frog....Turn turtle and swim under the cockpit...
@Simon Sexton asked about our experiences. I stayed on topic and answered truthfully. It’s a versatile boat. I highly encourage ownership.Leave it to the Frog to send us in that direction, but seriously...![]()
'Topic' was that a nickname or her real name? Were her parents frogs too?@Simon Sexton asked about our experiences. I stayed on topic and answered truthfully.
I own one, and am restoring two of them now, actually! I just thought I'd ask about what everyone else thinks about them!If you are in the market, find out what the weight of the hull should be, as manufactured and with hardware, for two reasons.
1) As someone already mentioned, they can become waterlogged (water filled?) My dad sold his last year, and it was enormously heavy. He had verified that it was not a water problem by drilling, then filling, some holes - no water. Which leads me to:
2) They can actually suffer from sand infiltration, and sand is MUCH harder to remove from the interior of the hull. My dad sailed his last Sunfish regatta two years ago at age 80, and when it was over, two young men loaded the boat onto the trailer. They commented that it was the heaviest Sunfish hull, by FAR, that they had ever experienced. I finally figured it out last year after finding a post on the topic on SA.