The youngster perspective...a slight tirade
I think that there's a risk of overgeneralization going on here. I'm 28 years old. I've been contibuting to this site since I was 24. My girlfriend is 26. I bought the boat we sail three years ago. At the time it was something a hulk but its in excellent shape now. Time to paint it probably, but its in excellent sailing shape.We sail almost every weekend in the summertime. The Maine season is short. We sail with several other boats on a regular basis. One crew is another girlfriend/boyfriend couple - both are under 30. One crew is husband/wife/child - they're early thrities. One crew is h/w/c mid-thirties. When we pull into anchorages at least here in Maine there seems to be no shortage of our peers. Of course, I think of anyone who loves the water as my peer.LaDonna's racing angle is certainly something to think about. We like to sail and fast. We reef late and on a 25 we tend to smoke much larger boats because they're generally sailed more conservatively - and we like it. This year will mark my return to racing and Jessica's initiation. It will be a very different thing from 420's and Lasers but will be fun. The competition and the comraderie - read parties - are attractive in equal parts. Our boat will be slow and uncompetitive - that's ok. Maybe next year we'll buy something faster. Maybe not - point of racing is the challenge and the social scene anyway. Needs to be balanced by some good isolated cruising, though.As a younger person I'd say the yacht clubs are not doing their part to ensure their own survival. I've been kicked off docks, shunned when I've looked into membership, and generally treated like an unperson. Why would I pay the dues? Now a sailing club - distinct in ideology if not purpose - is attractive. But we really don't need one. The people I enjoying knowing and meeting I tend to know or meet - because we're all out there having fun. Every once in a while I do get fed up with the attitude of the clubbies and I've been known to fly my boxers from the spreaders in protest of the bouquet of burgees - but for the most part the young people are there and we're meeting each other. And we're meeting older folks too - those with an open mind, anyway.Sailing is expensive but not prohibitively so - just takes creativity. I ran my boat through three years of law school on a thin budget but I did it. I don't have many of the toys I want but that's ok. Perserverence wins. I worked grueling hours at an evil chain marine retailer, became a contractor to do repairs on other people's boats, worked as an Emergency Medical Technician, and went to school fulltime. Yea me? Hell no - I just wanted to sail. I think that the younger crowd may mark a return better understanding of our boats - because we have to fix them ourselves. I can think of one nasty day here last summer. Blowing into the mid-30's, ugly chop. We sailed out to a favorite anchorage thinking it would be empty because no one else would have gone out. We got there to find a bunch of larger boats lying up and a bevy of sub-35 year olds on pocket cruisers. We struck up a conversation with the crew of a Catalina 38 - the S&S boat. They were amazed we were there. I don't know why -I could't afford to have my boat rebuilt - so I did it, and now I know the boat and trust it. There were nights I skipped dinner because the boat needed gear but there are worse places to be hungry than lying on the foredeck of a vessel you put back together.Now I find myself in an interesting position - at the beginning a new career and on the eve of increasing my income substantially. There's a new boat in my future. Next year, maybe the year after. I hope I can find someone as young as I was, as hungry as I was, who falls as desperately in love my current boat as I did when (s)he sees her.And the next boat? She'll be bigger, faster, and just as loved. And you won't find her tied to a mooring at the yacht club - but you should look for her at the finish line at their races.My two cents, worth what you paid.Justin - O'day Owners' Web