mxkris
New member
hoping to find others in the area to learn sailing with. scheming to eventually get a boat / share one with other queers to do art out of & sail along the east coast. down to travel beyond philly to link up!
not yet, still tryna figure out how to do it on the cheap. just connected with someone here who might teach me boat repair. down to help / tag along on any boat related things!
Thats awesome. I think knowing how to repair your own boat would make boat life a lot easier. Thats definitely something I want to learn along the way too, especially fixing the motor and any kind of damage to the hull. I'd also be down to tag along on any boat related stuff around philly. I want to learn anything I can.
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I saw the documentary "Hold Fast", how reliable is it to score a cheap boat and repair it yourself up there? It's fascinated me since I've seen the documentary. Guys allegedly paid around $1000 and fixed it up, but I can't imagine mooring etc is particularly cheap.
Thats awesome. I think knowing how to repair your own boat would make boat life a lot easier. Thats definitely something I want to learn along the way too, especially fixing the motor and any kind of damage to the hull. I'd also be down to tag along on any boat related stuff around philly. I want to learn anything I can.
I am kinda thinking the first step for me to learn sailing is to get a smaller sailboat and take it to nockamixon and just kind of figure out tacking and jibing in a relatively safe kind of way. Then when I get the hang of that, sell the little boat and get something bigger that I can live on full time. It seems like you can get something reasonably cheap. I don't know what slips cost in and around Philly, but around the LA area it seems like 450-650/month for a smaller sailboat. Definitely the cheapest rent you can get around LA by a longshot... short of sleeping in a tent (which will land you all kinds of fines and jail time).
Ah I didn't realize if there's not a free version anymore, my apologies
Good luck on your goals. I think it's very smart to start on a smaller boat. That's what I did, and I learned a hell of a lot while building up my confidence level on the water. Just sold the small boat and will be looking for a bigger ocean going boat, once I make it to the east coast in a couple weeks.
If you just want something to sleep on and occasional day sails, cool get a junker boat. But if you want to do any amount of long distance or offshore sailing, and be smart and safe, I wouldn't skimp on a good boat. The most expensive boat, is the one that's free so the saying goes. Sometimes you can get lucky and come out unscathed like the guys in Hold Fast.
Repair costs on a boat start to add up real quick. And always count on projects taking MUCH longer than you anticipate. Youre only one broken bolt away from a 10 minute job turning into a several days long shitfest.
Many marinas don't allow people trying to liveaboard (sneak-aboards) and also require insurance but free anchorages abound if you got good ground tackle and closely watch the tides/currents/weather.