MilesandMiles
New member
Hi Everyone,
I'm only in the thinking stage of this right now, but wanted to throw this out here for opinions and possible situations.
When I discovered these boats (when angels sang and the clouds parted) I was looking at the 16-cruiser as the perfect boat for my (mostly) solo explorations (in the future my 1 1/2 year old son Miles will be my #1) I was a little taken-a-back by the prices of the 16-cruisers in relation to the anglers and even some older but goodie 22-cruisers (i.e. I currently have fine examples of both) Are they "rare" or only recently built-explaining why the ones I've seen for sale are roughly the same price as a perfectly fine older 22-cruiser?
My conclusion so far is the 22 is wonderful, and comfortable, and I know sounds a bit silly, almost too much boat for my needs. I strain in all areas of life to keep things as simple and minimal as possible while still enjoying all that the activity has to offer. For example, I've had dozens of motorcycles, ranging from big thumper dual-sports down to what I've settled on: a 200cc dual sport that can go anywhere at 80+mpg..just not at 100mph. My 16-angler I imagine will make a great fishing boat, but unless I do a cabin extend, there isn't enough room to comfortably camp out on nice summer nights (and even colder ones--this is Superiorland) like I will want to.
I should point out the obvious by stating I love the idea of the super-economy the 16's are capable of, without losing out on where they can go (I won't have any reservations taking a 16 to Isle Royale on the right set of days for example)
So what am I getting at? Maybe I've shot all around the target this winter and what I've really been aiming at is a 16-cruiser. I've seen how most C-Dorians here start small (16) and move bigger (22-25-TC) My biggest reserve on selling/trading my 22 is the possibility of using it as a PT live-aboard during the winter in other places (Florida, Powell, etc.) a 16-cruiser wouldn't shine in that regard. Whether my lifestyle will evolve into that snowbird approach is still up in the air due to still unsettled family dynamics (longer story, trust me)
Anyone else had these thoughts and/or experiences? Is any of you 16-cruiser folks itching to move up to a 22-cruiser?
I'm only in the thinking stage of this right now, but wanted to throw this out here for opinions and possible situations.
When I discovered these boats (when angels sang and the clouds parted) I was looking at the 16-cruiser as the perfect boat for my (mostly) solo explorations (in the future my 1 1/2 year old son Miles will be my #1) I was a little taken-a-back by the prices of the 16-cruisers in relation to the anglers and even some older but goodie 22-cruisers (i.e. I currently have fine examples of both) Are they "rare" or only recently built-explaining why the ones I've seen for sale are roughly the same price as a perfectly fine older 22-cruiser?
My conclusion so far is the 22 is wonderful, and comfortable, and I know sounds a bit silly, almost too much boat for my needs. I strain in all areas of life to keep things as simple and minimal as possible while still enjoying all that the activity has to offer. For example, I've had dozens of motorcycles, ranging from big thumper dual-sports down to what I've settled on: a 200cc dual sport that can go anywhere at 80+mpg..just not at 100mph. My 16-angler I imagine will make a great fishing boat, but unless I do a cabin extend, there isn't enough room to comfortably camp out on nice summer nights (and even colder ones--this is Superiorland) like I will want to.
I should point out the obvious by stating I love the idea of the super-economy the 16's are capable of, without losing out on where they can go (I won't have any reservations taking a 16 to Isle Royale on the right set of days for example)
So what am I getting at? Maybe I've shot all around the target this winter and what I've really been aiming at is a 16-cruiser. I've seen how most C-Dorians here start small (16) and move bigger (22-25-TC) My biggest reserve on selling/trading my 22 is the possibility of using it as a PT live-aboard during the winter in other places (Florida, Powell, etc.) a 16-cruiser wouldn't shine in that regard. Whether my lifestyle will evolve into that snowbird approach is still up in the air due to still unsettled family dynamics (longer story, trust me)
Anyone else had these thoughts and/or experiences? Is any of you 16-cruiser folks itching to move up to a 22-cruiser?