Lucky guy!.... or you could just go SAIL. I'm heading out the door! ;^)
Lucky guy!.... or you could just go SAIL. I'm heading out the door! ;^)
No need to get snippy about it. You asked an unanswerable question. No one sets a stopwatch every time they open their toolbox, nor every time they raise a sail.Well, if never having had kept track of either, then including anchoring hours in the calculation wouldn't help much with the question.
We keep a departure log (for > 25 yr now) which also tells whether we are sailing or motoring (i.e., diesel engine hr log or notes). So, I do know approximately how much sailing we do. I keep maintenance notes, plus I know about how often I do certain tasks and how long it generally takes to complete them; others apparently do as well. So, it is estimable. The question is how much sailing, not how much one uses the boat for all purposes combined, relative to maintenance as a baseline. The latter could range from 0--never leave the dock but do wash the boat occasionally--to infinity, i.e., live on the boat and never fix anything except the Direct TV antenna. As it is, the range appears to be from zero to 10, or so.No need to get snippy about it. You asked an unanswerable question. No one sets a stopwatch every time they open their toolbox, nor every time they raise a sail.
Including nights spent at anchor would help, especially for anyone who keeps a log. If they cared enough, they might actually get close to obtaining one side of the equation.
Your question is "What should it be?"Reading through the posts on this forum over the past few years, plus what I see around me and see even for myself, I'm wondering what the "average" is of hours of sailing hours to hours of boat maintenance and repair--call it the S/BMR hourly ratio. Hopefully, it's much greater than one for most of us. What should it be? For the time being let's not include overnight anchoring in the usage hours. Just hours underway sailing or motorsailing but preferably sailing only, over say--one year or season.
Perhaps true, but we get a lot of questions from newbies about the sailing/boating experience, etc., and what it all entails--generally. I don't think: "Whatever works for you" would qualify as an informative answer to offer in those cases.Your question is "What should it be?"
My answer is whatever works for you.
Great point!But, I can say some of my happiest hours are spent on the hook. I would not exclude those hours from the ratio, myself.