[Rhodes22-list] Moving On

Tom Van Heule tom.vanheule at intrinsicprograms.com
Wed Nov 25 20:23:31 EST 2020


Sean if I saw my boat for 15k I would have save over 12k.   2011 return in
2017, Yet I saw 5 r22s,.in person, from 25 to 45k, I bought Octopian on
pictures alone, over 1500 miles from home . No regrets at all.

What does it need that your asking is so low? Value is high now, even
economically speaking ..




On Wed, Nov 25, 2020, 6:31 PM Shawn Boles <shawn.sustain at gmail.com> wrote:

> Hi:
>
> No less than $15k.
>
> Cheers,
> Shawn
> s/v Sweet Baboo
>
> On Wed, Nov 25, 2020, 3:28 PM James Schroll <jschroll at msn.com> wrote:
>
> > In spite of really enjoying our Rhodes 22 for the last 5 years and
> > appreciating the many clever design features that Stan has introduced, my
> > wife and I find ourselves considering a lifestyle change which might
> > preclude boat ownership.  Were we to decide to part with it, our first
> > choice would be to see if Stan wanted it back for another refurbishing,
> but
> > I haven’t gotten any answer to several emails which I have sent.  Do we
> > know if he is okay?  Does anyone have a suggestion for contacting him?
> >
> > If that doesn’t work out (and, again, assuming that we decide against
> > “just one more year”), how does one go about setting a fair price for a
> > used boat?  A quick internet search turns up about dozen boats from 1983
> to
> > 2008 priced (not respectively) from$5,500 to $38,900.  Ours is a 1990,
> > refurbished in early 2016.  It is in good condition (although it could
> use
> > a wash and polish).  It has a 2016 trailer and a 2016 Yamaha 9.9
> outboard.
> > So, how do I set a price that is fair for both the buyer and me?
> >
> > I’d welcome any suggestions.
> >
> > Jim Schroll
> > Pinafore
>


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