RUGGED
ROAMER |
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The Krogen 58 is a
terrifically stable ride built for liveaboard comfort |
By Dennis Caprio
▪ Photography
By John Bildahl
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Mention of the word "perfect" no doubt makes most of us think
"flawless." No boat is flawless, but a great many of them can be
perfect in the words other meanings. Webster states: "satisfying
all the requirements; lacking in no essential detail." As far as
Lynn and Don Obitz are concerned, Landd Ho is the perfect
boat. She's a stable liveaboard that offers easy motion, a quiet
ride and more stowage than the couple may ever fill.
Stepping aboard the 58 is like boarding a small ship. She
completely ignores the extra weight of a single person standing on
the threshold of the portside boarding door. Nor does the yacht
react in a significant way to one's wandering around her
perimeter. Part of this huge dose of initial stability comes from
a half -load displacement of nearly 97,000 pounds, the other part
from her firm bilges. Negligible motion, especially at anchor or
in the slip, adds to the comfort of the crew and guests as they go
about their routines.
At sea, a gentle motion is even more important. I'd never
thought of the Connecticut River as a rough body of water, but it
certainly was during my brief sea trial. The wind whistled down
the river, accelerating the venture of surrounding hills. Landd
Ho tested her docklines as we made ready to cast off.
Don Obitz had a moment of anxiety backing out the slip in
high winds, but the combination of twin engines and a powerful bow
thruster made the exercise painless. The 58 is fairly tall, but
she has enough displacement and hull below the water line to keep
her from sliding like a leaf the way light, shallow boats often
do. Obitz engaged the stabilizers and steered Landd Ho down
the river and downwind. We huddled in the pilothouse. |
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Fantasies played havoc with reason as Landd Ho battered the
short steep waves on the river. Her extraordinarily quiet running
(between 62 and 65 decibels at the helm at 9 knots) and solid
presence beneath my feet sent my imagination to distant ports of
call. Cherry joiner work and a cozy settee in the pilothouse added
to the attraction. I'd set the autopilot, pour a mug of coffee and
settle down with a book while the rain and wind lashed the
reverse-rake windshield. Of course, I'd look up from time to time,
check the heading and make sure the radar's perimeter alarm hadn't
missed a target.
Landd Ho
tracked like a
freight train in the following winds and seas. She engages the sea
with a fine entry, which grows to full beam in the first third of
the hull. A full-length keel, moderate deadrise amidships and twin
skegs keep her on course. She ought to track well down the face of
big waves, and her bow sections have all the reserve buoyancy she
needs to keep her foredeck out of the water. She's as stable as a
church in hard turns when the stabilizers are working. We
disengaged them and executed a lazy S-turn. The yacht heeled
predictably, but in no way alarmingly, to the outside of each turn
as we took the full force of the wind on the beam. |
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The owner opted
of an office in place of the
stateroom/den on the port side. He's only semi-retired
and has to maintain contact with his business.
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A most inviting saloon (above). The absence of a side deck on the
port side adds about 18 inches of width to the area. Note the
dogged watertight doors in the right of the photo. A serious
cruising boat needs equally serious ground tackle (top left).
Passage to the foredeck (left) on the starboard side imparts a
feeling of security. The Dutch door opens onto the galley. |
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She's as stable as a church in hard turns when the stabilizers are
working. We disengaged them and executed a lazy S-turn. The yacht
heeled predictably, but in no way alarmingly, to the outside of
each turn as we took the full force of the wind on the beam. |
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Back in the slip, the Obitzes took me on a tour of the
accommodations. I was ready to move aboard the moment I stepped
into the saloon, but I developed a genuine lust for the office on
the port side below decks. Bookshelves built onto the bulkhead
above the desk would hold most of my nautical |
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collection.
Cabinets outboard to port of the workstation and drawers to
starboard would swallow all the other paraphernalia of a working
writer/ voyager. Kadey-Krogen offers this space as a den/stateroom
equipped with a small desk and an L-shape berth that converts to a
double. Opposite the office is a stateroom with two single
berths.
The master stateroom is all the way forward and has more
stowage than I've seen in a yacht this size. It has 16 drawers
devoted to clothing, a hanging locker for the female crew (it's 5
feet from top to bottom) and a separate one for the male. The
berth lifts on gas struts to |
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A cozy, comfortable pilothouse
(above) will attract a crowd, so the skipper will never be lonely
on short cruises. The table folds out for meals. The guest
stateroom (right) is bright and well ventilated. It has more than
enough stowage for long cruises. |
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LOA |
62' 11" |
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LOD |
58' 0" |
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BEAM |
18' 10" max. |
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DRAFT |
5' 3" |
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DISPL. |
96,830 lb.
(half load) |
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FUEL |
1,760 gal. |
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WATER |
450 gal. |
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POWER |
2x154 hp
John |
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Deere
6068TFMs |
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BALLAST |
7,000 lb. |
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RANGE |
1,780 nm @
9 knots |
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BASE PRICE |
$1,430,000 |
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PRICE AT
TESTED |
$1,600,000 |
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reveal
cavernous stowage divided into compartments. The berth is 7 feet
long. Natural light floods the area from twoport lights each side
and a pair of 24-inch-square hatches in the overhead. These are
large enough to let an adult of normal size crawl to safety in an
emergency.
Displacement yachts benefit from deep bilges, and
Kadey-Krogen uses these areas for the machinery room, a workshop,
additional dry stowage and a stand-up engine room. The lazarette
back aft is nearly large enough to house a stateroom. The Obitzes
had their bicycles in there.
Most liveaboard couples tend to outgrow their stowage in a
matter of weeks. The Obitzes may need a year or two. "Can't fill
up the space," Lynn said. |
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Going to sea in a yacht of this caliber seems perfectly sensible
to me. She's as seaworthy as anyone could want, thanks to her
water tight compartments and sturdy composite construction. I was
sad to leave the Krogen 58, because the workaday realities would
stifle my fantasies of a life on the water. |
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