Its a decision to make.
The choice is simple.....whether you want to go sailing or whether you want to have fun rebuilding a boat. If it is a true project boat, you cant do both. From a dollar point of view, it will probably never be worth what you put into a project boat. Then again, you cant put a price on a hobby. If its sailing that you want to do, the bad news is that you will have to have enough money to buy a boat in running/sailing condition and just have to invest in cosmetic surgery from time to time, but at least you are sailing. I have owned/worked on 2 project boats in my lifetime because I wanted a boat bigger than I could afford. In both cases, I worked on each one for a few years each then sold them at a loss and bought a smaller boat that I could sail from 'Day 1'. I missed the sailing part, and soon the dream wore out also. And, I always regretted those years of 'no sailing'. I am probably amongst the vast majority of 'rebuilders'. If I didnt waste my time and money on project boats, I would have had the final boat of my choice about 5 years earlier then I did. For most, the solution would be to just buy a smaller boat and gradually work up. Then there are some that have more perserverence than others. Ross is one of them, but he is a rare breed. Ross did the whole rebuild thing...he would be the best to ask about time and money.ROSS. where are you? Tony B
The choice is simple.....whether you want to go sailing or whether you want to have fun rebuilding a boat. If it is a true project boat, you cant do both. From a dollar point of view, it will probably never be worth what you put into a project boat. Then again, you cant put a price on a hobby. If its sailing that you want to do, the bad news is that you will have to have enough money to buy a boat in running/sailing condition and just have to invest in cosmetic surgery from time to time, but at least you are sailing. I have owned/worked on 2 project boats in my lifetime because I wanted a boat bigger than I could afford. In both cases, I worked on each one for a few years each then sold them at a loss and bought a smaller boat that I could sail from 'Day 1'. I missed the sailing part, and soon the dream wore out also. And, I always regretted those years of 'no sailing'. I am probably amongst the vast majority of 'rebuilders'. If I didnt waste my time and money on project boats, I would have had the final boat of my choice about 5 years earlier then I did. For most, the solution would be to just buy a smaller boat and gradually work up. Then there are some that have more perserverence than others. Ross is one of them, but he is a rare breed. Ross did the whole rebuild thing...he would be the best to ask about time and money.ROSS. where are you? Tony B