SailNet is a forum community dedicated to Sailing enthusiasts. Come join the discussion about sailing, modifications, classifieds, troubleshooting, repairs, reviews, maintenance, and more!
grew up spending summers and weekeds at the lake. fell i love with sailing when an older gentleman would come to the boat landing near our house and take a few kids out sailing (with parental permission of course) This was over 40 years ago when the 'world ' was "different". Bought a Catalina 22 over 10 years ago and it hasnt been in the water in over 6 years! Just want to go sailing before I die ... cant figure out the rigging.....help
REMEMBER AGE IS ONLY A NUMBER,if the body & mind are reasonably sound,go for it.
I creak a bit more than I used to but what the hell.At 74 I still meet lots of people older than me & happily sailing.( beats sitting at home watching that bloody box) Live life don,t watch it.
Local Sailing Club, or post an ad for a sailor in your area he/she? maybe even come over for free, show you around your boat for an hour and blow your mind with their knowledge
there's lots out there with a kind eye for a fellow sailor
perhaps even offer $25 or a slice of apple pie
cheers
too old to sail?? sailing keeps ye young.. my uncle who taught us sailed sans engine until age 95. he was born in 1903, died 1998. his boat will make 110 yrs of age next spring, now undergoing refit.
we are only as young as we feel---but sailing turns back the clock....
Bought a Catalina 22 over 10 years ago and it hasnt been in the water in over 6 years! Just want to go sailing before I die ... cant figure out the rigging.....help
I'm 73 and single hand a 32 footer. If you are in reasonable health, then age isn't a big deal. I don't cross oceans, etc. and go when the wind isn't too high. i.e., you can adjust to and select conditions that fit your capabilities. I don't understand " can't figure out rigging". It's straight forward...What did you do in the first 6 years? Internet and sailing books can fix that problem in short order. Go to Bing or Google and pull up pictures of C22's...see how they are rigged. Get some basic sailing books on line or at nearest bookstore and read how boats are rigged and how to use the rigging and controls. Visit marinas nearby and see how similar boats are rigged. Talk with other sailors. Then take the boat out on a low wind day...have someone with you to be an extra set of hands. It'll not go right the first few times, but you learn each time. With low wind, when you do things wrong, the consequences aren't severe. If the wind is blowing higher than you planned on, simply cancel for that day. I only spent 3-4 hours riding on a sailboat...then bought one and a couple of basic books. Learned to sail by myself. It's not that difficult. Just do it (with advance study as mentioned above). (And if you have courses available nearby, take one...many of your concerns will be handled instantly.) If you discover you are missing parts, go to an online store and get the needed parts...there's Catalina Direct (they specialize in C22's), Sailnet, Defender, West Marine and others. If you still don't understand a particular part issue, ask the supplier by voice. Most can answer your questions.
This is an older thread, you may not receive a response, and could be reviving an old thread. Please consider creating a new thread.
Related Threads
?
?
?
?
?
SailNet Community
1.7M posts
173.8K members
Since 1990
A forum community dedicated to Sailing, boating, cruising, racing & chartering. Come join the discussion about sailing, destinations, maintenance, repairs, navigation, electronics, classifieds and more