I've written this to the list before, and it probably just reveals my 
novice-ignorance, but in most conditions
I feel as safe in my M17, at 1/3 the displacement of a Flicka, as I did in the Flicka. 
 The M17 is
far-and-away better in light air and with the stub-keel it turns on a dime, but the 
Flicka has a proven record
of circumnavigation, so you can't argue with that.  My sob-story is that the Flicka 
hasn't sailed since the
fall of '99 because "The Partnership" just hasn't had the funds to keep her in a slip 
or on a can.  So I
decided in Y2K that I had to have and affordable boat of my own, a boat for which I 
wouldn't have to pay slip
fees and a boat that I could sail in Lake Huron and Lake Michigan both in the same 
week.  I wanted a
trailerable boat that was seaworthy, with a deep comfortable cockpit.  So far, the M17 
is the only
pocket-cruiser I've seen and sailed that fits those criteria (of course, I've never 
had first-hand experience
with the M15, which I'm obviously not discounting).  But I do kinda miss that standing 
headroom and inboard
diesel of the Flicka.  And the Flicka is a boat that heels significantly before she 
stiffens up, which is fun
because you can bury the rail in lively conditions with the confidence of a 
Cadillac's-worth of weight in the
keel to keep you from turtling.  But now I'm off the Monty topic, so I'll stop.  :-)

----- Original Message -----
From: "Michael L Bowden" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, March 18, 2003 8:08 PM
Subject: Flicka

Hi Craig,

I've always wanted to try a Flicka and her bigger sister Dana.
The M17 must feel like a hot rod compared to a F20. But, in big
wind.......
Once again, you buy the boat suited to the conditions you'll be sailing
in.

Later,

Bones




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