Very Stable - in Two Directions!
When I was a kid I told my dad to get a multihull and trimarans were the multihull of the day. Arthur Piver, the single person responsible for increasing the popularity of multihulls was lost at sea on one of his designs.A few years ago a large 70 or 80-something foot racing trimaran entered the popular Foul Weather Bluff race in Puget Sound and was expected to smoke the fleet - well it didn't. Winds were perfect around 12 knots, the water nearly flat, and they were reaching toward the weather mark and hit a little wave estimated around two feet and pitch polled! "Northwest Yachting", a local boating magazine, had a two page spread of pictures of her going head over as someone covering the race was taking pictures with either a motor drive still camera (some people still were using film cameras then) or a video camera. What was the most amazing shot for me was when the boat was vertical on her nose(s) a guy was standing on one of the armas holding on!!!Guess my concern is the multihull is very stable - in two directions. The little Hobbies are light enough to be uprighted with a persons weight but the big ones aren't. There are systems being developed to deal with this issue but, for me, I'd rather have some water in the cockpit than the worry.In '91 we were on the west coast of Vancouver Island when a major storm hit with winds over 100 knots. We made it to a good harbor just in time but the trimaran anchored beside us that morning never arrived and was found three weeks later drifting upside-down. The couple on board were living off of canned cat food. To be fair, mono-hulls have capsized too.The editor of Latitude 38, a Bay Area sailing magazine, really likes multis and personally owns a large one. This is a top-notch magazine with frequent articles on multis. Web site is www.latitude38.com (I believe). His previous boat I think was a Santa Cruz 70 and he admits he likes to go fast.For some reason multihulls are not popular here probably because of our often light winds (they don't like it). As Debra mentioned cost and moorage are surely other issues. Have you tried giving your wife the helm? That seems to make a difference.