BUY, SELL AND TRADE TRAWLERS AND TRAWLERING GEAR
View all threadsFor sale Super Max 50 pound Anchor. $400
For picture and current price look at creativemarine.com.
For commentary, consult recent thread on trawler list.
My opinion and that of some very knowledgeable captains is that the Max is
number one.
I am selling mine because I have two of them and in ten years have never
needed to use the one that I'm selling. Thus the galvanizing is pristine.
Mine is the adjustable model.
Remember that the price quoted on the website, namely $650 does not include
shipping and neither does my price of $400. Since there are those on the
web who would not sell their Max at any price, my price is firm.
I am currently on the hard in Stuart Florida so if you are interested and
are in southern Florida it would make it easier on both of us.
919 270 7501
luxembergphd@gmail.com
Sadly, the time has come to sell our much beloved 46' trawler. It's hard to
do, but watching Pooh sit unused at our dock isn't easy, either. To see many
nice photos along with this description, go to www.trawlerpooh.blogspot.com
46' US Built Long-range Pilothouse Trawler
Winnie the Pooh is an efficiency trawler a sailor can love. Great Live
aboard; perfect for ICW, Bahamas or the Great Loop. Simple, roomy,
comfortable, unique, unsinkable, economical. Charley Morgan designed
Heritage West Indies 46, built 1978 in Clearwater, FL. Completely rebuilt
from the keel up in 1997. 80hp John Deere, cruises 7.5 kts @1.5 gph.
Workshop fwd, A/C queen stateroom aft, propane cooking and heat. Comfy,
roomy pilothouse. Dims 46' x 15' x 4.6' draft. Displacement 36,000 lbs.
Asking $84,900. Docked in Ortona, one hour east of Ft. Myers. Call Mark
863-517-1152, after 4/15, use e-mail richter-pooh@rocketmail.com
Pilothouse - 6'8" headroom fully enclosed with a large chart table and
comfortable leather seats for helmsman and navigator. 8' Settee seats four
across or great for naps. Cocktail table centrally located can be reached
by all. Equipped with Navico autopilot, backup autopilot, JRC 2000 radar,
Garmin fishfinder, Standard Horizon depth sounder, Garmin 126 GPS, Standard
Horizon VHF, Icom handheld VHF.
Workshop forward with workbench and vise. Teak trimmed cabinets provide
lots of storage for tools and parts. ABI deck prism for great lighting. 6"
blower exhausts interior air through rope locker. The workshop was
originally a large V-berth, and could be made so again if desired.
Head - Large, deep stainless sink. Bronze WC Skipper manual head for no
headaches. 40 gal holding tank w pumpout via deck fitting or electric pump.
Stainless Nicro solar vent. Roomy shower room in aft cabin with 6'3"
headroom for sit down or stand up showers.
Roomy saloon trimmed in cherry and teak. Romantic brass trawler lamp adds
light and heat on cool evenings. Dinette seats 6 for dinner. Long settee
opposite. Sylvania 15" flat screen TV concealed in cabinet. Pioneer stereo
w speakers in saloon and pilothouse. (2) Caframo fans, (3) Hatches are cast
aluminum Bomar. Lewmar aluminum ports new 1997. Force 10 propane heater.
Galley - Lots of counter and storage space, cherry and teak. Force 10
propane range, 3-burner with oven and broiler. Microwave oven. Extremely
efficient top-loading refrigerator/freezer w 4" foam insulation. Large, deep
stainless sink. Well lighted, airy galley with direct communication to
dining room and pilothouse, so the cook feels a part of the party. (3) 70
gal aluminum water tanks feed a Flojet pressure pump and filter system.
Master cabin aft with queen bed, lots of hanging locker space, drawers and
doors galore. 5000 BTU a/c can run from batteries; no generator noise.
Caframo fan over bed.
Anchor equipment - 72 lb Supermax anchor on bow roller w 160' of 5/16" HT
chain and 150' 5/8" nylon three-strand rode. Lofrans Tigres 1500 watt
windlass, rated 2300 lbs, new 2004. #37 Fortress aluminum anchor mounted on
bow roller w chain and 200' 5/8" nylon double braid. Bow eye for snubber
attachment near waterline. Fortress Guardian #55 storm anchor. Rope locker
vented w 6" blower, exhausts from boat interior. Seabrake drogue for heavy
weather safety.
Driveline - John Deere 4039DFM diesel, 80hp @ 2500rpm. Velvet Drive 5000
transmission ratio 2.8 ratio swings a 26x19 3-blade prop for greater
efficiency. 1.75" shaft with Aquadrive coupler to reduce vibration and
noise, never needs aligning. Prop Protector line cutter for safety among
the crab pots. Spare prop. (3) Racor 900 series fuel filters let you
change filters while underway. 320 gal diesel in (2) aluminum fuel tanks w
electric transfer pump, provides 1800 NM range.
Electrical - Unique system has 8 golf cart batteries, 880 AH of 12v capacity
to anchor out 4 days before needing to charge. Twin 120 amp alternators on
the Deere for rapid recharge underway or at anchor. Freedom 10
inverter/charger runs microwave or air conditioner. Link 1000 battery
monitor tells when charging is needed. 75w solar panel on the PH roof
produces enough amps to run the refrigerator. Many interior lights are LED
for low amp draw. LED night-lights throughout boat for safety and
convenience at 0.3 amp draw. 5000 BTU air conditioner in aft cabin can be
run from the batteries; no genset needed. Isotemp water heater runs on
shore power or engine heat.
Deck - 22' aluminum mast hinged to be lowered single-handed in 30 minutes
for low bridge clearance navigating canals. 100 sq ft steadying sail and
200 sq ft jib for emergency get-home power (sails 3.5 kts in 15 kts wind).
2" diameter stainless dinghy davits hold the 9' Boston Whaler with 9.9
Mercury OB. Built-in fiberglass swim platform reached by 4-step stainless
boarding ladder.
+++++
Here's the story about "Winnie the Pooh", and how we came to design and
build him the way we did. WTP is a custom 46' trawler who started life as a
Heritage West Indies 46 Ketch, a Charlie Morgan designed cruising sailboat
with a broad 15' beam and lots of interior room.
We bought the boat in Ft Lauderdale, motored it to Indiantown, FL where we
lived on 2.5 acres, and had the boat trucked to our house. After 4 years of
work, $50k in parts and supplies and about 9000 man-hours of labor, we
launched Pooh in 1997, a brand new trawler with a 20 year old hull. All the
wiring and plumbing is new. New engine, transmission, prop, shaft, rudder,
seacocks, fuel tanks, pilothouse, ports, galley, range, refrigerator,
furniture, cushions, electronics, etc. About the only things not new are
the hull, deck and water tanks. "Why did you do such a crazy thing?" you
ask? Good question. I asked myself the same thing many times during the
construction process. Halfway through the task, we were sometimes in the
depths of despair. But now, having lived aboard for 10 years, we are proud
and very pleased with our decision. Though it didn't enter into our
reasoning at the time, it's nice to have a unique boat that gets attention
wherever we go. And, of course, in rebuilding a boat from the ground up, we
had the opportunity to add custom touches like a large workshop in the
forepeak, a sewing room conversion of the aft berth, and full foam flotation
for safety.
Mastless sailboats tend to have a quick, snappy roll in a beam sea; safe but
not comfortable. To correct this problem, about half the ballast in the
keel needed to be removed. We cut the lead keel on Pooh from a draft of 6'6"
down to 4'8" at full load. For Florida and Bahamas cruising, it is best to
keep draft under 5'.
Fuel tankage addition is not difficult or expensive if the room is
available. I designed the new tanks so they fit through the companionway. We
added a pair of 160 gallon aluminum tanks port and starboard amidships to
minimize trim change with changing fuel load. Pooh now holds 320 gal for a
still water range of 1800 nm at 7.5 kts at 1700 rpm, burning 1.5 gph (not
bad for a 36,000 lb boat).
Mark Richter, Mechanical Engineer, Winnie the Pooh, Lying Ortona, FL one
hour east of Ft. Myers
"Mark's Mobile Marine" electrical system design, installation and repair
863-517-1152 after 4/15, use e-mail richter-pooh@rocketmail.com
See photos at www.trawlerpooh.blogspot.com