Wave height - how high have you been?

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Brad Newell

about the Mac 65

Not too long ago we spent some time in the South Pacific, part of it in company with at least one MacGregor 65. Our feeling was that we would not have traded straight across - but they probably felt the same way about our Legend 43. We had seriously considered the 65, even visiting the factory, before we bought our present boat, but opted out for several reasons - none of which had anything to do with the strength of the 65. It CAN be very fast. In actual practice, however, while sailing from Australia to Honolulu, we found the two boats to be about the same speed. The reason is that the 65 is very narrow, making it a little "tippy". The owner's wife, on the one we kept company with on our way back, is very short and she didn't like living on the walls. Coming up the east coast of Oz, most of the time we were broad reaching in 20-25knots of wind. We usually had a reef in the main and full 135 jib out. The 65 used a reef and a staysail. Both boats were doing about 8.5, for days at a time. We were both heeling about 5-7 degrees, about all you really want to live with for any length of time. They could have used their genoa and left us at any time; it was capable of 10-12 knots, but the ride might not have been fun, with a heel angle of 15-20 degrees. When you climb up on the cabin top of the 65, which is very narrow, you get a feeling of insecurity, at least we did. The deck over the cabin has a pronounced curve to it and I suspect that footing is a little precarious under sail. I wouldn't want a bunch of kids running around on deck while underway. To access the aft cabin, it is necessary to climb up on the aft deck. Our friends used their aft cabin like a "garage" - stowage for things they didn't need often. The living area in the main cabin gave the feel of being not much larger than our own, if any. Bottom line? We felt that it was not a BAD cruiser; we just would not have liked one. On those rare occasions when you can find a dock, moorage for a 65-foot vessel can be very expensive. On the other hand, if you can afford the boat, moorage is a secondary cost. (It's like an airplane owner being concerned about the cost of gas.)
 
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Nelson Santiesteban

Boarding Steps for C30

I have a 1985 C30 and would like to replace the boarding steps. The newer boats come with metal ones, and mine is wood. The wood ones are quite bulky and heavy. Any suggestions?
 
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Michael

Largest Waves

While racing outside of the the Golden Gate we encountered 28-30ft seas. Very exciting.
 
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Ron Davis

Boat Bashing, my surprise

Two years ago, I bought a Mac 26X to use to learn to sail. My plans are to retire in another two years and buy a bigger boat for extended coastal cruising. My Mac has been perfect for what I bought it for and I agree with Gary completely. The reason I'm writing this is to express amazement at all the prejudices I've discovered in the boating world. Power boaters don't like Sailers. Sailers don't like Powerboaters. Then there's "My boat brand is better than yours." I've been riding motorcycles for about 25 years and always thought it was stupid of bikers to act like I've discovered boaters act. I ride a Harley-Davidson and have friends that won't even ride with someone on another brand. I thought boaters were above all that and respected other's choice of boat. Oh, well. Out of one pond and into another just as bad.
 
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Barry Holmes

Pretty impressive seas

In the aftermath of a gale north of Hatteras, we experienced 70 ft crest to trough seas, easy to estimate since they appeared fully as high from the trough as our 80 ft mast. Since it was after the storm, they were not breaking, and really posed no serious threat. Other than the sheer drama of the enormous waves, the most exciting part was surfing down from the crests. The hull speed on our 61 ft wooden ocean racer (just 13 ft beam) was no more than 10 knots, but we averaged 13 knots over a full day sailing.
 
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Capt. Mitch Witt

Trop Storm Allison

During crossing from Key West to Galveston, June 2001 we encountered following seas and winds of 8-12' and 50 kts for 10-15 hrs overnight. Broaching was a major concern. All sails down. Motoring to maintain control. Frequent shift changes to maintain alertness. As soon as conditions moderated begain sailing again. At times we turned back into waves to keep from falling off and plunging the bow into the trough. Nothing like riding a 18 ton, 42' surfboard.
 
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