Good to hear they were able to get everything set up for you. Were going to wait till spring to order our furler. Less to store over the winter. Amazing how much space all the stuff out of the boat takes up in the basement.
Cindy and I are still waiting on our invite to come up and sail on your yacht ;-)
Sam
Of course, you two are welcome anytime! At this point, you'll probably prefer to wait until next June, since they're predicting our first frost of the year this coming weekend. However, if you decide to do any CC skiing in MN, plan on spending a night at my place on the way up. We can't sail, but we can swap hilarious stories about our sailing adventures!
I'll tell you my new one - not EXACTLY a sailing adventure, but still an adventure on a sail boat! It involves motoring back the approx. 3 hours from the rigger's marina to my home port in total darkness on Sunday night. That 2 hour installation job wound up taking 5.5 hours from beginning to end, so we didn't head back until about 7:45PM. By then, it was pitch dark and the winds had really kicked up - 30+ mph sustained and gusts to at least 50 mph (of course I had no idea - the marina is well protected and the wind was apparent, but nothing like it was on the open water). About 5 minutes into the voyage I was wishing I had left her at the riggers marina and gotten a ride back to our home port...
But, a combo of pride and fear kept me going - it was home port or bust by then! No way I could possibly scuttle her, she was flying a brand new furler - and, the ink wasn't even dry on the installation check! I'd be darned if that boat was gonna sink - not while I'm paying the bills!
I can attest to the fact that the H26 can handle some pretty intense waves; I'm very, very glad she's so wide and deep. I think my knuckles are still white from the death grip I had on the tiller. My acting job in convincing the Admiral that waves like that were no big deal was Oscar-worthy - good thing it was dark or she might have noticed the look of terror on my face as I spoke those encouraging words... Hahaha, oh man, I was beyond happy to get that boat into the slip!
And so the adventures continue..! I seem to learn something new everytime I leave the marina. I now consider myself a rather accomplished foul-weather sailor (or motor-boater, you pick)!