"They have a number of senior, overweight, or disabled friends and wanted
something comfortable and rock solid in the water

The boat has a permanent slip on Minnetonka, so they didn't care about the
weight of the boat"

I would have recommended a Flicka 20' . . . The one I have for sale!

----- Original Message -----
From: "Cal Spooner" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, March 13, 2002 3:36 PM
Subject: M_Boats: Introduction


At 10:58 AM -0800 3/13/02, Shawn Boles wrote:

Hi Cal:

I would have bought a Rhodes 22 (note spelling) myself, as they are a GREAT
boat manufactured by a GREAT guy (Stan Spitzer) , but the damn things weigh
3500 pounds. The 17 is a fine substitute and probably a better heavy weather
sailboat. Is your boat grey?

cheers-
Shawn Boles
Grey Mist (M17 #276 1978)

No, she's white/blue trim.

I like the Rhoads 22 but I can't get over the minuscule (relatively
speaking) mainsail and the HUGE genoa jib (just guessing, but it's
gotta be a 180) that is so large that you have to go forward and walk
it around the shrouds when tacking (or it gets caught), just when you
really want to leave the helm. It has a plastic window cut into the
bottom so you can see where you're going, as it covers your entire
range of view on one side, and that means you have to steer from the
high side, or you can't see much (you still can't). And the jib
sheets are large, long, and all over the place, and you have to have
your winch handle ready to close haul her. So on a close reach,
having to tack often, she's somewhat a pain. But on a beam or broad
reach or while running she's a joy. I love the way the mainsail rolls
out of the mast (the jib rolls out as well) and you can take it out
in anything, and give yourself just as much sail as you want. It also
has the combo keel like the Montgomerys. With the 3500 pounds in the
water, I haven't seen much in the way of weather that could rock this
boat. I don't know much about the M17, but in a storm, I would bet on
the Rhoads.

It seems better suited to coastal or great lake cruising than sailing
our smaller Minnesota lakes... all 10,000 of them.

Steve owns the boat along with his wife, Mary Ann, and a friend,
Judy, who has done quite a bit of global cruising on a trimaran. They
have a number of senior, overweight, or disabled friends and wanted
something comfortable and rock solid in the water, as the M15 tends
to be a bit spunky at times during weird weather. The boat has a
permanent slip on Minnetonka, so they didn't care about the weight of
the boat... it hits the trailer once a year for a total of about 3
miles.
--
Cal Spooner
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
763-574-1482

_______________________________________________
http://mailman.xmission.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/montgomery_boats


_______________________________________________
http://mailman.xmission.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/montgomery_boats

Reply via email to