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Consider it a price you pay for living in the beautiful northwest ;-)
On a more serious note I find it very frustrating that living on the west coast there are very limited opportunities to find some of the greatest classic sailbots which are plentiful on the east coast. Cape Dories, Morris Yachts (Frances, Linda, Annie), Seasprites, Southern Crosses, etc. very rarely come on market on the west coast. I am sure you already know Catalinas, Cals, Westsails, Islanders, Pacific Seacrafts are everywhere (at least in California). Where you live I noticed there are a lot of heavy displacement cruisers like Cape George. Overall I still feel fortunate be living in the U.S. compared with Canada, Australia, U.K., and Europe where sailboat selections are even more limited (obviously a subjective and thoroughly US centric view, not meant to offend folks from those countries).
While I agree that there are fewer choices in Canada, I'm not too sure I'd say that about the UK or Europe. Pick up a British sailing rag and check out the back pages. Anytime I did I was impressed with the selection. The Brits tend to have some pretty hardy stuff- Nicholsons, Ebbtides, and Vancouvers come to mind. Not many light air drifters though...
Cheers, David
Sorry Peter, I don't agree. When ever I see a Classic Plastic, the type I would like to take on as a project boat. Their always in the East.
As for Europe, the prices seem much higher. I'm not saying this from extensive knowledge. I have compared prices of the Contessa 32 in the U.K. and here. We are sometimes about half the cost here.
It threw me off at first as well. Post more and move up the food chain. You'll note we all have a role. It's part of the forum and part of the fun!
Cheers,
David