Action
Guru
- Joined
- Mar 13, 2015
- Messages
- 679
- Location
- Phoenix, AZ USA
- Vessel Name
- Enigma
- Vessel Make
- 1997 Wellcraft Excel 26 SE
My first was a 1986 Bayliner 19' Capri cuddy with 125hp outboard. I would have that as a first boat again easily.
Not to be snarky but I found the Sunfish to be infinitely superior. I sailed a Sunfish across Lake Michigan. i would not have done that with a Snark.Interesting thread and I am a bit surprised that others were also bombing around having a good time in their Snarks. Sometimes if the wind was good I'd go out twice a day with mine. Sometimes unemployed gives you extra time to do things like sail your Snark. Not sure that this thread is going to help to OP but by top mentions we have:
Snarks = 4
Hatteras Brand = 4
Looks like a Snark on the boat deck of a Hatteras is a winning combination.
Must agree. The Sunfish taught me more about sailing than any human could have!Not to be snarky but I found the Sunfish to be infinitely superior. I sailed a Sunfish across Lake Michigan. i would not have done that with a Snark.
I would buy a 22 C-Dory again although the wife would prefer the 25. Very capable and very simple.
Not to be snarky but I found the Sunfish to be infinitely superior. I sailed a Sunfish across Lake Michigan. i would not have done that with a Snark.
Not to be snarky but I found the Sunfish to be infinitely superior. I sailed a Sunfish across Lake Michigan. i would not have done that with a Snark.
No boat is perfect, but I'd buy my Cherubini again.
Probably tough to make a case for what you should buy without knowing your mission parameters.
Ted
Not to be snarky but I found the Sunfish to be infinitely superior. I sailed a Sunfish across Lake Michigan. i would not have done that with a Snark.
My Snark fit well on the roof of my orange Volkswagen Dasher
Thanks for the laugh. Mine was the coffee cup model. The thing I remember most about it was that it was touchier than a pregnant wort hog. One little puff of wind would put you upside down. If you tried to hike quick the wind would quit and you would be upside down to windward. It seemed you were always setting it the damn thing in a puddle of dirty water and sand and any time you would move it would squeak.What cracks me up with this thread is the bottom feeder of sailboats is the most mentioned on a trawler site. I mean some of these were just foam with no outer protective shell, a coffee cup with a sail.
The one boat I keep coming back to in my mind. Is an EDEY&DUFF Stonehorse 23. We owned one many years ago. Totally simple, well balanced cutter sailboat. Cozy cabin, One cylinder Westerbeke- tan barks sails and a tiny tot wood stove, what more could you want. We still talk about the fun times we had with that boat!
I had 3 Snarks that gave me lots of fond Memories. It was fun- I was young and pushed it to its very low limits. I had the narrow yellow (banana shaped) "Super Snark" model and then their "high end" sloop "? snark." it had a stayed mast still with the hull foam filled black ABS and had a semi- trimaran shaped bow. It was pushed past it limits and the stays forced the mast thru the bottom of the boat! Then I bought the Snark more normal shaped hull (red ABS over foam) (from Sears) with an unstayed mast that I had for several years until I finally bought a Ranger 26. The last snark lasted many years and was still car-top-able. I loved the simplicity of car toppers.I really had fun with a cartop Snark sailboat, wish I still had it.
This is a bit of a "bring me a rock" question, with all due respect.
FYI.. i am 77years old, speak English and was born in New Jersey.. graduated from high school, etc.
i have never heard this expression before. what does it mean?
just curious