In the questions and Answers section from her web site, Tami states that if it was any other boat it probably would not have made it, that's bull. I do think the boat had something to do with it but there are plenty of others that would have survived also.
In one of the pictures it states that the Hull is full of water...Can't be or it would not be floating at the designed water line.
I'm not discounting what she went through just that there is some stretching there.
With conditions that bad, they should have Hove to or ran. But I aint nobody that should second guess their choice
To say you want an unsinkable boat based on what happened to that boat is absurd, unless you intend to sail into a HURRACANE just for the fun of it. IF thats the case you should have a custom boat built just to meet your specs.
Bee
Tami also said the fact that the boat righted itself; probably half the boats on the market would have sunk. She said the Trintella was a great boat and also said 50% of other sailboats would have also survived the storm, not just the Trintella.
As far as weather forecasters go, I don't trust them any farther then I can throw them. Shortly after Katrina most forecasters/ experts lol said, the following year would definately be worse. They were 100% wrong. Sailing between December and February really decreases the chance of a hurricane, as they need heat to form. Otherwise I don't sail, being it's mostly in the Gulf of Mexico that has more hurricanes then any other place on the planet.
Being I can't get a roomy, comfortable, unsinkable, in the year 2009, perhaps I need to wait longer.