I am new to sailing...or hope to be. I live in the Hudson River Valley in NY and an amazing offer has come my way. In short, I think I can get my hands on a 1965 19' O'Day Mariner for the price of a 16-piece bucket of KFC. Seriously, the cost to purchase the boat is less than nominal.
The catch...and there is always a catch, is that the boat needs some TLC. It looks like the bottom needs to be painted (who knew that boat paint cost $180 a gallon. But how many gallons does it take to paint the bottom of a boat?) and the outboard motor probably needs a hearty servicing (notice it holding up the boat). Other than that I think she'll float...and hopefully sail. it had been used by a local sailing club and they decided to sell off two of their extra boats.
The sails and rigging are all intact. I have access to a boat slip and the current owner will allow me to keep the boat in their yard until the Spring and let me work on it there as well with the folks who will be working on three other sail boats, so I will have no storage or mooring fees until the fall.
Oh there is one other minor point to consider...I don't know how to sail. So one option is to forgo the boat and the repairs and take sailing lessons (a minimum of $200 -$400 a person) and enjoy the summer on the Loose Goose II, my father-in-law's Maxum motorboat. Or for the same price, I can buy the O'Day and learn on my own.
The dilemma is, as my wife stated, " You are a renaissance man. Between the garden, inoperable Harley, kayaks and camping, photography and cooking do you really have time for another hobby this summer?" and she's right! Do I?
But for the price of a some original recipe thighs and a box of biscuits I can fall down the rabbit hole of owning a boat.
Can anyone give me some insight on what I am really getting into.

The catch...and there is always a catch, is that the boat needs some TLC. It looks like the bottom needs to be painted (who knew that boat paint cost $180 a gallon. But how many gallons does it take to paint the bottom of a boat?) and the outboard motor probably needs a hearty servicing (notice it holding up the boat). Other than that I think she'll float...and hopefully sail. it had been used by a local sailing club and they decided to sell off two of their extra boats.
The sails and rigging are all intact. I have access to a boat slip and the current owner will allow me to keep the boat in their yard until the Spring and let me work on it there as well with the folks who will be working on three other sail boats, so I will have no storage or mooring fees until the fall.
Oh there is one other minor point to consider...I don't know how to sail. So one option is to forgo the boat and the repairs and take sailing lessons (a minimum of $200 -$400 a person) and enjoy the summer on the Loose Goose II, my father-in-law's Maxum motorboat. Or for the same price, I can buy the O'Day and learn on my own.
The dilemma is, as my wife stated, " You are a renaissance man. Between the garden, inoperable Harley, kayaks and camping, photography and cooking do you really have time for another hobby this summer?" and she's right! Do I?
But for the price of a some original recipe thighs and a box of biscuits I can fall down the rabbit hole of owning a boat.
Can anyone give me some insight on what I am really getting into.