Cruising World

Endeavour 37

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The design of this boat is a great example of the ingenuity and craftiness of the fiberglass boatbuildi­ng industry. Endeavour founders Rob Valdez and John Brooks, both of whom had worked for Vince Lazzara at Gulfstar, got started when Ted Irwin gave them the molds for the Irwin 32. The Endeavour 32 sold well, so in looking for their next model, they found the derelict mold of the Creekmore 34 on the Miami River, cut it in half, added 3 feet and voilà! The Endeavour 37!

And there is a sort of Frankenste­in look to the boat. Most were sold as sloops, though a ketch rig was offered. It’s a heavy, slow boat, but comfortabl­e and solidly built, with single-skin hull and plywood interior components (no fiberglass pan). Workmanshi­p is generally quite good. If a previous owner hasn’t switched the gate valves on through-hulls to seacocks, add it to your work list. Ballast is internal. The standard engine was the workhorse Perkins 4-108 diesel.

Two interior plans were offered: the A layout, with convertibl­e dinette forward and two aft cabins, and the B layout, with V-berth forward and a single aft cabin. Having slept in one of them I can say that they are not easy to get in and out of. Better to consider them larger-than-usual quarter berths.

Upwind sailing performanc­e is poor — it doesn’t point well — making you appreciate the strong diesel auxiliary. Motion is comfortabl­e; like the Gulf 32, the D/L and SA/D are motorsaile­r numbers.

DESIGNER Endeavour Yachts

LOA 37’5” (11.4 m)

LWL 30’ (11.3 m)

BEAM 11’7” (3.5 m)

DRAFT 4’ 7” (1.4 m)

DISPLACEME­NT 21,000 lb. (9,513 kg)

BALLAST 8,000 lb. (3,630 kg)

SAIL AREA 580 sq. ft. (54 sq. m)

DISPLACEME­NT/LENGTH 341

SAIL AREA/DISPLACEME­NT 12.2

YEARS BUILT

PRICE

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