tugnewbie
Member
- Joined
- Sep 19, 2020
- Messages
- 7
- Fluid Motion Model
- C-24 C
- Non-Fluid Motion Model
- Grady White Freedom 375
- Vessel Name
- Sundance
Hello, I just semi retired and we THINK we want to sell our 36' day boat and get a R27 or R29 we can trailer to dream destinations around the country for cruises of a few weeks at a time. Like an RV but on the water. We'd use it on weekly day trips in the summer around Cape Cod, maybe a few local overnights to MV, ACK, Block Island, and at most we'd take 3 trips a year for the next few years to special places that seem better to explore by boat.....
Key West
Bahamas
Great Lakes
Canada
OR/WA
Maine
Lake Powell
We have a 7000# 25 foot Airstream and a 1 ton truck so not new to towing but acknowledge the Airstream weighs less and is shorter/narrower for sure.
The reason we are thinking about this we have more fun on the few overnights we do each year on our express boat around Cape Cod. We like the comradery of fellow boaters in marinas and feeling adventurous navigating the seas and weather. When we go to places such as Maine we look at the people staying on boats in secluded bays or harbors and think we wish we were doing that instead of staying in a crowded RV park. But our boat is not designed for cruising or for trailering, so not suitable for doing more of that.
Further we do not have the time or interest at this point in our lives in the long cruises to and from these destinations. I'm guessing it's like 10 hours through rough seas just to get from Cape Cod to central Maine at 15 knots. Not for us. We do not want a huge boat like a Sabre or Back Cove with all the headaches, being hostage to hauling out at a specialized boatyard, waiting weeks for repairs, and the expense, having to take 2 weeks each way to cruise it down the ICW to FL and back. We discussed chartering boats but there is something rewarding, perhaps irrational about experiencing/conquering these destinations on our own boat that appeals to us. So we came across the idea of a more manageable, transportable Ranger tug we can tow (or even have shipped if that makes more sense) as a potentially ideal solution to our dream.
This all sounds good on paper but we've never done this before or stayed on a 27-29' boat for 2 weeks so to those who have done something similar, have you been happy with that choice and what were the negatives that we might not be considering? For example:
Seaworthiness/comfort of the R27 or R29 vs. our 20K# 36'x 13' beam Grady which is a beast designed for offshore fishing
Difficulties towing something larger than our Airstream...permits, how do you fit a 10' boat through toll booths, traffic
Finding marinas to launch and store the boat or park our truck
Finding slips
Room for 2 people and stuff on a 27 or 29 for a couple of weeks at a time
Maintenance headaches on any boat...are these user friendly?
Room for our ebikes...cockpit?
Inland transportation to shopping and restaurants once you are staying on the boat (I guess there's always taxi)
Rain, bad weather spells on a boat with a smallish cabin
Sleeping on a small boat for 2 weeks, (ours has loud "hull slap" so takes some getting used to)
For once I am taking this slowly and methodically over this fall and winter..I have bought a few ebooks and subscribed to forums like this and a blog. People paint a very appealing picture but I want to make sure I know what we are getting into before we make this big financial and time commitment.
Thank you T
Key West
Bahamas
Great Lakes
Canada
OR/WA
Maine
Lake Powell
We have a 7000# 25 foot Airstream and a 1 ton truck so not new to towing but acknowledge the Airstream weighs less and is shorter/narrower for sure.
The reason we are thinking about this we have more fun on the few overnights we do each year on our express boat around Cape Cod. We like the comradery of fellow boaters in marinas and feeling adventurous navigating the seas and weather. When we go to places such as Maine we look at the people staying on boats in secluded bays or harbors and think we wish we were doing that instead of staying in a crowded RV park. But our boat is not designed for cruising or for trailering, so not suitable for doing more of that.
Further we do not have the time or interest at this point in our lives in the long cruises to and from these destinations. I'm guessing it's like 10 hours through rough seas just to get from Cape Cod to central Maine at 15 knots. Not for us. We do not want a huge boat like a Sabre or Back Cove with all the headaches, being hostage to hauling out at a specialized boatyard, waiting weeks for repairs, and the expense, having to take 2 weeks each way to cruise it down the ICW to FL and back. We discussed chartering boats but there is something rewarding, perhaps irrational about experiencing/conquering these destinations on our own boat that appeals to us. So we came across the idea of a more manageable, transportable Ranger tug we can tow (or even have shipped if that makes more sense) as a potentially ideal solution to our dream.
This all sounds good on paper but we've never done this before or stayed on a 27-29' boat for 2 weeks so to those who have done something similar, have you been happy with that choice and what were the negatives that we might not be considering? For example:
Seaworthiness/comfort of the R27 or R29 vs. our 20K# 36'x 13' beam Grady which is a beast designed for offshore fishing
Difficulties towing something larger than our Airstream...permits, how do you fit a 10' boat through toll booths, traffic
Finding marinas to launch and store the boat or park our truck
Finding slips
Room for 2 people and stuff on a 27 or 29 for a couple of weeks at a time
Maintenance headaches on any boat...are these user friendly?
Room for our ebikes...cockpit?
Inland transportation to shopping and restaurants once you are staying on the boat (I guess there's always taxi)
Rain, bad weather spells on a boat with a smallish cabin
Sleeping on a small boat for 2 weeks, (ours has loud "hull slap" so takes some getting used to)
For once I am taking this slowly and methodically over this fall and winter..I have bought a few ebooks and subscribed to forums like this and a blog. People paint a very appealing picture but I want to make sure I know what we are getting into before we make this big financial and time commitment.
Thank you T