|
|
15-05-2007, 20:18
|
#1
|
Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: land locked in Iowa, usa
Boat: Boston Whaler Harpoon 5.2
Posts: 22
|
Talk me out of this....
I have a small Boston Whaler harpoon 5.2 and I mentioned to a friend it would be cool to sail it from Florida to the Bahamas. Now all he has been talking about is doing that later this summer for a couple weeks. We are both college students on break and have nothing better to do than look for some adventure.
My sailing experience consists of sailing the harpoon around on lakes in the midwest. Also when I was a kid I lived in Kemah, TX and we had a Erikson 38. I have never plotted a course or sailed to a destination that wasn't where I left from.
What keeping me from wanting to do this is, I would have to drag the thing from Iowa to Florida, storeage of my truck and trailor in Florida for along time, and I have a really small boat.
Talk me out of it.
|
|
|
15-05-2007, 20:28
|
#2
|
Now on the Dark Side: Stink Potter.
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: Palm Coast, Florida
Boat: Sea Hunt 234 Ultra
Posts: 3,990
|
Quote:
I have a small Boston Whaler harpoon 5.2
|
Would that be 5.2 METERS or 5.2 FEET?
I assume Meters, but I also assume ya are from the US of A where most folks can't even spell meters so why would the boats be measured that way...
__________________
Life is sexually transmitted
|
|
|
15-05-2007, 20:40
|
#3
|
Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: land locked in Iowa, usa
Boat: Boston Whaler Harpoon 5.2
Posts: 22
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by CSY Man
Would that be 5.2 METERS or 5.2 FEET?
I assume Meters, but I also assume ya are from the US of A where most folks can't even spell meters so why would the boats be measured that way...
|
Yes, it is meters, and yes I am from the US. I have no Idea why it is measured that way but that is the model.
Stock photo:
|
|
|
15-05-2007, 20:54
|
#4
|
Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Phoenix, Arizona... USA
Posts: 2,386
|
Harpoon5.8
If you and your freind were going that long of a distance in that boat.
I say I better tell ya to get out of that!!
That boat is only best used for just-off-the-shore sailing along coastal areas only. In that dinghy type of sailboat. Only good for day sailing.
I am sure that there are others in here who might say the same thing.
You wanted talked out of it. Well!! I am talking you out of that trip in "that" boat!! My advice to you.
__________________
CaptainK
BMYC
"Those who desire to give up Freedom in order to gain security, will not have, nor do they deserve, either one." - Benjamin Franklin
|
|
|
15-05-2007, 20:57
|
#5
|
Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Pahrump, Nevada (about 75 miles west of Las Vegas)
Boat: hope to be a Power Catamaran Cruiser as soon as we can swing it
Posts: 25
|
As far as spelling "meters" it should NEVER have been in the American vocabulary to start with. The so called conversion to the metric system has screwed up almost every commodity it has come in association with in regards to the American public..
We colonial Ameicans, seemed to have done fairly well, using our own measurement system for nearly 200 years, somehow overcoming the lack of the metric system and becoming a world power along the way.
The only thing that has come from the "metric convesion" is confusion, paying the same for a smaller amount of almost anything, thus allowing manufacturers to reshape the packaging slightly to assure that the American consumer, fairly ignorant of the conversion ratios, wouldn't be aware that they are not getting the "quart", "pint", "pound" that they thought or trusted that they would be getting.
Its been a boondoggle since its inception, and hasn't gotten better.
When I buy a boat, I like it measured in FEET! When I buy fuel, I like it in Gallons etc..etc.
JMHO, and I'm sure you'll all have yours.
__________________
The real estate agent told me that California was going to drop off into the sea, and my desert property would become waterfront, I'm still waiting
|
|
|
15-05-2007, 20:58
|
#6
|
Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: land locked in Iowa, usa
Boat: Boston Whaler Harpoon 5.2
Posts: 22
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by CaptainK
Harpoon5.8
If you and your freind were going that long of a distance in that boat.
I say I better tell ya to get out of that!!
That boat is only best used for just-off-the-shore sailing along coastal areas only. In that dinghy type of sailboat. Only good for day sailing.
I am sure that there are others in here who might say the same thing.
You wanted talked out of it. Well!! I am talking you out of that trip in "that" boat!! My advice to you.
|
Thanks, I was thinking the same thing, but my buddy is pretty persistant. Now I kind of want to check out how much it would cost to fly down and rent a boat for a week or so, even though I know it would be out of my budget.
|
|
|
15-05-2007, 21:00
|
#7
|
Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Charlotte harbor, FL
Boat: Morgan OI 414
Posts: 251
|
It is very possible to do what you are saying but I would by no means encourage you to do so. You need a bigger boat to do it safely,no pun intended. I would however tell you to have fun in that boat close to shore.
|
|
|
15-05-2007, 21:01
|
#8
|
Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Phoenix, Arizona... USA
Posts: 2,386
|
Your welcome.
I was not trying to smash any hopes for you to go sailing one day. I just would not take "that" trip. In "that" boat IMHO.
If you look around the internet. Maybe you could partner up with other people heading into that direction. Or you and your friend could rent a boat.
__________________
CaptainK
BMYC
"Those who desire to give up Freedom in order to gain security, will not have, nor do they deserve, either one." - Benjamin Franklin
|
|
|
15-05-2007, 21:05
|
#9
|
Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: land locked in Iowa, usa
Boat: Boston Whaler Harpoon 5.2
Posts: 22
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by CaptainK
Your welcome.
I was not trying to smash any hopes for you to go sailing one day. I just would not take "that" trip. In "that" boat IMHO.
If you look around the internet. Maybe you could partner up with other people heading into that direction. Or you and your friend could rent a boat.
|
No worries, I was being the rational one and said it was not that feasable in the first place. My next step though is to see how much it would cost to fly down and rent a boat, but I am sure it is out of my price range. We are in our early 20's so we have alot of time left for cruising.
|
|
|
15-05-2007, 21:20
|
#10
|
Now on the Dark Side: Stink Potter.
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: Palm Coast, Florida
Boat: Sea Hunt 234 Ultra
Posts: 3,990
|
With expensive modifications you could sail that thing across the gulfstream safely.
As is, it looks a bit open and vulnerable.
Not only from mother nature, but also from the big motor yachts and sportfishing boats that cross at 30 knots on autopilot without a proper lookout and without really caring if they run over some poor souls in their 5.2 trying to prove a point or win a bet.
Besides that, it CAN BE DONE if weather and luck are smiling at ya.
I would not..Too old and too wise now.
30 years ago perhaps: Because I had more balls than brains.
Good luck and hat off, but don't be stupid.
__________________
Life is sexually transmitted
|
|
|
15-05-2007, 21:27
|
#11
|
Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Sai Kung, Hong Kong
Boat: FP Lavezzi 40 / Hatteras 48
Posts: 775
|
Why not trailer it to the 30,000 Islands (Georgian Bay) load up camping gear and bob around there for a few weeks. Beautiful scenery, fresh clean water and lots of places to pitch a tent. You could even sleep in the boat and take it down the Trent Canal to Kingston.
I'd recommend August as the bugs will have largely abated and the blueberries grow wild up there.
Don't rethink the boat, rethink the trip.
Cheers, Muskoka
|
|
|
15-05-2007, 21:30
|
#12
|
Senior Cruiser
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Marlborough Sounds. New Zealand
Boat: Hartley Tahitian 45ft. Leisure Lady
Posts: 8,038
|
You have answered your own question. You had to ask, so the reply from me would be no. If you were confident and competent to not need to ask, then you would have my blessing. I don't really know the area you intend to sail, but I would say it was possible for a boat like this to cope, providing the crew were skilled enough to cope. There are those with enough skill and courage to sail a boat like this just about anywhere. But there also those that want off 40fters as soon as a sea gets a little over a chop.
__________________
Wheels
For God so loved the world..........He didn't send a committee.
|
|
|
15-05-2007, 21:34
|
#13
|
Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Whangaparaoa,NZ
Boat: 63 ft John Spencer Schooner
Posts: 956
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by Desert Sailors
When I buy fuel, I like it in Gallons etc..etc.
|
Did you mean imperial gallons??
|
|
|
15-05-2007, 21:36
|
#14
|
Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: land locked in Iowa, usa
Boat: Boston Whaler Harpoon 5.2
Posts: 22
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by muskoka
Why not trailer it to the 30,000 Islands (Georgian Bay) load up camping gear and bob around there for a few weeks. Beautiful scenery, fresh clean water and lots of places to pitch a tent. You could even sleep in the boat and take it down the Trent Canal to Kingston.
I'd recommend August as the bugs will have largely abated and the blueberries grow wild up there.
Don't rethink the boat, rethink the trip.
Cheers, Muskoka
|
wow thanks for the tip. I google earth'd it and it sent me to the great lakes. It that what you are talking about? Looks cool.
|
|
|
15-05-2007, 21:55
|
#15
|
Moderator Emeritus
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Hayes, VA
Boat: Gozzard 36
Posts: 8,700
|
Quote:
No worries, I was being the rational one and said it was not that feasible in the first place.
|
You could have a fun time with it camping out in close coastal waters. Maybe fresh water would be the better choice. I would remove the great lakes from your list as well but maybe some of the larger lakes could be a good time depending on the time of year.
Crossing the Gulf stream is a clearly not a safe idea. I think if you lived within your own and the boats limits you could sail some place and have fun. Hey, you are looking for fun not the incredible journey. Crossing the Atlantic in the worlds smallest boat has been done. It's less than 3 meters but was NOT an open boat.
OK, so you can't go the the Bahamas so what. It's about what you can do. Cruising out on nice lakes with islands for camping and having fun could be nice. It's what you know and what the boat can do. Seems more what you need for a fun time. Consider the extra money you would have for on shore adventure.
__________________
Paul Blais
s/v Bright Eyes Gozzard 36
37 15.7 N 76 28.9 W
|
|
|
|
|
Thread Tools |
Search this Thread |
|
|
Display Modes |
Rate This Thread |
Linear Mode
|
|
Posting Rules
|
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts
HTML code is Off
|
|
|
|
Advertise Here
Recent Discussions |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Vendor Spotlight |
|
|
|
|
|