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At what size do you no longer feel like you're boating

Discussion in 'General Yachting Discussion' started by olderboater, Sep 7, 2013.

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  1. olderboater

    olderboater Senior Member

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    Ok, let me try to explain what I'm asking for opinions on here. I love boating. I love taking a Cobalt out on a lake. I love the feel of driving a Riva from Fort Lauderdale to Key West. I love a Sea Ray type on the Tennessee River. But now I'm finalizing my decision on a larger yacht. While having a crew, I do still intend to learn to both Pilot and Navigate, as does my wife. We do intend to spend a lot of time in the pilothouse and at the upper helm if it has one as well. We intend to supplement our own experience with training by our Captains and formal training at a local Maritime school. Now we'll still have smaller boats for play. We fully intend to learn over the years to do everything relative to Captaining a boat outside of the mechanical tasks.

    We started thinking in the 80-90 foot range and soon found ourselves at 100'. We do still seem to get the feeling we're after behind the wheel in the 90-100' ranges. Note we are looking at semi-displacement hulls capable of speeds over 20 knots. Our requirements were the ability to have this speed but also the ability at a slower speed to make an Atlantic crossing so range in excess of 2000 nm and really for any level of comfort in excess of 2500 nm. This is where the size kept having to creep up as the smaller yachts just don't have that range unless strictly trawlers.

    Note that much of our cruising will be the two of us plus crew. Then often it will be just four to six passengers. We will have only those rare times of off shore entertainment of 10-15 passengers. Typically we will spend one to two months on the boat at a time, then broken by a period at home. So if it's an extended cruise it will probably go something like, two months cruise, fly home for a month, two more cruise, home a month, two more cruising.

    So now the 100' even started creeping up in some cases based on fuel capacity. Also in some lines the pricing difference between 100' and 112' or so is often minimal considering the total price. Now leaping to 130' or so is much greater. Still at 130' you can get an incredible boat. One fear we've had however is that at some point beyond 100' you no longer feel like you're boating or even driving a boat (and I know driving a boat is not a term yachtsmen would use but we still like it). Suddenly it's like you're on a cruise ship and cruise ships do not interest us. Now I know that the 200'+ yachts would be that way to us. But does that start to happen at 120' or 140' or 175'? Now I've talked to those with a 130' Westport and they say they still haven't lost the boating feeling. We certainly intend to do sea trials on some of these models but would like the collective YF experience.

    For the record, here are the lines and models we're currently considering and our leanings as of this moment as well as a couple we've most recently eliminated.

    We loved the advertised functionality of the Marlow 97E but have eliminated it and all Marlows from our consideration. First the fact that all 97E's have quickly hit the used market is frightening and then reading about the Kakawi dispute is enough to scare us away.

    We do like Hargraves, the 101, 114 and 125 and the pricing on the 125 is great. However, we've sort of decided that, everything else being equal and since the majority of our contenders are US manufactured, then we'll probably go with a US built boat. This is not being overly nationalistic because we truly aren't, just a choice here. We own Italian, German, and Japanese automobiles so make no claim to strictly buy US. It's just that naturally three of the four lines we had narrowed to are US made.

    I'd say the leader right now to us is probably Westport. We're considering the 98, 112 and 130 and if we were choosing today we'd probably buy the Westport 112. Also under consideration are the two Ocean Alexanders manufactured by Christiansen, the 112' and 120'. Then there is the Hatteras 100'. We wouldn't make a move there until one actually hits the water as completed.

    So interested in responses to the original question posed as well as any comments on the boats we're considering. Any and all opinions welcomed even by those thinking we're totally insane.
  2. K1W1

    K1W1 Senior Member

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    Hi,

    Aside from what feels nice on a sea trial and the range of the yacht.

    If you really want to go 2000 or 2500 miles non stop somewhere you need to consider a lot more than the fuel burn.

    The reliability of the propulsion and support systems should be right up there on the list of what is important.

    Another important consideration should be the running costs of your chosen ride from the annual expense to repair and maintain/improve it right thru to the dockage costs including when you are back home having a break and its just the crew onboard.- with or without their parents.
  3. olderboater

    olderboater Senior Member

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    Thanks for the reply.

    Certainly reliability and redundancy are very important as is proper crew and onboard support. With the other boats we own or will own having qualified engineering skills available is important. Also, it will be our plan to supplement where necessary with captains with local or applicable experience. For instance, if we ventured as far on the west coast as Alaska, we would want a Captain/Pilot who was from that area. In fact, it's a requirement on some vessels. Similarly, if we went to Europe, we'd want someone familiar with the area. We haven't found any major problems with any of the boats now under consideration.

    We have budgeted running costs and attempted to even provide high side contingencies. Even things like the air travel and we would do some switching out of crew during the longer trips so our Captains and the others could get some time home. So that's additional air. Ah, and don't need to worry about their parents, they are deceased, just daughter, son-in-law and granddaughter, and I'm sure their granddaughter will accompany us on some of the trips during college breaks.

    Certainly we do see the costs involved with a 130 vs a 100 as more. Docking and fuel costs certainly significantly more as is hauling and yardwork and just general maintenance. That is one additional factor discouraging us from the 130 as you're even more limited on shipyards that can haul it. In South Florida we're lucky as there are 330 and 660 ton travelift's, but when cruising in many areas that capability will not be there.

  4. Capt J

    Capt J Senior Member

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    You're going to need a full time Captain and mate as well as a stewardess on a westport '112. No full time Captain is going to want to hand over the helm to some "local captain". Any real Captain should be able to run that vessel safely anywhere in the world with the proper charts.

    I wouldn't do a transatlantic on a Westport '112. Westports quality is pretty good and I'd put it over Hargrave. I'd really take a look at Moonen's as their quality is very good and they build some nice boats in that size range. In order for Westport to get it's cruise speed, part of it's compromise is it's ride and they are not a good boat in a head sea. Fine if you're heading from Fort Lauderdale to the Bahamas or Carribbean etc.....or within 250 miles of land. Nothing that I would really want to do a transatlantic on, although the boat can do it providing the seas don't get real nasty. Most all of these boats travel most all of the time at 10-12 knots and not at their 20+ knot cruise speed. What you save in travel time is pretty much made up for by having to take on fuel for 2-3 hours once you get there. Perfect example take a Westport 112' from Ft. Laud to Nassau 160NM at cruise, 8 hours @ 200gph- 1600 gallons. Cruise at 12 knots, burn probably 500 gallons and 13hrs you're there and have plenty of fuel left to keep on.

    If you want a transatlantic boat, without going quite so big a great option at the expense of not having a 20+ knot cruise speed. A 80' Northern Marine or similar sized Nordhavn are both long range and built for rough seas and transatlantic crossings. You'd also have the deck space and capability to carry a nice tender and many other toys on these boats.

    In my opinion 100' doesn't feel like boating. 80' still feels like boating. Once you start getting past 100' you then really have to plan a lot more in regards to draft, dockage, electricity at the marina, and other restraints.
  5. ranger58sb

    ranger58sb Senior member

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    OB, you are way out of my league...

    But I can tell you length/beam/tonnage doesn't particularly influence my idea of boating, or not.

    I think more in terms of smaller components or activities:
    - if I can't almost touch the water from the cockpit, I'm not boating
    - if my Admiral and I can't dock the boat by ourselves, we're not boating
    (even better if I can do it alone, 80% of the time)
    - if I can't service/maintain/repair 80% (squishy number) of systems, I'm not boating
    - if guests (rarely welcome) require more services than I do, I'm not boating
    - if I can't get to that nifty waterside restaurant right over there, I'm not boating

    And so forth.

    My limits aren't perhaps representative relative to your situation, but you might have your own ideas about activities you can -- or cannot -- do because of the boat's length/size/tonnage... and maybe that's the way you find your own particular red lines...

    -Chris
  6. olderboater

    olderboater Senior Member

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    Thanks for the reply.

    Yes, I do know about the needs for additional crew. I do respectfully disagree with you regarding the value of a local captain. He would not be taking over but working on a contract basis for my captains. I think one can provide some great benefit in areas where one lacks familiarity, knowing local secrets, first hand knowledge of marinas, and all those things not shown in charts or guidebooks. Can it be done without one? Of course. But does one provide some benefit, I do believe so.

    You say you wouldn't take a Westport 112 so I'm curious as to whether you would a Westport 130 (I'm guessing not), a Hatteras 100 or an Ocean Alexander 120.

    Someone recommended privately going to Delta. Now I do know they've done 124's but don't know if they've gone that small recently.

    Yes, I've done a lot of calculations on fuel at various speeds and do understand what you're saying. The intent wouldn't be to run 20 knots all the time but it might well be so on trips up the coast and things like that. The specific Nassau trip you mention, I'd take over and back and then get fueled the next day at my dock at home by Peterson. But let's say going up the Eastern seaboard on an extended trip, you're right that the higher speed would require fueling every couple of days.

    As to something like Nordhavn, I've certainly considered them as an option. I've followed the delivery of their 120 carefully and they did run across even on it some weather conditions and delays, so would have been more so on a lesser boat. I'm less familiar with Northern Marine but will research.

    One thing that I may have to consider is something just for the transatlantic, transpacific or otherwise very extended long trips over oceans or rough waters and using another one of my boats for the near coastal travel. My plans already include multiple boats for different uses so maybe I'll just find myself rethinking the combinations.

    All these words of wisdom are appreciated. I always appreciate as much input as possible in matters where my experience is limited. I also have time to evaluate as my Trans-Atlantic trip isn't for at least 3-5 years. In 2014, I intend to spend my boating time on the East Coast, in the Bahamas and in the Gulf. Then in following years, more in the Caribbean, through the Canal to the West Coast, north to Canada and around to Montreal and the Great Loop probably come before crossing any ocean. While my name says Older, I'm older I guess than those on many web forums but don't consider myself at all old as I'm in my 40's so some of my adventures on the water will come 10 or 15 or even 20 years from now. Circling the globe may or may not ever be in plans as there are some areas I am fine avoiding for now, those with high piracy and no desire for icebergs. I do have a good grasp of what one encounters on the near coastal navigation and the capabilities of various boats to handle them to our desires. It is the crossing of oceans where the input received here is being most valuable.

    It's also great here to get input from those in other regions. Many even experienced and capable yachtsmen have prejudices based on their location. I've talked to those who are going to answer every question with Hatteras and then a couple of locals who claim nothing less than a 193' Trinity. That is another hot topic, construction material. Steel vs Composite vs Aluminum. I similarly had someone say they wouldn't take a Trinity across because they would not go in any Aluminum boat regardless of size.

    I like the boating vs. no longer boating answers too and your 80 vs 100. Someone else also said in the enclosed Pilothouse no and on the flybridge it's still boating. We do intend to charter occasionally over the next months to get the feel for various sizes.



  7. olderboater

    olderboater Senior Member

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    Interesting thoughts.

    Ok, the touching the water from the cockpit, I hadn't thought of that one, now going to have to.

    Today Belle and I wouldn't feel comfortable docking anything over 50-60 feet alone but we certainly intend to develop more knowledge and skill. Just because we can doesn't mean we won't use Captains too, but I'm with you on just handling the size.

    As to servicing the systems, thats not me at all. I have no desire to be able to do that. Now I do want to know how to monitor and some basic emergency type things, especially things like fuel filters and those things that can leave you stranded most easily even on a smaller boat.

    As to guests, we do not intend to serve our guests hand and foot at home or on a boat. Since we moved into our house here, we've had at least two guests overnight at least 90% of the weekends, and we typically have 8-12 every Sunday, but these are make yourself at home kinds of guests. Most are so close that when they're here on Saturday, they may just decide Saturday evening, they're staying (they live within 10-25 miles) and they just go pick out the room they're use to if it's vacant. We don't do formal entertaining. We have friends over. Now made one exception for employees of the small businesses I've collected but even that was a cookout by the pool and the cooking was all done by us and the couple that manages our home for us. The only time we've used caterers and hired waitresses was throwing a party for some friends in their 80's at their home. They use to love formal entertaining and were no longer up to it.

    The waterside restaurant, we have boats or have on order boats for the trips to restaurants within South Florida. Now you do give me the thought though and that is the ability to get to the sites along the way when cruising. For instance, I think of the NC coast. Beaufort and Morehead City are easy. But Bellhaven and Elizabeth City and areas like that more limiting.

    But one of the thoughts I am getting is that finding a boat for coastal and near coastal cruising and also for Ocean crossing in one boat may not be a reasonable expectation. That being the case would allow one to go smaller for the coastal and larger and slower for the oceans. This was already something we were considering and your input is helping greatly.


  8. NYCAP123

    NYCAP123 Senior Member

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    Let me chime in directly to your question about losing the feel of boating. You know where you go with your Cobolt? You're not going there with a 100' anything. Get too big and you'll only be going to the major ports. DK that I'd put so much emphasis on being able to cross the Atlantic. It seems to me that more and more yachts are making the trip on the decks of ships, because of the cost and the abuse they sometimes suffer. Maybe our friend at Dockwise can chime in to tell us the largest vessel they're transporting over. I know they've been getting fairly large. Also I don't think owners generally make the tansits as it's long and boring when it's not terrifying. If you were insistant on making the crossing I'd have to agree with some of the other comments about reliability and seakeeping being far more important than doing 20 kts. Some good names have been mentioned in the 70' to 90' range.

    The one fact in boating I've learned is that the bigger a boat is, the less it moves. Even if cost isn't a consideration, what's involved in moving them is.
  9. olderboater

    olderboater Senior Member

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    I'm seeing the divide more clearly and so started another question as well. I see delaying the ocean crossing yacht a bit......but do still see that as something I want......but not trying to serve multiple purposes. I have looked at Dockwise and think of it for some time and some things. But I also want to experience crossing the oceans one day as well and other long range cruising. I was already being advised somewhat as what I'm hearing here...makes things a lot more practical. I value all the advice I'm getting.

    Last edited: Sep 7, 2013
  10. NYCAP123

    NYCAP123 Senior Member

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    As for size, all I can say is that the worst tail kicking I ever got in 25 years was on a 140'. Size isn't nearly so important as the right boat and the right weather.
  11. lovinlifenc

    lovinlifenc Member

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    You really should consider something that is a custom solution. I would have to seriously consider a yacht like the Moonen 94alu. I believe that one of our members is selling his.
  12. olderboater

    olderboater Senior Member

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    Several are talking about custom builds but I prefer something on a proven hull, even if the interior is custom. I like to be almost on the leading edge, not completely on it. So a custom builder but a hull design that has proven itself.
  13. Kafue

    Kafue Senior Member

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    When do you feel like you're boating?

    I’ll leave the questions of crossing the Atlantic, Captain/crew requirements and budgets on yachts over 100' to those who have done this or have the knowledge. My experience is skipper of my own boats up to 62' on ocean voyages of 500 to 600nm around the Australian coast. The crew was usually just my eldest son.
    So I'll give my humble opinion on your question of when do you feel like you're boating?
    When you are on board.
    When the waves move your home.
    When you are all wearing casuals or swim gear all day and into the night.
    You get back to land and your legs need to re-adjust.
    Smell the sea.
    If you love boating, then it doesn’t matter if it’s a 13’ Boston Whaler, a large Sportfish or a Dutch built steel expedition yacht.
    And then:
    When the bills roll in and only boaters can justify those ridiculous costs.

    As for the poster who says “you’re out of your depth” that’s just BS!
    You’re asking the right questions from the right people and admitting your lack of knowledge in this quest. Only people who think they know it all find themselves out of depth.
    Good luck and enjoy the search for and then the use of your new yacht.
    Cheers
  14. sagharborskip

    sagharborskip Senior Member

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    Not quite sure size has much to do w/ whether you do/don't feel like you're boating...

    When you're on your 200' boat in a blow and the seas are running, I'm sure you're "going to feel like you're boating".

    Up to that point, if you're 200' boat allows you to get to some remote destination, be totally self-sufficient, and wake up in the morning in some anchorage and take you're 30' tender out for a spin, you'll definitely feel like you're "still boating".

    If by "feel like you're still boating" you mean watching your precious crew members work the Flitz w/ a toothbrush to get at the slightest discoloration around the screw heads of every stanchion on your boat, well, I'm not sure that's boating no matter how small the boat is.

    Right now, "T6" is on the hook outside. She's 160', holds 32,000 gallons of fuel, has a range of 9,000 nm, and has a pretty sick/slick helicopter on the back - I can guarantee you that guy "feels like he's boating". But then, his 12' draft keeps him from clearing the breakwater and being on the dock here in Sag Harbor.

    Is walking off the boat whenever you like to get a cup of coffee essential to your experience or not? I'd trade being on the dock for waking up on the hook any day (especially as I would have allotted some of my cash to having my favorite beans aboard and someone who knew how to brew them. With satellite internet I don't have to walk and get the newspaper either).

    I'd go as big as I could afford and stay less than 200'. Up to about 50 meters, you should be able to find marinas in most places and plan yard visits around destinations that can accommodate you pretty easily. The larger the boat, the further she can go and the longer she can be away - that definitely sounds appealing to me...

    Your budget sounds pretty elastic - why not have the big boat you want to do your crossings (slower is better) and have a 40-50' chase boat like a Sabre for inland excursions and gunk holing? You'll have the best of both in that you can cruise at 25 kts on the small boat and have almost unlimited possibilities range wise on the big boat.

    My .02 cents...
  15. Capt J

    Capt J Senior Member

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    I think you're best buying 2 boats. Buy a 75'< first and do the trips that you cannot do in a size over that. The Great Loop for example. If you can't get the boat below 19'2, you're not doing the Great Loop. I did it in a 75' Hatteras and it was TOUGH. There were very very few marina's that could accomodate us, and also very very few areas we could even anchor. Do that for a few years, hitch a ride on a transatlantic on a boat much larger, find what you like and don't and go from there and then trade up.

    All megayachts are a one off build, so I wouldn't be afraid of a one off hull design from a good builder.
  16. ArielM

    ArielM Senior Member

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    I couldn't have said it better Kafue!
  17. olderboater

    olderboater Senior Member

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    Actually for the loop boat I'm strongly considering a Hatteras 60 MY without the hardtop on the bridge and a modification to a hinged arch. The top of windshield is 15'. The top of the arch is 19'9" but that's also without the electronics on it. I've seen several other brands hinge the arches just for that purpose. The other modification from their standard is to add a lower helm station. Last I would go for the optional crew cabin. Draft is 4'6" which isn't bad for a boat in that range. Also while 50' or less is better for loop dockage, 60' works most of the way. I don't want less boat for several reasons. 1-Space for long cruises. 2-Safety for near coastal as I don't want to run ICW all the way. 3-I intend to spend some extended Great Lakes time at some point. 4-The gunwales are high and side decks are 13" giving ease and safety of getting to the bow for handling of lines, docking, anchoring and locking is good. 5-It's easy to get fully equipped with all the electronics and all the conveniences associated with larger boats.

    This was never dependent on what I do for near coastal and/or ocean as this boat may find itself docked elsewhere much of the time. As we do want to explore rivers including the Tennessee, Cumberland and Ohio docking at Aqua Yacht Harbor on Pickwick, for instance, is quite conducive to that. While we will cover the entire loop over time, we're not in a rush and don't feel compelled to do it in one run or even a year. Ideally timing the Northeast so that one could hit the run from the Atlantic to the Great Lakes in June would then give an opportunity to leave it in Chicago or elsewhere on the Great Lakes through August and then get quickly down the Illinois and Mississippi to warmer weather.

    I'm sure you stood out doing the loop in a 75'. I know a lot of loopers discourage anything over 40', I've known many to go up to 60' and be quite happy they did.


  18. sagharborskip

    sagharborskip Senior Member

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    As for the Delta 124's...I think I heard Jimmy Buffet's "Continental Drifter" is on the market. Having spent 6 months aboard "Aerie" (now "Spirit"), all I can say is, "You're going to need a bigger boat"...

    The ride from the Virgin Islands to Antigua was misery. Another 40' would have been welcome.

    There's not a lot of room on the swim platform for any thing other than water entry/exit, tender boarding - if you've got a boat this big you're going to be in warm climes an awful lot and access to the water should be primary. A lot of the bigger, newer boats have re-thought this area of the boat and turned them into very expansive guest areas (flip down transoms that become sun decks w/ full head, wet bar, lounge chairs, umbrellas, etc.)

    Other than that, the 124' is a very solid boat but I still wouldn't think it was made for crossing the oceans w/ out some very thoughtful planning.
  19. YachtForums

    YachtForums Administrator

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    CaptJ offers good advise, but before you take a Northern heading, you may want to contact me via PM for a weather report.
  20. Pascal

    Pascal Senior Member

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    The key is to decide where you will really use the boat and be honest about it as well as the schedule.

    For instance Will you really want to cross the pond on your own bottom? Is it worth everything else that you will be compromising? In other words don't sacrifice some features and amenities you need now because 5 years from now you may want to cross.

    Also, there is a lot more to that boating feeling than LOA. Layout and draft are just as important. For most of the east coast, except New England, draft is the limiting factor. If you can keep it at 5 1/2 feet you will enjoy many more anchorages, scenic spots and marinas. Once you hit 6', you loose many options and cruising grounds. The 70 footer I run draws a little over 6' and it is a pain in the butt. For instance, we really can go anywhere in the keys except in Hawks Channel. On the ICW, I have to constantly play the tides and adjust the schedule accordingly. Same with the Cheasie, with many anchorages and marina becoming an issue.

    Layout is critical in two ways. First from a boat handling perspective, especially if you want to run with minimal crew, the right layout can make a 90 footer easier to dock and handle in close quarters than some 60 footer. Easy access to your spring lines from the lower helm is key. For backing in, stern controls are a must (or remote control but I prefer regular controls). A good rub rail at a reasonable height means no need to man individual fenders when coming in against the typical wooden pilings.

    As to that boating feeling, I consider a large aft deck and big swim platform a must have. This is where we spend the most time and this is where guests spend the most time on the boat I run. Unfortunately mane builders don't get that and give you a ridiculous 3' deep platform with an aft deck that will barely seat 8... If you want to be in an enclosed air con living room, you may as well stay in hotels.