Barcă cu pânze Bluewater și de ce nu să cumperi una

Barcă cu pânze Bluewater și de ce nu să cumperi una



De-monetizat, inscrieți-vă aici https://gofund.me/e1a56b2c Înscrieți-vă pentru newsletter pentru a primi gratuit ghidul meu de cumpărare a barca cu pânze E-book https://chasinglatitudes.com/home Alăturați-vă patreon https://www.patreon.com /chasinglatitudes?fan_landing=true pentru beneficii extraordinare și acces la zona membrilor Cashapp ChristopherCousteau Venmo @howtosailing Sfaturile PayPal sunt întotdeauna apreciate https://paypal.me/HowToSailing?locale.x=en_US Consultanță www.chasinglatitudes.com Reducere pentru membrii ASA https: //members.asa.com/?promo=HOW2SAILING Noua carte este lansată și disponibilă acum https://amzn.to/3lgzG61 Site-ul meu și articolele www.chasinglatitudes.com Bine ați venit la Chasing Latitudes! Ți-ai imaginat vreodată mirosul aerului oceanului în timp ce barca ta se prăbușește printre valuri? Libertatea care decurge din aruncarea de pe prora și pornirea în larg pentru a explora locuri noi la care nu poți ajunge cu mașina sau cu avionul? Atunci acest canal este pentru tine. Nu veți vedea aici plaje cu nisip alb, recenzii de restaurante, petreceri pe plajă, selfie-uri sau cuțite japoneze. Ceea ce veți găsi sunt informații concrete bazate pe zeci de ani de experiență în navigație. Canalul meu este destinat în mod special pentru un singur lucru, pentru a te ajuta să îți găsești noul iaht din visele tale și să mergi pe apă în cel mai rapid și eficient mod. Nu te lăsa prins să te uiți la bărci vechi! Mă concentrez în mare parte asupra navelor mai noi, construite în 2000 sau mai târziu, pentru că vreau să-ți petreci cât mai mult din timp navigând, nu exersându-ți abilitățile de restaurare pe o barcă veche care încearcă să o aduci la gloria de odinioară. Doriți să profitați de tehnologia mai nouă uimitoare și de design-ul modern de carenă atunci când vine vorba de navigație. Acest lucru va face ca nava dvs. să navigheze mult mai ușor singur sau cu mâna scurtă și o va face mult mai confortabilă și mai eficientă pentru a trăi la bord cu normă întreagă sau chiar doar pentru călătorii de weekend, fără a cumpăra mai multă barcă decât aveți nevoie. Ofer o mare varietate de servicii, inclusiv consultanță, unde vă voi ghida prin întregul proces al modului în care bugetați corespunzător, alegerea dimensiunii navei care va fi potrivită pentru nevoile dvs., ce tip de navă, vă voi ajuta să faceți cumpărături pentru nave, stabilirea prețurilor de ofertă , programați sondaje, discutați cu brokerii, vă învață cum să vă faceți propriul sondaj prealabil, vă ghidează prin angajarea inspectorului corect și vă ajută să evitați toate capcanele obișnuite pe care le veți găsi atunci când cumpărați nave cu pânze uzate. Consultanța nu se oprește aici, voi fi alături de tine la fiecare pas și mult timp după ce ai achiziționat nava, deoarece consultanța vine și cu acces pe viață în zona membrilor. Chasing Latitudes găzduiește o zonă privată mare și activă de membri, unde membrii sunt mai mult decât fericiți să-și ofere propria experiență pentru a rezolva problemele, găzduiesc videoclipuri private pentru chestionarele ASA Sailing (ASA 101, 103 și 104) și videoclipuri în flux live care prezintă orice de la croaziera membrilor la cumpărături cu barca, comparații cu barca și alt conținut live cu chat de la abonații la canalul meu YouTube și membrii canalului. E timpul ca TU să intri pe apă. Vino la bord!

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48 thoughts on “Barcă cu pânze Bluewater și de ce nu să cumperi una

  1. There are guys sailing 14'-24' in blue water. Ant Steward used an open 18' boat on his journeys. no boat is comfortable in heavy seas and smaller boats even hv an advantage in rough water less chance of dismasting and knockdowns etc. Smaller boats are actually stronger in proportion to a larger vessel. smaller is lighter, and you don't get trapped on a reef if you run aground, need far less draught thereby getting into places big boats can't go, and you need less anchor, to hold it. Also, and of course, it's far less expensive to own and maintain. Small boats are easily driven and cheap to operate, since most "cruisers" run engines nowadays, few real owners actually sail their 50' yachts- they motor them. Boats do not go up in price proportionally by size, the go up exponentially. i.e a 24' boat will not be 1/2 the price of a 48' er. just my 2 cents…

  2. Everyone likes the idea of taking a 1 year vacation to sail the world. Then reality sets in . . . How do you have a good enough job to save up enough to buy a boat, and have enough for a year of food and repairs, disappear for a year, and expect a job when you get back.

    Highly recommend weekend to monthly boat rentals to keep this in "hobby land". Often you can "rent a captain" that will keep you alive till you can take care of yourself.

  3. Why buy when you can rent? Please do a video on bare boat chartering. Rental allows you to get out on the water a couple of times a year, and not worry about storing and maintaining boat the other 50 weekends a year.

  4. I saw your comments on Sailboats but I did not see any comments on A Bavaria 44 or Beneteau 461 or 473. Have you made any YouTube pieces on these boats?

  5. Crossing oceans might be an achievement, but essentially it can be incredibly boring, masochistic and a lot more dangerous to no purpose. Most are better off coastal sailing. You get to see more cultures, people, architecture, landscapes, rivers, cities, wildernesses, scenery, diverse food and cooking. I agree you do not need to spend ridiculous amounts of cash. "Sailing round the world" is often an empty ambition compared with the cultural diversity of, say, sailing around the Med, or Europe, or coastal waters of the USA. While there is a certain rhythm to sailing endless oceans, that feat is more technical and often less satisfying than visiting a wealth of different countries and regions without needing to cross oceans.

  6. Great info. I'm looking at both types. Not expecting to sail over 1000 nm in a single voyage in the next couple of years. Have 2 refit 45's in great condition, solid and proven but looking at a 33, 39 also. I've been on the ocean for years but not sailing. Last boat a taylorcraft built on long Island NY. Easy to sail single. Larger vessels I've never ⛵

  7. Some of the most stable and reliable ocean-capable boats are under 30’, the Laurent Giles design ‘Vertue’ for example

  8. This is a funny video. One of my favorite YouTube sailing channels is on a 36' boat & they've been all over. I think people need to get a boat and figure out what works for them. Thanks for the video.

  9. so im planning on learning to sail and getting experience on other people's boats while i save up to buy my own

  10. I bought a Catalina 30 foot for $10,000. Spent a month and $500 fixing her up then sailed clear from Myrtle to Ireland. I’ve sailed her from gig harbor to Hawaii, New Jersey to the Bahamas. My brother and I had no issue but that she was slow as could be! Averaged 90 miles a day I’d say on most of our trips. Had some electrical issues, but it was a loose screw. Had the black tank leak which was fun being 15 days in to a 25 day trip. Put some duct tape on it lol! Catalinas are so wide that it wasn’t even that rocky unless we got some good swells of course! People have gone around the world in boats that aren’t even 20’! being that my family is one of salty sea riding tradition it was nothing too hard. If someone tells you you can’t cross the deep blue on a 30’ tell them you’ll do it on a 20’. That is if you’ve been on her before. I wouldn’t go out there to the deep if you’ve only sailed once before. Could turn your boat to a submarine if you’re not skillful enough! My brother in the coast guard has pulled inexperienced people on 45’ boats out the water more than 20’ fellas that know what they’re doing.
    My biggest tip to y’all after all my time sailing on the deep blue? PUT KNOTS IN YOUR DAMN LIFE LINE!!! Can’t climb a wet rope with no knots too easy!

  11. Some good advice, bottom line do your research. Everything on a boat falls into one of two categories 1) Broken 2) Not broken yet. Budget 10% of purchase price annually for maintenance and you’ll be good. Planning to buy next year Oceanis 47, working hard toward that goal.

  12. Interesting advice……definitely food for thought. Made me think of the folks sailing on Atticus. That was their approach. Thanks for posting.

  13. Excellent video and so true! Especially the part about every bought yacht needs a refit and time = money is an eye opener. I did two refits and it’s always much more work then you had expected

  14. new sailor here, how you gonna tell me there a better options, there's no need to to buy one of these bluewater vessels and then not proceed to tell me what these better options are. ughhh

  15. I'm planning to buy a 20k used sailboat just to test the waters first.

    I won't use it for ocean, even if they are old blue water boats. I plan to just do islands and go across coast.

  16. I lived aboard a 22ft altlanta catch. For 10 years.
    Now I'm in a house, and can't wait to get my next boat, which will be 37ft+
    When I lived aboard there was no wasted space.

  17. I grew up in a sailboat community. In the off season, I'd make money by helping with cleaning and repairing with my neighbors. After a few years of this, I decided I'd never buy a boat. The best thing is to have friends with boats. I'll gladly bring food and refreshments.

  18. What if you have absolutely no sailing experience of any kind but plan to live on a boat. A 30 footer would be too small. Why would I not get a 40 or 45 footer and then learn how to sail it while I'm living on it?

  19. This video is absolutely truth to the "dreamers". I met so many people who had this dream but when it came time to go they never did. The sailing population is about 1 percent, of that maybe 10 percent leave home waters. Most of those people had one thing in common, fear.
    I bought a blue water boat after looking for four years, a Nicholson 32. Yep, I had read everything Linn and Larry Pardy wrote, studied Hal Roth, and knew what I wanted. Only trouble was, after sailing down the coast to Mexico the dream faded as the reality set in. It isn't cheap to go, sails, rigging, electronics, and all the other maintenance items soon smashed my dream into bits. I realized that crossing oceans wasn't for me after sailing west toward Hawaii for five days and screaming at the top of my lungs, " why hadn't anyone told me it would be like this"? Crawling hand over hand to find the toilet, two hands to make coffee and my third hand to hold on, changing sails at 0300 with heavy foul weather clothing on and tied onto the boat, and crawling into my bunk exhausted only to be roused up half an hour later to make sure you don't hit anything.
    I realize that it would have been easier with another person on board but what female will give up her settled life for this?
    The point is, go sailing with something cheap, anchor out for a couple of weeks, and try your hand at ocean swells before you settle on a boat.
    By the way, after 35000 miles at sea, I would do it again in a heartbeat. Nothing is more fulfilling as sailing.

  20. Hey there! All totally true. So my father would sail the whole family on an Islander34 across the molokai channel every other month or so when I was 6. I can't agree with you more about the weekend sailors buying cruisers and trying to sail around the world, they have no idea… I might have a little more coin that most but I am thinking of buying Haylas 45 or Garcia 45. I really like the modern stuff i.e. debris collision radar so I can sleep at night… I'll see you in tortugas.

  21. In 5 years I'm buying a boat between 32 and 36 feet and popping my cherry and seeing the world. I will.either sink the boat or go around the world.

  22. I grew up sailing. I always said I'd retire on a boat. Now it's almost time. This is all great advice and I know I'll be happy on a boat because I traveled the US for 3 years in the '80's living outdoors in the woods, etc. Then I lived off grid in the desert of Arizona in the middle of nowhere in an RV with my wife. I have about 60K and am finding plenty of boats that at least on paper are good boats in the 30k-60k range. For sure I'm paying for a survey before I buy. I'm rusty, so my plan is to buy the boat in the mid Atlantic area and hire a guy I know who's a captain and a mechanic to sail with me to where I live in Florida. I should get my sea legs by the time we get there. Then me and the wife are gonna rent out our house and give it a go! YOLO!!

  23. Well, after viewing this I am totally convinced my original plan is the way to go…lottery win. With that loot, I can buy any boat I want and hire a crew. One of those PowerBall or MegaMillions billion dollar jackpots, and I'm good to go.

  24. 261 / 5 000

    Výsledky prekladov

    Výsledok prekladu

    I and you understand, you are so poor that you will never buy a yacht, although every night you dream of "riding the waves"

    I'm sure about it, but I'm not a fan of the World of Yachting… it's a wonderful sport, although I'll never have the money for it…

    What are you proving to yourself? You are pathetic

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