Ahoy – Iahturi pentru a naviga lumea cu un buget redus

Ahoy - Iahturi pentru a naviga lumea cu un buget redus



Bun venit la Ahoy de săptămâna aceasta. Alăturați-vă celor doi Dick în timp ce se adâncesc în iahturi de apă albastră mai vechi pe care le puteți cumpăra cu un buget redus. Dacă sunteți nou la Ocean Sailor, Ahoy este o serie în care vă răspundem la întrebările arzătoare. Ai o întrebare pe care ai dori să o pui? Scrieți-l în comentarii sau trimiteți-ne un e-mail la hello@oceansailormagazine.com Pentru citiri suplimentare, consultați acest articol: https://krakenyachts.com/turning-back-the-clock/ Pentru toate lucrurile Blue Water Cruising, consultați Ocean Sailor Magazine și Podcastul Ocean Sailor. https://krakenyachts.com/oceansailor https://krakenyachts.com/podcast

source

31 thoughts on “Ahoy – Iahturi pentru a naviga lumea cu un buget redus

  1. if you have the desire to go and play extensively out on the Deep Blue Waters people, remember this: there is only ONE Kraken that will take you OUT, and bring you HOME AGAIN…..

    THANK YOU Kraken for doing it RIGHT.

  2. Nicely put , I am a huge "understander" of your boats, the reasons why you have done what goes into your boats, but even more, the honesty with the way you market what you have.
    As far as an outstanding, no compromise yacht built to do as you state it will. And a marketing strategy that is straight up, straight up. That is what this whole industry is lacking, World bloody wide. And this is coming from an old boat builder/business owner. Well done good sir's.

  3. And don’t forget Island Packet built in America and still bomb proof in the models they’re building today. Full integrated keel with protected rudder. And only 5 foot draft. Soooo sail the Florida Keys and Bahama islands. Brand new 42 for $700,000. Roughly

  4. Thanks for this! I like the idea of a sub-40 kraken. Something the misses can easily manage in the event of injuries. We also have the rustler 36, which is a wonderful boat as well. You can find older under 100k. I think 36 is a fantastic size, there are plenty of space to fit everything for a couple.

  5. Thanks going into it – espacally since kraken is obviously the absolute opposite of the spectrum and if you would round to a full percent basicly nobody can affort them^^

  6. yeah I love the diea of a Kracken 44 I think is a great size! I just wish I could afford one! I am looking at a Vagabond 47 in amazing condition with great upgrades so I am hoping that will serve my purposes! Curious if the Dicks' have any opinions on the Vagabons!

  7. Hi Dick, I recently watched your video where you visited Fair Isles. You make no mention of the HCs deck stepped mast. In this video you give Fair Isles as an example of a blue water boat. My last boat was an Alberg 37 hill no. 7 but I love the HCs. I lost a back stay on my Alberg in about 35 knots. Was able to compensate with the topping lift and main halyard. We were fine. If the mast would have been deck stepped I wonder what the outcome. I could say it was my fault but there was no sign of a problem and the stay stripped and pulled right out of the turnbuckle so it was actually the turnbuckle that failed. I have been getting the itch but at 67 I would probably only sail the Caribbean which I have done before as far South as St. Lucia. Would the deck step mast disqualify the HCs? Thank you for your thoughts.

  8. I've just bought an Endurance 37'. She's great, barely used and complete with SS fuel and water tanks. Internal helm. Was impounded for years in a drugs bust!!

  9. I have to admit, I'm new to this sailing lark and currently looking for something to take me around the warmer parts of the planet, but I'm wondering, are the world's oceans littered with upside down bolt-on-keel boats bobbing around without their keels (and/or rudders)?

    What is the real risk of coming a cropper?

    I've been thinking Island Packet purely due to the risk of grounding as a sailing halfwit, but I do like the idea of a massive cockpit to sleaze around in just off some tropical beach bar. Living on an IP, or any other tiny cockpit blue water boat when at a cruising ground sounds miserable.

    Maybe potter about coastally in a cruising ground with a big cockpit, then sell it and buy another massive cockpit on the other side of each ocean.

    Though, I'd also like to try an ocean crossing at least once.

    Doesn't Starlink and OpenAI basically make every ocean crossing a walk in the park these days?

    I've really no idea.

  10. Strong opinions about varios matters such as rudder design, integral keels etc. Are they based on some serious investigations or what. If so please give me some reference.

  11. Would an older Morgan Out Island 41, or something like an Alberg 37 or Cape Dory 36 work?

    Full integral keels and keel-hung rudders across the board, fairly heavy for their size, and heavy lay-up.

    Yeah, I'm definitely one of the landlocked poor's trying to figure out how to see the world by sail 😅🤙

Comments are closed.

Follow by Email
YouTube
YouTube
WhatsApp