Wing for Chesapeake
On the wing keel, the factory adds over one hundred extra pounds of ballast to compensate for the difference in keel depth. If your sailing ground is the Chesapeake, I would think a winged keep would provide so much more in the number of anchoring locations and exploratory areas you can check out. I have the Catalina 30 with the wing keel and the 3'10" draft is perfect for ICW work.The only thing I can think of that is negative is if you ran aground with a fin keel you can kedge off; however, that would be tough with a wing keel as you would dig yourself in deeper. However, a winged keel would hold you steady in a grounding as the tide receeded, whereas a fin keel would make the vessel list. For coastal work, the winged keel is the way to go.Bob