Thank You, Peter
Peter, thanks for the reply. I sailed the boat alone on Saturday and got the boat going at a good clip. Made it "turn on its sides" "Lean" purposely to see if any water would come into the boat. Nothing!It is impressive how easy it is to sail it alone. When I was looking around at boats I thought that the roller furling "Thingy" would be a must for a lone sailor, but I was wrong.Peter, I would be honored to sail with you, let me know when.I wen't offshore, 35 miles, fishing yesterday for Snapper and Grouper on my 22' Mako, I did notice a few smaller sailboats out there (like five miles out)around Cocoa Beach. They looked beautiful, maybe in one or two months, after I have more sailing experience, I will take my hunter out in the Ocean(within a few miles of shore).My Fishing / Powerboat friends are having a hard time understanding why I am into sailing, after being an oil / fuel burner for so long. Burnt 111 gallons yesterday. They do not understand, but once I start trolling and catching fish off the sailboat, they will (He-He)!!The seas where like 5 -6 feet in the early morning (5:30-11:30AM) with a snotty and very messy 15-20++ mph wind. One in my crew got sea sick en route to the 22 mile bait mark and spent the rest of the day making sure the deck of the boat did not go anywhere. We loaded up on bait and headed to another point at 35 miles from Port Canaveral and after 1:45PM it laid down to 10 mph winds and true two and three foot seas really spread out, making for a great 41 mile ride back at 4600 RPMs.A few spots were fished on the way back in, adding some Sea Bass and some Lane and Vermillon Snappers to the box. Then a great cruise back in while sipping a few golden sodas. I think that old Hunter could take three foot seas well, it would be really fun with other boats close by.