Sailor of Fortune
Guru
Any of the Nimble boats would totally be suitable for loop trip. They are small in a big way
Funny made me laugh, do you have the twin 800 hp or the twin 1200 hp engines in your boat .what are you doing on this forum 2000 hp planning hull boat ,don’t get me wrong nice Boat .I’m skeptical about doing the loop in one , you got any pictures of that boat on the Erie canal ,laugh out loud my twin engine Hatteras burned 27 gallons an hour . does that burn 270 ,I know I’m being sarcastic .I can’t help myself , I thought you were worried about global warming .Maybe you’ll trade it off on a solar powered boat next ,I can’t think of a worse Boat to do the loop ,but to each his own
Personally, I don't think people in small boats should denigrate people in large boats, nor should people in large boats disparage those in small boats. This is recreational boating. Ideally, we are all having fun by our means and preferences.
Really?
Nobody needs to do the Loop. We do it because we want to in a manner or our choosing. Unless you plan to row or sail around, all boats have some amount of a carbon footprint.
Am I a bad person for doing the Loop by myself in my 45' boat?
Ted
This is sure ironic and really amusing - a debate about carbon footprints and hand wringing over environmental effects on a forum of big, gas guzzling boat owners. But then nothing new, just like the celebrities who fly private jets to environmental events where they scold us all for extravagant consumption.
I am from Europe and I am new to this forum. My wife and I want to do the Great Loop, starting in spring 2023.
We have a European flagged steel boat capable of doing 12 Kts cruise with a range of more than 1.000 NM. After having cruised the Inland waterways and larger rivers in Europe over the last years, we would like to bring our boat (as a deck load on a cargo vessel) to the USA for this adventure.
I am familiar with the draft, airdraft and size restrictions of the Great Loop but still need a lot of advice. We want to devide the Loop into several segments, one segment per season, and return to Europe during winter. I am also familiar with the cruising permit issue, which is manageable IMO.
We want to start the Loop on the East coast at Florida. My first question would be, should we go counter clockwise or clockwise around the Loop?
Second question, would You go via the St. Lawrence River and Welland Canal or via the Hudson River and the Eri Canal.
Thanks in advance for Your answers.
HTMO9
Wifey B: And the F65 would be a great loop boat. We did the loop in a Sunseeker Manhattan 65 which was 69'4" vs the 70' 10" of the Fleming 65. Larger boats than those have done the loop.
We want to start the Loop on the East coast at Florida. My first question would be, should we go counter clockwise or clockwise around the Loop?
Second question, would You go via the St. Lawrence River and Welland Canal or via the Hudson River and the Eri Canal.
Probably the F55 is a better fit, but I think about a helmsman 38E or maybe something faster.
Tastes vary and obviously are individual , but that Sunseeker Manhattan, while I’m sure nice in the inside, I just couldn’t have pride of ownership looking at it.
Wifey B: And here is the new version. Sunseeker Manhattan 68 (actually no longer than the 63 was. lol).
So this one just as bad?
https://www.sunseeker.com/yachts-and-boats/manhattan/manhattan-68
Just wait till you find out what he's thinking. :lol::lol::lol::lol:
Yep, me neither. As extravagant as it is, I can't tell you how much I enjoy that moment when I stand at the helm and ease those throttles down and feel 700 horses way down beneath my feet under the salon floor glide 26,000 pounds of boat out of our slip. Or how much I enjoyed a crossing on the Queen Mary 2 during a savage Atlantic storm some years ago (2011 I think). There's a sublime thrill in quiet power. Sorry Greta Thunberg.
Yes, I’m still not a fan. I like classic and proportion, not the “euro” look. I’m sure though it makes great use of its space and lights. Design is quite important to me, even sometimes over functionality. And my boy thinks the med style look is far preferable to my old fashioned trawler look. Many people would agree with him.
But this is Trawler Forum!
And I do appologize in advance for my limited english, which is not my mother tongue.
HTMO9
Lack of moorings, no jetties, no nice yacht harbours, no nice restaurants and grocery stores in villages along the big rivers and no refuelling stations for yachts along the canals and rivers. One would need a pretty decent level of autonomy for that part of the Loop. And due to the long distances between suitable stops, there would be very long times on the wheel. My boat has a fairly long range and a autonomy as far as provisions are concerned of about 14 days (watermaker, a lot of dry, cold and frozen storage space). Is it really that bad?