Motor Boat & Yachting — August 2017

(WallPaper) #1
LENGTH OVERALL 7. 7 m

BEAM
2.6m

FUEL CAPACITY
58 imp gal (265 litres)
WATER CAPACITY
17 imp gal (79 litres)
DRAUGHT
36in (91m)
RCD CATEGORY
C for 9 people
DESIGNER
Barry Parker
DISPLACEMENT
2.9 tonnes (at light load)

THE DATA


The exterior
galley is ideal for
cockpit parties

Cave lockers at the back
of the mid cabin offer the
only meaningful storage

There are plenty of
windows and skylights to
brighten up the interior

The optional full-length
bimini provides plenty
of welcome shade


compromise is the beam. Americans think nothing of trailering
boats like this, so the beam is set to comply with their towing
width restriction of 8ft 6in. With a sub-8m length overall (length
is pegged at 25ft 2in/7.7m), the designers have their work cut
out delivering a meaningful sportscruiser experience within
these compact parameters.
The biggest diffi culty is that, annoyingly, buyers of smaller boats
tend to be about the same size as those of larger ones, making
proportions challenging. Standing headroom is a prerequisite
for the successful sportscruiser, and the GS 259 delivers, offering
a full 6ft of clearance at the base of the cabin steps. The layout is
standard-pattern sportscruiser, with a horseshoe of dinette forward
that drops to create a double, a small galley opposite the head and
a double berth stretching back beneath the front of the cockpit.

That head is a particularly good size – people are less prepared
to sit on the loo with a shoulder against each wall these days, and
the GS 259 ensures that they won’t have to. Pale wood and classy
linings are well lit by triple overhead skylights (the forward one
an opening hatch) and slim fi llets of window. But unfortunately,
for every inch you take, something else has to give, and in this case
that something is storage. Apart from unlined lockers beneath the
seats and a couple of shallow shelves in the galley, the only proper
storage space is two slim open-fronted lockers next to the cabin
steps (the lower of which looks like a hanging locker but lacks a
rail) and three cave lockers in the mid cabin aft bulkhead – again,
open fronted. Travelling light would seem to be a prerequisite.
Head upstairs and that narrow beam makes itself felt via a total
lack of side decks; the only route to the foredeck is through an

BOAT REPORT

mby.com/GS

SEE THE VIDEO
Free download pdf