Are you Roger Mac ??
Not to be crass, but your question sounds like something posted by Roger MacGregor. Go with a portapotti and your Nirvana is the same as Roger's 26x design. I bought my first boat, a new 26x, two years ago. After adding some extra sail controls the Mac 26x gives a thrilling ride under sail. I've had half-hour tacks in 20 knots upwind at 8 mph (by GPS). I needed to add adjustable backstay, outhaul, 12:1 vang, jiffy reefing, and tune the mast rake to get good control - the same controls found on most keelboats.On SF Bay, we have a four-mile channel transit before reaching the Central Bay where winds are consistently 15 to 20 knots. A Hunter 24 owner took me to the boat show and described the issues HE saw in choosing a trailer boat for a novice. In order to avoid 90 minutes tacking the channel to the real sailing, he suggested taking a demo ride on the Mac. The new Mac with sails, tax, trailer and outboard was $28,000. We reach the Central Bay in 20 minutes, 16 mph @ 3800 rpms. You can even have a conversation because the 4-stroke motors are so quiet. The outboard even makes it feasible to go out for only a half-day sail after work, just not practical in a traditional sailboat.Finally, if you really want a glimpse of the real value of the 26x, read some of the owners' cruise stories in attached link ... Keys to Bahamas in one week ... Bellingham to Juneau and back in six weeks ... Catalina over a Saturday Sunday, the Channel Islands in a long weekend ... or Dry Tortugas, or Desolation Sound, or Princess Louisa Inlet. It may not be the best pointing sailboat, but it's probably the most practical cruiser for real destination sailing. Roger has sold 5,000 of this single design in six years - he's obviously doing something right.