Delivery
I thought I had read that some Bennys were made on the east coast. Maybe that's wrong. I had assumed that most that came from Europe where delivered on deck of another boat. I'm sure that many do cross the Atlantic because there are people like me (I plan on crossing the Atlantic in a coastal cruiser) who figure they can do it once. I do believe that many coastal cruisers are capable of crossing oceans with the right decisions made, but I don't think that says the boats are designed to cross oceans and to me, that's what a blue water boat is...one that is designed for it, not one that has done it.We are not talking about 10' seas and 30 knots of wind, we are talking 30'+ seas and 50+ knots of wind. The stuff that one would definately not take any boat out in if they knew it was coming. True Blue water sailing you don't know what's coming because you are out there longer then the weather can be forecasted. I'm not talking 200 miles offshore, I'm talking 600+. I'm talking you pulled up the 5 day weather forecast and all was good so you left but on the 6th day you find yourself bare polls, running with the wind, visability zero at night, wind raging so loud nobody can hear each other, waves pooping the cockpit, autopilot is useless, everybody is scared, you are at the helm and are wishing you had a sea anchor because you are cold, wet, hungry and tired but nobody else wants to take the wheel.BUT...you are right Peter, I did miss your point. Sorry.