Seaman's Marine Sales

Your Maritime MacGregor26 Dealer

MacGregor 26    Sailing    Motoring    Ideas    Current Stock/Pricing   

The MacGregor26M

The MacGregor26 is a great sailboat and is easily single-handed. With her ballast on board, she is no more tender than many sailboats her size. The 26M has a daggerboard rather than a swing keel. She also has a rotating mast -- the latest technology -- which presents a perfect airfoil at all times. The mast is very easy to raise and lower, and it doesn't require a backstay.

You will find occasional comments on chat lines about Macs not wanting to come about, particularly in lighter airs. They are a relatively light boat without a lot of momentum, but there is a trick to everything. You need the jib to get maximum speed and pointing in a light wind, but let it fly JUST BEFORE you put the helm over, not after you come about. MacGregors want to stay on the course determined by the set of the sails.  I have sailed a Mac26M upwind for an hour and never touched the helm once.  This is an excellent feature, but seems to work against coming about. When you let the jib fly, the pressure on the main alone is behind the mast/daggerboard pivot point and tends to cause the boat to round up, which aids the tacking manoever.  Give it a try -- you'll be amazed how quick she comes about once the pressure is off the jib.

Another important trick with a Mac when sailing in stiffer winds is to keep the sails as flat as possible. A baggy sail just catches wind like a spinaker, which isn't good when sailing up wind. I had an embarrassing time recently  --  couldn't make the boat GO, and was heeling like crazy, until I noticed that the back-haul had let go and the mainsail was bagging. Keep the main halyard and the back-haul nice and tight, with a little pressure on a boom vang, and adjust your jib sheet cars back to pull your jib more back than down, and you will take off like a scared rabbit. With a sloppy main and the jib cars all the way forward, a Mac will lay down and sulk.

I read an interesting comment on a chat line somewhere about a guy who sails a Mac where the trade winds prevail most of the time -- over 20kts. Says she works great with a reefed main and a storm jib (or the jib half rolled up on the furler). It is true, this boat is no schooner, but it is a good light sailboat. There is nothing about her hull and rig that is particularly unusual -- relatively flat bottomed hulls with dagger keels are common. The compromise is really on the motor boat side.  Even though the mast and rigging are fairly light, motor boats are not supposed to have an upside-down pendulum pointing at the sky. Don't try to do slaloms!  And the cockpit does not offer the kind of deck space you have in a motor boat. However, they do plane, and they steer well under power if you use just the right amount of dagger board (too much and it will develop sideways lift, causing heeling; too little and the boat will skate sideways when you try to turn.) 8 or 10 inches seems to do the trick.

Treat a Mac right and you will find that it is an extraordinarily versatile boat.


This is the MacGregor65, now out of production. Two prototypes of a new MacGregor 70 have been built. She won't be available for awhile, but you better get on the waiting list!