[Rhodes22-list] Rhodes 22 Questions
peter klappert
peterklappert at comcast.net
Tue Jul 5 14:35:24 EDT 2011
Hello & Welcome, Ron, from a new owner--so new the baby has yet to be baptized. I was able to get "Sailing Small" just a year or two (or three) ago, and Mary Lou's chapter was a big help in reaching a decision. Try Amazon, which will probably at least have used copies. You might also check the Practical Sailor review of the R22, some or all of which is at the General Boats website. I recently emailed an equipment question to Darrell Nicholson, editor of PS, explaining I was getting an R22. The first words of his reply were "Good choice of boats."
P
>>>>>>o<<<<<<
Washington, DC
Apollo Beach, FL 33572
>>>>>>o<<<<<<
----- Original Message -----
From: "Mary Lou Troy" <mtroy at atlanticbb.net>
To: "The Rhodes 22 Email List" <rhodes22-list at rhodes22.org>
Sent: Tuesday, July 5, 2011 12:30:39 PM
Subject: Re: [Rhodes22-list] Rhodes 22 Questions
Hi Ron Welcome to the group!
>In a message dated 7/4/2011 11:33:06 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
>amazingmisterx at gmail.com writes:
>
>We are looking for a boat that will make a good boat to sail in our
>retirement. We like to go cruising in the Great Lakes for a week or
>so at a time as
>well as day sailing. We were wondering how many of you do trips and
>how adaptable
>this boat is to do this.
We used to do 10 day cruises on our Rhodes 22. We retired, moved
closer to the boat and got so busy that we don't seem to cruise or
even sail much anymore. There are a number of people on this list who
have cruised on the boat for at least a week at a time. We have found
the R22 very adaptable to this. I wrote a chapter in a book called
"Sailing Small: Inspiration and Instruction for the Pocket Cruiser"
edited by Stan Grayson about the technicalities of choosing and using
the R22 for short cruises. It's out of print but a copy might be
found in a library or in a used book source like abebooks.com
One of the nice things about the boat for cruising is its
flexibility. You can sleep in the main cabin and use the v-berth for
storage or in the cockpit with the filler cushions. You could sleep
in the v-berth too but that would be giving up all that storage
space. The pop-top and pop-top enclosure give you real cabin space
and extra galley space for cooking. (With the pop-top enclosure in
place, the top of the cabin becomes an extra shelf - very handy)
>If the boat carries 15 gal. of water, what do you do
>about the extra water you need if you want to be out away from
>civilization for a
>reasonable amount of time?
Our cruising has always been planned with a stop at a marina every
third say or so to take showers, empty the head and take on water if
needed. If we were going to be planning a trip away from such
amenities, I would just bring extra gallon jugs or perhaps a couple
of those flexible 5 gallon jugs they sell to campers.
>What size vehicel is needed to tow the boat without putting too much stress
>on your vehicle.
We initially towed our R22 with a Chevy Blazer - 5000 lb towing
capacity. It was very satisfactory towing on the flat and for
launching and retrieving. If we had been towing in mountainous
terrain we would have wanted something a bit more powerful. We now
tow with a Nissan Frontier that we bought to two our travel trailer
6300 lb towing capacity and it's more than we need for the boat.
>How satisfied are you with your Rhodes vs. other boats in this category?
It my mind it's the right trade-off of space and comfort versus
trailerability. It sails well as a daysailer, is relatively easy to
launch and retrieve and is very comfortable for longer cruises.
>We want a boat that will be easy to handle as we age and not be something
>we have to constantly chase repairs for. If we get a
>recycled Rhodes, does the
>factory fix anything that needs repaired including leaks, etc?
Yes, the factory fixes anything it knows about. If you come back to
them with something they obviously missed right after purchase,
they'll take care of that too. Any boat needs maintenance. Our theory
when we purchased the boat was to keep the systems as simple as
possible. Along those lines, we went for a porta-potty rather than an
installed head and when our electric water pump gave out, we replaced
it with a hand pump/foot pump system that works really well. Leaks
are always an issue. Our goal has been a dry bilge and that has been
attainable most of the time we've owned the boat. We have had issues
with the ports and rebedded them after about 8 years of ownership.
>Not sure what else to ask. Where can I find cruising/trip stories by owners
>of RHodes 22s?
The most recent cruising stories that have been posted to the list
are Bill Wickman's stories of his trips to the Bahamas and the Dry
Tortugas (2 separate trips) and Chris Geankopolis's stories of
cruising in Baja Mexico
http://old.nabble.com/forum/Search.jtp?query=bills+dry+tortugas&local=y&forum=14229&daterange=0&startdate=&enddate=
http://old.nabble.com/forum/Search.jtp?query=bills+bahamas&local=y&forum=14229&daterange=0&startdate=&enddate=
I couldn't get Chris's posts to come up in the Nabble archives but if
you search Google for site:rhodes22.org baja most of them should come up.
All three cruises are excellent reading.
There are also some good cruise stories at
http://www.rhodes22.org/blew_skies/stories.html
The FAQ on the R22 owners site is old but contains lots of info about the boat:
http://www.rhodes22.org/blew_skies/topics.html
Best,
Mary Lou
1991 Rhodes 22 Fretless
(recycled 1998)
Rock Hall, MD
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