Refrigeration isn’t necessary, it’s a luxury. With a home food dehydrator and a little planning you can have good food for months.
Nope, personally I like reading by candle light and crapping in a cedar bucket....
In the eye of the beholder....I love those lines !
Yep. I was wrong.I think the "Timbercoast 22" was penned by Tad Roberts. The rest of the line by a Mr George Calkins.
"Legendary designer George Calkins combined these ingredients (and a great deal of style) to produce a unique boat design that continues to appeal to discriminating rough water boat enthusiasts worldwide. Read a bit about him in a Tillamook Herald news article."
The 6’7” to 8’ headroom in the engine room is certainly appealing.
Isn’t all that pretty paint going to eventually fall off the aluminum hull/deck/everything?
https://yachts.nl/yachts-for-sale/steel-motor-yacht/steel-charter-yacht
Only 800k pounds
Buy 2, you can afford it.
https://yachts.nl/yachts-for-sale/steel-motor-yacht/steel-charter-yacht
Only 800k pounds
Buy 2, you can afford it.
Heh, if I had your money, I'd burn mine.
Greetings,
Mr. b. No ER pictures and no mention of range or fuel consumption (might have missed it in my quick scan). I did not sit through the video so maybe that information in in there.
Oh, your post #7965.
In my younger years I was a devoted follower of the Pardeys and Hiscocks and the philosophy of minimalism... electricity was evil and bad for the environment and would fail and then your boat will sink and everyone onboard will die. You have to crap in a cedar bucket and use kerosene lamps and salt your fish and venison because refrigs are faux pas.
It's funny how nowadays, electricity does work. Modern batteries are great. Solar can power everything on our boats (perhaps except aircon). Solar pollutes the environment less and is more readily available than kerosene. Ice is impossibly expensive to find in some areas. Modern refrigs (especially European ones) are incredible efficient.
So I don't know about you guys but the most important thing is that I keep my wife happy. She's not a die-hard sailor, but she is my wife, and I like having her along for the ride. But not if she has to crap in a cedar bucket. No thanks.
Refrigeration isn’t necessary, it’s a luxury. With a home food dehydrator and a little planning you can have good food for months.
You can also eat MRE’s from the surplus store and sleep in a sleeping bag...... But who wants to live like a floating backpacker for more than a long weekend?
My wife and I once spent 6 months sea kayaking, so obviously we don’t see eye to eye on this one.
I just told my wife that and she just gave me with a “why are you telling me this” look. [emoji30]