Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]()
posted to rec.boats.cruising
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hi group
OK, now I've exhausted my search around usenet and the wider web for information on this topic I thought I'd post for some fresh thoughts and ideas. I'm considering buying a wooden boat as a liveaboard, and I have some major concerns. Almost everyone I come across - surveyors, brokers, finance houses, insurance companies, usenet posters - seems to balk at it to lesser or greater degrees. It seems established that they require regular and vigilant maintenance. I don't want to buy a money pit, and two marinas I've come across are so fed up with people abandoning wooden boats they won't allow them. Any thoughts on this? I've been quoted GBP950 (about $1800) for a survey on the hard, and the surveyor will do an initial walk-through to see if it's worth going ahead even to that stage. It's 45 feet long, and is carvel constructed. I don't yet know the year or specific hull material. The beams are about 2" x 2". I'm going to go along tomorrow and try to have as many of the floorboards up as possible so that I can go through with a bradawl and check for sponginess. Think I should not risk it and try and find myself a nice tongue in cheekeasy/ steel-shell? Biz |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Plans Announced for 30th Annual Port Townsend Wooden Boat Festival | General | |||
Dates and details, wooden boat week, Lake Tahoe | General | |||
cruising vs liveaboard boats | Cruising | |||
Wooden Boat Forum | General | |||
Sailor's tattoo, must be married too long, Wooden Boat Festival | General |