That's too bad about the condition of the boat. Hopefully it will find a home with someone who will take proper care of it.
A friend of mine at the Hamilton Creek Sailboat Marina and I often look around at some of the boats there and comment that it is where old boats come to die. It always breaks my heart to see some of them slipping further and further into disrepair as well as the occasional one that gets hauled out on a flatbed wrecker and sent to the scrap yard.
I'm currently restoring a 1978 Ranger 22 that was abandoned up there. When I acquired it the boat was sitting about 8" below the waterline and I know I pumped water out of it with a sump pump for most of the day before getting it to where I could start drying it out.
It's a nice boat but I am going to have to rebuild the cockpit doorway bulkheads and do some other minor repairs. That said I like the way it sails and I'll probably end up keeping it and selling my 1987 Catalina 22 that I have in the slip there.
I have a bit of work to do on my Mariner 19, and need to rebuild the trailer it is sitting on. But I plan to get that done in the spring so I can start using it on the local lakes and river this summer.
I can relate to the wife not being into sailing. I've been married 39 years to a wonderful woman but she has no interest in boats or the water at all.
Fortunately she knows how much I love boats and the water and she supports my passion for them.
Happy Holidays to you as well!