This subject or variances of it has come up every few years, so here are some of my thoughts shared here over the last 12 years.
Posted Mar 2006
Saw our 1st C Dory in Bridge Bay Marina, on lake yellowstone in Yellowstone National Park in l981. Jo-Lee and I on that day made a pact that we would own a C Dory someday. It took 22 years for that dream to become reality. Even though we know the C Dory history we still named our boat Hunkydory. Websters got it right our boat is "just right”.
Jay and Jo-Lee
Posted Oct, 2011
Love that gentle rocking & surging along, yep a wonderful feeling, but not quite sure it makes up for the equally bad times the water can create. Not really into fishing so for our boating is all about where the boat can take Jo-Lee & I & what we can see & experience along the way.
Have always felt living without adventure or solitude not really living, but what I have found fairly late in life is with the right boat, solitude, adventure & the challenges I've sought throughout my live could be experienced without the pain & loneliness that came with most of my previous adventures in the mountain wilderness. From a canoe to RIB to CD 22, We’ve progressed to increasingly more comfort, while at the same time accessing more remote & wild places then ever in the mountains. Combine this with the diverse, intriguing, knowledgeable people one meets here & at the CD gatherings makes boating though started late in my life the best of all my endeavors so far.
Jay
Posted Feb, 2012
Our first boat of any kind was a 16 foot canoe in 1989 at age 41. Followed by a scanoe with a 3 hp Tanaka motor the same year.
Then in 2000 a 12.5 foot Sea Eagle RIB with 18 hp, 4 stroke Nissan motor. We had a fantastic time exploring rivers & lakes in the Canadian Northwest & Yukon Territories & some in BC. With one jaunt between Skagway & Haines Alaska.
None of our C-Dory cruising time has been anymore fun only more comfortable. Our grand adventures on the CD22 started in 2003 & should show others with similar lack of prior boating experience what a great boat the CD 22 is either in the hands of one starting out a novice like us or many year seasoned boating veterans like Dr Bob & Marie.
Jay
Posted Feb 2013
We started the boating chapter of our lives very late compared to many here who have been involved in one way or another with boating most of their lives. I know most here push the safety factor before most any other aspect of boating as perhaps it should be, but when we purchased our first boat (other than a small rubber inflatable & canoe) our 22 foot CD, we knew where we wanted to explore with it & because of our very limited boating knowledge knew that an elevated risk must be accepted in the doing or wait longer than willing to lower the risk. Fortunately for me I had time on the job to throughly learn all that I could from reading books & other information about cruising, seamanship, instruments & boating in Southeast Alaska. It was the actual hands on experience that we were sorely lacking. As those who have followed my writings of our various cruises in the Grand Adventure Forum, through this learning process know, we jumped in from the get go learning as we progressed from adventure to adventure. Our boating through the last 10 years (now 14) has been a phenomenal time & the most enjoyable period of a wonderful life with very few regrets. I'm now more happy then ever that we entered this boating phase of our life in the manner we did, because if we had waited until retirement & slowly gained experience, it most likely would have not have made up for the loss of physical ability & confidence brought on by the aging process & the concerns shared by the good hearted well meaning folk of the C-Brat community. At that time, we being mountain, not water people didn't know anybody evolved with boating to tell us our plans were just not realistic & much to dangerous for us & the others we might encounter due to our lack of experience & knowledge of boating in general & particularly the ocean waters of Southeast Alaska. Now at the present time, due in good part to this time accelerated learning curve during those wonderful adventures, we gained achievements & experience to counter the present loss of physical ability, endurance & declining drive, which is giving us the confidence to continue on exploring these & other waters as we continue the aging process.
Posted Oct 2016
Our CD22 is our first boat larger than a canoe or small RIB & it will likely be our last. For many years, when on travels in water areas, where the marina docks could be walked, walking them & talking to the boat owners was a favorite thing for us to do. Only the boats, that looked like they could be used to see places, we couldn't any other way & do so for extended time periods, really captured our interest, but with zero knowledge of boat cruising & boats in general & a more mountain area living & doing lifestyle with very limited finances for a boat cruising endeavor, any future boating idea was really just a fun day dream. Then in 2003 at 55 years old & back problems limiting my remote mountain endeavors, yet still having a desire to explore the wild places with Jo-Lee's company, we decided it was now or never if we really wanted to change our boating dream to reality. I think it's availability & our choice in choosing the CD22, has been the single most important link to us making the dreams become reality without creating some horrible nightmares in the process. It’s a niche boat & has been & still is a perfect fit for us.
Jay
Posted Mar 2006
Saw our 1st C Dory in Bridge Bay Marina, on lake yellowstone in Yellowstone National Park in l981. Jo-Lee and I on that day made a pact that we would own a C Dory someday. It took 22 years for that dream to become reality. Even though we know the C Dory history we still named our boat Hunkydory. Websters got it right our boat is "just right”.
Jay and Jo-Lee
Posted Oct, 2011
Love that gentle rocking & surging along, yep a wonderful feeling, but not quite sure it makes up for the equally bad times the water can create. Not really into fishing so for our boating is all about where the boat can take Jo-Lee & I & what we can see & experience along the way.
Have always felt living without adventure or solitude not really living, but what I have found fairly late in life is with the right boat, solitude, adventure & the challenges I've sought throughout my live could be experienced without the pain & loneliness that came with most of my previous adventures in the mountain wilderness. From a canoe to RIB to CD 22, We’ve progressed to increasingly more comfort, while at the same time accessing more remote & wild places then ever in the mountains. Combine this with the diverse, intriguing, knowledgeable people one meets here & at the CD gatherings makes boating though started late in my life the best of all my endeavors so far.
Jay
Posted Feb, 2012
Our first boat of any kind was a 16 foot canoe in 1989 at age 41. Followed by a scanoe with a 3 hp Tanaka motor the same year.
Then in 2000 a 12.5 foot Sea Eagle RIB with 18 hp, 4 stroke Nissan motor. We had a fantastic time exploring rivers & lakes in the Canadian Northwest & Yukon Territories & some in BC. With one jaunt between Skagway & Haines Alaska.
None of our C-Dory cruising time has been anymore fun only more comfortable. Our grand adventures on the CD22 started in 2003 & should show others with similar lack of prior boating experience what a great boat the CD 22 is either in the hands of one starting out a novice like us or many year seasoned boating veterans like Dr Bob & Marie.
Jay
Posted Feb 2013
We started the boating chapter of our lives very late compared to many here who have been involved in one way or another with boating most of their lives. I know most here push the safety factor before most any other aspect of boating as perhaps it should be, but when we purchased our first boat (other than a small rubber inflatable & canoe) our 22 foot CD, we knew where we wanted to explore with it & because of our very limited boating knowledge knew that an elevated risk must be accepted in the doing or wait longer than willing to lower the risk. Fortunately for me I had time on the job to throughly learn all that I could from reading books & other information about cruising, seamanship, instruments & boating in Southeast Alaska. It was the actual hands on experience that we were sorely lacking. As those who have followed my writings of our various cruises in the Grand Adventure Forum, through this learning process know, we jumped in from the get go learning as we progressed from adventure to adventure. Our boating through the last 10 years (now 14) has been a phenomenal time & the most enjoyable period of a wonderful life with very few regrets. I'm now more happy then ever that we entered this boating phase of our life in the manner we did, because if we had waited until retirement & slowly gained experience, it most likely would have not have made up for the loss of physical ability & confidence brought on by the aging process & the concerns shared by the good hearted well meaning folk of the C-Brat community. At that time, we being mountain, not water people didn't know anybody evolved with boating to tell us our plans were just not realistic & much to dangerous for us & the others we might encounter due to our lack of experience & knowledge of boating in general & particularly the ocean waters of Southeast Alaska. Now at the present time, due in good part to this time accelerated learning curve during those wonderful adventures, we gained achievements & experience to counter the present loss of physical ability, endurance & declining drive, which is giving us the confidence to continue on exploring these & other waters as we continue the aging process.
Posted Oct 2016
Our CD22 is our first boat larger than a canoe or small RIB & it will likely be our last. For many years, when on travels in water areas, where the marina docks could be walked, walking them & talking to the boat owners was a favorite thing for us to do. Only the boats, that looked like they could be used to see places, we couldn't any other way & do so for extended time periods, really captured our interest, but with zero knowledge of boat cruising & boats in general & a more mountain area living & doing lifestyle with very limited finances for a boat cruising endeavor, any future boating idea was really just a fun day dream. Then in 2003 at 55 years old & back problems limiting my remote mountain endeavors, yet still having a desire to explore the wild places with Jo-Lee's company, we decided it was now or never if we really wanted to change our boating dream to reality. I think it's availability & our choice in choosing the CD22, has been the single most important link to us making the dreams become reality without creating some horrible nightmares in the process. It’s a niche boat & has been & still is a perfect fit for us.
Jay