Sail condition

Jul 7, 2024
71
Catalina 27 Lake Keowee
For the ones you do not wish to use as sails, you can send them to a sail-maker or upholsterer to make covers for the deck and other uses.
 
Apr 8, 2010
2,238
Ericson Yachts Olson 34 28400 Portland OR
It will help your sail shopping - a LOT - if you weed out the "R" word and the "C" word from your vocabulary. It's all about sails with the best shape and material for "Sailing"... Whether you spend nights aboard or enter a race is secondary.

Spending more on better sails is a budget concern and that often depends on how long you plan to keep your boat. I have friends with Catalina's from this series (309, 310, 320) and these were a good sailing design. No way would I denigrate a Catalina 320.

FWIW, I used to buy from UK because back in the stone age I was a rep for them, and nowadays use a local North loft and receive great advice and after-purchase advice from them.

Good Luck! :)
 
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dLj

.
Mar 23, 2017
5,073
Belliure 41 Back in the Chesapeake
It will help your sail shopping - a LOT - if you weed out the "R" word and the "C" word from your vocabulary. It's all about sails with the best shape and material for "Sailing"... Whether you spend nights aboard or enter a race is secondary.

Spending more on better sails is a budget concern and that often depends on how long you plan to keep your boat. I have friends with Catalina's from this series (309, 310, 320) and these were a good sailing design. No way would I denigrate a Catalina 320.

FWIW, I used to buy from UK because back in the stone age I was a rep for them, and nowadays use a local North loft and receive great advice and after-purchase advice from them.

Good Luck! :)
I've found that North Sails is excellent - however, because they have to support a lot of "advertising" their prices tend to be on the high side. I've found if you can find "good" local sailmaker, they can make excellent sails for lower prices. I put the "good" because that is difficult to ascertain and if it can't be done reasonably - meaning how do you do that - a very hard question to reliably answer - then North Sails is an excellent option.

When you say remove the "R" or "C" I assume you mean racing or cruising. While I somewhat agree with that, I think the biggest thing anyone needs to assess is a reality check of how one is going to sail. How long one is planning to keep the boat is important, but most of us will have a hard time really knowing the answer to that unless there is a clear plan to upgrade the boat in a known, or an expected, time frame. I feel most of us have a "as long as possible" mentality. But each has to decide that for themselves.

"As long as possible" is directly tied to how one sails. For example, I'm a cruiser, I do a lot of off-shore sailing. In fact it's primarily how I sail. So the tradition dacron sails won't work for me. I could easily blow them out in one (OK, maybe a couple) off-shore sail if I get caught in a major storm. I'm never selling my boat until the day comes when I can no longer sail. I want sails that give good performance, I do like to sail fast, and I want them to remain viable for as long as reasonably possible.

dj
 
Jan 11, 2014
14,002
Sabre 362 113 Fair Haven, NY
I've found if you can find "good" local sailmaker, they can make excellent sails for lower prices.
Some of the sails made by local sailmakers are actually built in the same lofts offshore that major brands use. I believe North operates its own lofts offshore.
 
May 17, 2004
6,148
Beneteau Oceanis 37 Havre de Grace
It will help your sail shopping - a LOT - if you weed out the "R" word and the "C" word from your vocabulary. It's all about sails with the best shape and material for "Sailing"... Whether you spend nights aboard or enter a race is secondary.
I hear this a lot about sail trim and sail shape discussions, and there I completely agree with it. For sail design and material I’m not so sure. The right material for a racer is going to be something very low stretch, and they’re more likely to compromise durability. A cruiser will want something that works in a wider wind range and can hold up to less delicate handling.
 
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jssailem

SBO Weather and Forecasting Forum Jim & John
Oct 22, 2014
24,526
CAL 35 Cruiser #21 moored EVERETT WA
We buy modern sloop rigged boats with their resin-impregnated or film-layered sails and often forget about the traditions of sails, hand-stitched and cared for by the sailor's family and friends.

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A time when sails billowed, carrying us off the wind.
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And oxen would drag the boat and the fishermen's catch ashore.