trailering
Hello,Last year I decided sailing with the family would be a GOOD THING. Did some research (much of it here), decided a C22 was the boat for me, found one and bought it. This was July, and no moorings were available near me (north shore of Long Island, NY). That's Ok, the boat is trailerable and I don't know where I would want to sail either (Long Island Sound, Great South Bay, Peconid bay, etc.). We spent the rest of the summer and fall learning and having fun. Sailing was great. Rigging, launching, hauling, de-rigging was not.Even after 10 times practicing, it would still take about 1 hour from the time we got to the marina until the family boarded the boat. And the same hour from the time we arrived at the ramp until we were driving home. There are many benefits of trailerable boats:no slip or mooring feesmuch easier to care for the boatthe boat stays much cleanermuch easier to load the boat with gearHowever, as Scott wrote, unless we had the entire day to spend (AND the weather forecast was favorable) we didn't bother. It made no sense to sail for 2 hours if it would more time than that preparing the boat.This year I put the boat on a mooring and it was just wonderful.I wouldn't change the way we did things. We were able to try sailing in more places than if we just dropped the boat in the water and left it.Regarding over night trips, any boat small enough to trailer is going to be REAL tight for a weekend. I thought about spending a weekend on my C22, but it was not big enough. Even my 28' Newport is tight, and it is about 3X the size of a C22. Finally, if you aren't sure about what to buy, my advice would be to find the nicest condition, oldest boat, for the least amount of money. Using Catalina 22's as an example, you can find very nice boats from the early 80's, in sail away condition for $4000. I know because that's what I sold mine for. It was in very nice condition, included a 1994 trailer with brand new tires, 1994 5 HP motor that ran great, and 1993 sails.I looked about 1990 boats and they were in worse condition than the 1981 I bought, and the later boats were more money too!Buy something cheap, get out there, have fun, and then you'll know if sailing, trailer sailing, small boats, etc. are for you. If you decide to get out, get something bigger, or something newer, the first boat won't cost you much.One last thing, I decided that I LOVE sailing and wanted to do more. So I sold the C22 and bought a Newport 28. Big enough for my family of 5 to overnight on, big enough to handle more weather conditions, big enough to have a real head, and still small enough to learn on, care for, etc.Good luck,Barry