Does a Bounty 257, a 26' pilothouse cruiser with Volvo diesel I/O and a
planing hull meet the definition of a trawler?
Paul mv Serendipity NJ
-----Original Message-----
From: Richard G. Cook [mailto:newmoon1@prodigy.net]
Sent: Tuesday, January 09, 2001 5:32 PM
To: trawler-world-list@samurai.com
Subject: TWL: Introduction
Since we just posted our first message, we ought to introduce ourselves.
We're Cindy and Richard Cook, of Holladay Utah. Our cruising experience
includes sailboat charters in the Abacos, and power boating on Lake
Powell and other western lakes, and our most favorite, the Pacific NW
coast.
Our first boat was a C-Dory 22 outboard cruiser, which we dearly loved
for seven years. She took us on a three-month adventure, from launch at
Prince Rupert, BC all over SE Alaska in 1996. One of the highlights was
watching 200-foot chunks calve from the Marjorie Glacier at the top of
Glacier bay, making waves higher than the length of our boat.
After I took retirement at 51 a couple of years ago, we gave ourselves a
reward of a lovely green-hulled Bounty 257, a 26' pilothouse cruiser
with Volvo diesel I/O and a planing hull. New Moon took us back to
Alaska in 1999, starting this time from Everett WA - a memorable summer.
Our border terrier Scrappy has become an old salt. Many friends and
relatives have helped us enjoy the peace and beauty of cruising. Our
towable boats aren't exactly spacious trawlers, but we've spent lots of
time on the water, even with guests, and we're pretty good at living
well in a small space. Good food, good scotch, good fishing, good whale
watching, good traveling, and so many beautiful anchorages!
Richard & Cindy Cook
New Moon
Bounty 257
Paul:
Does it matter? If this "club" is restricted to those who own a narrowly
defined vessel, I would prefer to resign. It would seem that Richard might
teach some of us a thing or two about living with less debt and less space
while enjoying life to its fullest.
Wesley
M/V Little Bitt
So Burlington, VT
Paul Koch wrote:
Does a Bounty 257, a 26' pilothouse cruiser with Volvo diesel I/O and a
planing hull meet the definition of a trawler?
Paul mv Serendipity NJ
-----Original Message-----
From: Richard G. Cook [mailto:newmoon1@prodigy.net]
Sent: Tuesday, January 09, 2001 5:32 PM
To: trawler-world-list@samurai.com
Subject: TWL: Introduction
Since we just posted our first message, we ought to introduce ourselves.
We're Cindy and Richard Cook, of Holladay Utah. Our cruising experience
includes sailboat charters in the Abacos, and power boating on Lake
Powell and other western lakes, and our most favorite, the Pacific NW
coast.
Our first boat was a C-Dory 22 outboard cruiser, which we dearly loved
for seven years. She took us on a three-month adventure, from launch at
Prince Rupert, BC all over SE Alaska in 1996. One of the highlights was
watching 200-foot chunks calve from the Marjorie Glacier at the top of
Glacier bay, making waves higher than the length of our boat.
After I took retirement at 51 a couple of years ago, we gave ourselves a
reward of a lovely green-hulled Bounty 257, a 26' pilothouse cruiser
with Volvo diesel I/O and a planing hull. New Moon took us back to
Alaska in 1999, starting this time from Everett WA - a memorable summer.
Our border terrier Scrappy has become an old salt. Many friends and
relatives have helped us enjoy the peace and beauty of cruising. Our
towable boats aren't exactly spacious trawlers, but we've spent lots of
time on the water, even with guests, and we're pretty good at living
well in a small space. Good food, good scotch, good fishing, good whale
watching, good traveling, and so many beautiful anchorages!
Richard & Cindy Cook
New Moon
Bounty 257