Capthead
Guru
- Joined
- Mar 17, 2013
- Messages
- 956
- Location
- USA
- Vessel Name
- Heads Up
- Vessel Make
- Grand Banks 42 Classic
I'm going to be totally non PC. I seem to suggest controversy with my posts and I did a search for the word sailboaters and nothing came up.
In my 30 years experience as a boater and over 25 as a liveaboard, I soon saw there were distinct differences between types of boats and the people who owned them.
I realize going into this subject that there are x-sailboat owners now owning trawlers and I mean no disrespect to anyone here. So please look at the humor.
Also, I can only speak of the California sailboater and these are special people.
First, I see power boaters being divided into sport fisher types and cruiser types. Here the fisher types pretty much keep to themselves and are not the friendly ones. When they come back with a big catch, they clam up the most but they love show and tell. Just don't ask for any.
The cruisers are the friendly ones, offer you a cold beer and love dock talk. I have many of them as friends and they use their boats both at the dock and going out.
Sailboaters are also divided between real cruisers who are either outfitting their boat for a long cruise, or just came back from one. The other group is the 'air is free" bunch and live by that motto. They never admit to being powerboaters even though they motor all the way to Catalina. They can sail back which is downwind and that makes them a sailor.
There are a few exceptions, the guy who sails down the busy harbor with tug and ship traffic tacking in front of everyone. Oh, that's what five loud blasts of that ship's horn means. It means they will stand back for me. Woo Hoo!
When you have a dock party, you won't have to worry about left overs. The sailboater will take them. must be he thinks food is free air.
It's all in fun.
The trawler guy is not accepted by the sport fishers, liked by the other power boaters and loved by the cruising sailboaters. We seem to be the odd man when it comes to boating. Anyone else notice that?
Not that I care, but it's funny. I get the returning cruisers all saying they are seeing more and more trawlers out there and they want one. Especially the wives. I think comfort plays a lot into that and I've seen a lot of 50-65' sailboats cruising with just a couple onboard. That has to be work.
What do you think? Am I wrong? or am I right?
In my 30 years experience as a boater and over 25 as a liveaboard, I soon saw there were distinct differences between types of boats and the people who owned them.
I realize going into this subject that there are x-sailboat owners now owning trawlers and I mean no disrespect to anyone here. So please look at the humor.
Also, I can only speak of the California sailboater and these are special people.
First, I see power boaters being divided into sport fisher types and cruiser types. Here the fisher types pretty much keep to themselves and are not the friendly ones. When they come back with a big catch, they clam up the most but they love show and tell. Just don't ask for any.
The cruisers are the friendly ones, offer you a cold beer and love dock talk. I have many of them as friends and they use their boats both at the dock and going out.
Sailboaters are also divided between real cruisers who are either outfitting their boat for a long cruise, or just came back from one. The other group is the 'air is free" bunch and live by that motto. They never admit to being powerboaters even though they motor all the way to Catalina. They can sail back which is downwind and that makes them a sailor.
There are a few exceptions, the guy who sails down the busy harbor with tug and ship traffic tacking in front of everyone. Oh, that's what five loud blasts of that ship's horn means. It means they will stand back for me. Woo Hoo!
When you have a dock party, you won't have to worry about left overs. The sailboater will take them. must be he thinks food is free air.
It's all in fun.
The trawler guy is not accepted by the sport fishers, liked by the other power boaters and loved by the cruising sailboaters. We seem to be the odd man when it comes to boating. Anyone else notice that?
Not that I care, but it's funny. I get the returning cruisers all saying they are seeing more and more trawlers out there and they want one. Especially the wives. I think comfort plays a lot into that and I've seen a lot of 50-65' sailboats cruising with just a couple onboard. That has to be work.
What do you think? Am I wrong? or am I right?