Well, power is great, but not the cost
If I had my druthers, I'd be a power boater. But if money isn't endless, there are constraints to consider.I bought a car for $12,000 a number of years ago and by the time I sold it, I estimated I had paid out well over $24,000 in fuel for it.A buddy of mine wishes I had just bought a power boat instead of sail; here is what I told him. "Scott, if I buy the boat, pay for the insurance, and also pay for the moorage; and you only pay for the fuel, I will feel I have put one over on you. The fuel costs will well outstrip the price of the boat and all the other expenses."With the price of sails included in the equation, the cost of sailing is still less than power boating as you don't go out and purchase new sails constantly (unless your a racer).The arguement of where you sit in the boat is silly, however, to play with that line of thinking lets take it to its logical conclusion. The power boater feels like he is a "bus driver" to quote the article which I could see happening. While you are up on your command bridge for the thousandth hour, the party below might seem more inviting. On a sail boat, it all happens in the cockpit.In terms of seamanship, you don't need to know that much with power boating, which unfortunately is demonstrated all to often on the water. Get in the boat, turn on the key, let go the lines and head out. If you sail a boat, you have to know what you are doing, what this winch is for, what that cleat attaches to what. You need to know about winds and currents, and have a better understanding of time management, if you are going to make your way through some passes where tide and current is and issue.In fact, my buddy and I once sailed to a location the Gulf Islands, here in BC, and anchored off a point so that we could laugh at power boaters. You see there is a channel that is only navigational during the high tides, and low tides it is a creek about 8 feet wide and about two feet deep. He said: "watch this Rick, you'll be amazed at how many power boaters will try to go up this channel because the road map they are using shows it at full tide." And sure enough, we watched as power boater after power boater tried to navigate up the creek, which was too shallow for their boat. He and I walked up the creek and drifted down in inner tubes while drinking a bottle of champagne.At one point we had to push a power boater out of the mouth of the creek because he just wouldn't stop and accept what his eyes were telling him.With people working harder and becoming a voluntary slave to the corporation, time is more limited. These guys want something that is turnkey, not skilled.And a sailboat has better range than a power boat. The power boaters that circumnavigate the planet on their boat are by and large very wealthy, as you would need to be to pay for the fuel for a 25,000 mile journey. Most boaters that circumnavigate earth are sailboaters, its just cheaper that way.Our range is the same as a power boaters, we just need three times the amount of time to do it.Also when I sail on the Straits of Georgia, whose boats are more stable in a nasty job? A sailboat under sail is more stable than a power boater bouncing around in the Straits. In fact I have seen this alluded to in local rags on boating - a warning to power boaters that they will bounce around more than sail boater. Its nice to have a keel and sail add stability to the boat performance.I think a lot of baby boomers are coming into money now, the same scanario holds true for Harley Davidson purchases - its the guy in their fifties driving the HD motorcycle company. The guy inherits money and gets the boat he always wanted without the intimidation of having to take lots of lessons to learn how to use it; this and less time to play as you slave away at the office and throw your life away for the corporation are the reasons power boating is popular. Lets be realistic, if Donald Trump bought a boat it would be power, he doesn't have the time to learn how to sail.I know for a fact that the level of seamanship I need to know is far greater as a competent sailboater than as a power boater; this statement from an ex-navy officer in the Canadian Navy.