The Natural Curve
Thanks, Craig, for the information.Having aspirations for daysailing first, marina/island hopping next, then real coastal cruising is a prudent plan, which says a lot about your common sense and basic temerament as an erstwhile skipper. The H33 is a platform that will let you do all of it in incremental steps. I echo others' recommendations, and have included a few peculiar ones of my own:1) get familiar with your boat's deck equipment and workings, and become familiar with its behavior on daysails in all kinds of conditions. Focus on learning sail handling/trim (including de-powering and reefing), basic boathandling skills, like tacking/gybing, keeping a course toward a mark (like a distant landmark), noting how the boat behaves in different wind and sea states, how to heave-to, and how to read/use charts and any electronics, like GPS, you may have/buy. Have a thorough working knowledge of the deck equipment and the standing and running rigging, and its function, INSPECTION, maintenance and repair. Of course, docking skills will be gained at the end of every outing. Get those manuals and dig in; perform standard maintenance like oil/filter changes, zinc replacements on heat exchangers, whatever applies to your powertrain and its support systems. Take covers off and see where your electrical/plumbing routing goes, what valves and switches do what, etc., so that it all becomes familiar territory. Implicit in that is to have a basic tool kit that in addition to wrenches, sockets, drivers, etc., incudes a multi-meter, connectors, shrink-wrap, etc.And rags. Lots of rags.Become a safety-minded skipper: devise and stick to protocols you create about who is wearing what, in terms of safety equipment, in which conditions, and who is allowed to go forward, wearing what equipment (harness/tether, etc.) in what conditions. Study and practice Man-Overboard routines in pleasant, then challenging, wind/sea states. What will she do in case YOU go over? Learn routine and emergency use of your VHF radio, maybe creating "cheat sheet" cards kept in your nav table, for proper/efficient use of the radio in a variety of circumstances, including a breakdown of which channels are earmarked for what use: hailing, commercial, distress, boat-to-boat, etc.Note: I'd buy an auto-pilot before a GPS at this place in my learning curve. A fabulous piece of gizmo-kit.2) provision up for a few days and make the trip to Catalina when you know a bit about your motor and other basic systems, have done some maintenance, and can do some rudimentary trouble-shooting, and are confident about your ability to adjust to quickly-changing coastal weather; these trips, while pleasant and rewarding in themselves, can be used as short "training voyages," letting you practice just about everything you would do on a longer trip, and have the convenience of shopping/fuel/showers/parts & service, etc. at your fingertips, so you can have that safety net. When on the mooring, note the equipment other skippers are using that you might like to add to your Christmas list to make life more convenient: I have my eye on an outboard motor crane right now that will eliminate man-handling my heavy, four-stroke motor to and from the stern rail and dinghy transom. Also surveil boats around you that are anchoring (I don't know about Avalon, but at the Isthmus, where I go, boats anchor in several places in Isthmus Cove). When you feel confident, you can try it yourself, maybe in the off-season when you'll have few neighbors and plenty of room to make beginning mistakes. Use this time to learn about your electrical systems sans shore power: husbanding your electrical resources, battery-charging routines (you'll begin to form ideas about which route you want to go for charging: engine alternator (with or without improved controller), generators, solar panels, wind generators. It's a wonderland of Carroll-ian proportions that will make your head spin and push you to much research/opinion-gathering before you decide what's right for you.3) after you've had problems to solve (and in a couple of seasons, you will have plenty) and those experiences under your keel, you will know when it's time to cast your eyes on the horizon.It's gonna be a great season of your life: enjoy!Jeff