Greetings all! Just joined the group. I currently have an 81 Hunter 25 "ShoeString." I sold a rotten wood 33 foot Hogdon Brothers Rex 33 pilothouse, as I am in graduate school, (I finish this Dec.) and decided I could not afford a boat. Then I made the mistake of looking at ShoeString (my name for the boat as the PO was calling her the "sailing turd"). The owner was going to have it cut up because he could not find any takers. I bought it for $500, it did have 5 good sails and a few other goodies, and sailed it home with a hole in the hull big enough to to put a fist through. Pulled it out of the water and parked it in the yard next to my shop. I am doing a complete rebuild and hope to sell the house and leave with the wife on an extended cruise of Florida's forgotten coast, Dry Tortugas, Keys, Bahamas, wherever the wind blows us, ect., ect.
The boat is amazingly solid. I must confess to being a former Hunter basher and never thought I would fall in love with one. All of the bulkhead tabbing is sound and the liner is extremely well bonded to the hull. The rudder is junk but I will build a new one. I have cut the floor out and will thicken and stiffen the hull around the keel area, add additional keel floors, beef up the rudder tube and stiffen the bow with additional stringers. I am going to glass the bulkheads all the around the hull. She is going to get new standing rigging and new portholes to replace the econo ports Hunter put in back in the day. I intend to add an inner forestay and a set of swept intermediates to the rig. If any one part fails there should be enough redundancy to keep the rig from going over the side. I think I will go with 6 Trimatrix ports and 2 stainless ones from New Found Metals. All of this should make her as bullet proof as possible. I will be putting a new water tank under the V-berth and replacing the bladder under the cockpit. Other than a couple of fans, VHF, GPS and depth finder, the only luxuries I will add will be a SMALL fridge and a tiller pilot. Gots to have my iced tea and the occasional Boston Lager. The outboard and solar panels should keep the battery bank topped off. I think she will be the perfect simple mini-cruiser, capable of taking me almost anywhere I wish to go. I have owned bigger boats but I think this is my favorite so far. I have read many wonderful posts on the forum concerning the Cerubinis and am proud to own ShoeString. The boat is quite roomy since I am small in stature and I can be comfortable with far less than most folks. I guess my time in the Marine Corps and early career as a war photographer (Bosnia, Haiti, Gaza, Israel, Beruit) have taught me to do more with less. I like the intimacy of a small boat. Its a good thing as it's all I can currently afford. I have calculated the total cost of my mini cruiser to be about $6000. Not bad for what will essentially be a new boat complete and ready to cruise. Fair winds to all.
Quotes - "The brave may not live forever but cowards never live at all!"
"They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety."
"Never despise meager beginnings."
The boat is amazingly solid. I must confess to being a former Hunter basher and never thought I would fall in love with one. All of the bulkhead tabbing is sound and the liner is extremely well bonded to the hull. The rudder is junk but I will build a new one. I have cut the floor out and will thicken and stiffen the hull around the keel area, add additional keel floors, beef up the rudder tube and stiffen the bow with additional stringers. I am going to glass the bulkheads all the around the hull. She is going to get new standing rigging and new portholes to replace the econo ports Hunter put in back in the day. I intend to add an inner forestay and a set of swept intermediates to the rig. If any one part fails there should be enough redundancy to keep the rig from going over the side. I think I will go with 6 Trimatrix ports and 2 stainless ones from New Found Metals. All of this should make her as bullet proof as possible. I will be putting a new water tank under the V-berth and replacing the bladder under the cockpit. Other than a couple of fans, VHF, GPS and depth finder, the only luxuries I will add will be a SMALL fridge and a tiller pilot. Gots to have my iced tea and the occasional Boston Lager. The outboard and solar panels should keep the battery bank topped off. I think she will be the perfect simple mini-cruiser, capable of taking me almost anywhere I wish to go. I have owned bigger boats but I think this is my favorite so far. I have read many wonderful posts on the forum concerning the Cerubinis and am proud to own ShoeString. The boat is quite roomy since I am small in stature and I can be comfortable with far less than most folks. I guess my time in the Marine Corps and early career as a war photographer (Bosnia, Haiti, Gaza, Israel, Beruit) have taught me to do more with less. I like the intimacy of a small boat. Its a good thing as it's all I can currently afford. I have calculated the total cost of my mini cruiser to be about $6000. Not bad for what will essentially be a new boat complete and ready to cruise. Fair winds to all.
Quotes - "The brave may not live forever but cowards never live at all!"
"They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety."
"Never despise meager beginnings."
Last edited: