have you seen this website?

A forum for discussing topics relating to older MacGregor/Venture sailboats.
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impinnacr
Chief Steward
Posts: 73
Joined: Sun Oct 22, 2006 7:00 am
Sailboat: MacGregor 26D
Location: Colusa, Ca

have you seen this website?

Post by impinnacr »

I was surfing the net the other night and found this. Has anyone seen this website? Its about a guy named Buck Graham who sailed his Mac 26 fm LA to Costa Rica.
Thats quite a voyage if it is all true.
any comments?
http://members.tripod.com/~lbucko/mship.htm
Frank C

Post by Frank C »

Impinnacr .... very nice find!

Not sure, but I think his boat is a Mac 26S - the swing keel model just prior to the 26X design.
Buck writes an impressive account of the sailing characteristics of the Mac classic ...
Excerpted ... Buck Graham wrote: ... "WIND GIFT", a MacGregor Classic 26' Sloop, is also sea friendly, and its' performance along the way has to be called awesome. The trip was a 3,000 mile love affair. To me, it is awesome to lash the tiller with balanced sails and have the boat sail on track until the wind changes, sometimes for days!

Image

i single-handed "WIND GIFT" and depended on the superb balance of the MacGregors rather than the use of wind vanes or auto pilots. Back in stateside marinas i was always witnessing the avid sailor ho took his small sail boat sailing every week. When that day came when he "moved up" to a larger boat the frequency dropped to maybe just a few times a year. Boats the size of "WIND GIFT" are a joy to sail, and easy to handle and maintain.

So how about a long trip? Off-shore? With storms? God provided some chubascos to show me how "WIND GIFT could handle wind. Off Champerico, Guatemala, one hit, with 45 knot winds, gusting to 60. I was putting a third reef in the main, but gave up and bare poled it, hiding out in the cabin, watching the GPS.

I thought I was heading for rocks, five miles away. I used the outboard to turn the boat and head out to sea. "GIFT" was riding beam to the weather on a lashed tiller, making 2 - 3 knots away from the rock. In those storm-tossed seas, "GIFT" had an easy ride. A gentle pitch; a yaw to the left. A wave rolled under (the keel was up) and "GIFT" gentle yawed to the right, with a gentle ten degree roll. It was about one-fourtha s fierce as the bow waves of the sport fishing fleet when "GIFT" was at anchor in Cabo San Lucas.

In the next chubasco I sailed under a reefed main. "GIFT" had a fifteen degree angle of heel, and was making about 5 knots on a reach in 25 knot winds, on a lashed tiller.

In another chubasco, I sailed under a reefed jib - no main. I was amazed how well "GIFT" points to weather under only a jib. When I got caught in a gale in the 22' Venture (earlier boat, earlier trip) it was the same story. An easy ride, gentle angles of heel, and a lashed tiller. I suspicion the MacGregors bounce and bob a lot. This is why they never take seas over the deck: they are always on top of the water.
zuma hans 1
Engineer
Posts: 129
Joined: Sun Jan 15, 2006 12:29 pm

Post by zuma hans 1 »

Did I read that right, or was that trip in 1985? The web page says it was last updated in 2001.

I wonder how the old fart is now. Probably holed up in a Huatluco shack with a senora ... ah, what a fantasy.

Be sure to look at the man page. I never, ever use emoticons. But in this case:

:o
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kmclemore
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Joined: Sun Feb 08, 2004 9:24 am
Sailboat: MacGregor 26X
Location: Ambler, PA -- MACX2018A898 w/ Suzuki DF60AV -- 78 BW Harpoon 4.6 -- 2018 Tahoe 550TF w/ 150 Merc

Post by kmclemore »

zuma hans 1 wrote:Be sure to look at the man page. I never, ever use emoticons. But in this case:
:o
Heck of a leaf that guy's got there. I think he's bragging. :wink:
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