Buizen 48 Pilothouse
Currency
Length
48' - 14.63m
Vessel Location
Port Macquarie NSW
Launch Year
1993
Hull Material
Fibreglass/GRP
"Foxy Lady" Australia's Iconic pilot house yacht by Mastercraft marine.
Quality that built to last in a yacht designed to cruise oceans in comfort, style and safety.
"Foxy lady" has had two devoted owners sinch launch with her history including first place in the inaugural Round the World Millennium Odyssey Race in 2000.
The builder Eddie Buizen's vision was to create a cruising yacht with comfortable interior while maintaining vision from main saloon to outside world via wraparound armour glass. Cockpit and saloon being on same level provide interior / exterior connection, easily managing aft cockpit or interior helm positions.
An easy yacht to sail being set up to manage short handed and well suited for cruising couples.
Recently slipped /antifouled/polished/ serviced & surveyed. (Service history & survey available on request).
YACHT REVIEW -DAVID LOCKWOOD 1998
First built in 1990 and launched the following year, the Buizen 48 is one of the world's most charming cruising yachts. Designed and built in Australia, each vessel is the product of five months' labour by Mastercraft Marine. They are also a showcase of the skill of two fine shipwrights - Eddy and Fritz Buizen - who with their Midas touch turn hand laid fibreglass and teak into a floating home with glorious handmade furniture. It's the craftsmanship, comfort and performance that are the real attractions of a Buizen 48.
THE CRUISING FORMULA
Good cruising boats aren't made just for going places any old how. They're built so you can enjoy the journey as much as the destination. Or, as was the case on the day I tested the Buizen 48, enjoying the comforts aboard so much that you end up going nowhere much at all.
So I guess you shouldn't take it from me about this boat's potential. Just look at what it's already achieved. For instance, there's a Hobart-based 48 called Eclipse which has been across Bass Strait 14 times. Nearly all the 48s the Buizen boys have crafted have been to the Great Barrier Reef and back, and one sailed to Noumea. This year, four 48s sailed in convoy from Pittwater to Lord Howe Island.
But most impressive is the fact that a 48 was, at the time of writing, on a ship headed for Tel Aviv to take part in the Millennium Cruise - an 18 month trip with 50 other boats around the world. The Buizen 48 will be a proud - and fitting - Australian flag-bearer.
ON THE WATER
Called "Show Me" our stylish testboat is owned by Tom Wykoff, a gentleman who has worked his way through powerboats and yachts and settled on the something which he says delivers the best of both worlds. Though the ex-pat American began with little working knowledge of sailing, he has since sailed this boat to Lord Howe Island and back.
My time aboard the 48 was less adventurous. I didn't experience the high seas, but instead enjoyed the Buizen 48 as a prestigious home on the water with plenty of shelter from the weather.
And far from dreading being couped up, this gave me enough time to enjoy the handiwork of the brothers Buizen, for though the 48 looks great on the outside, it's even better on the inside.
Everywhere you look there is teak joinery and teak and holly flooring, each finished in a blend of semi or full gloss finishes. The headliner is a buff, suede-like material and you have the option of leather upholstery (as on Tom's boat), and fitted blinds for the windows.
The 48's pilothouse has full headroom and is surrounded by laminated 13mm safety-glass windows which keep you cosy but connected to the outside world. This glass alone costs around $14,000 installed and helps create the Buizen's innovative open plan layout.
Features of the pilothouse include an L-shaped lounge with seating for four, a lounge and cocktail cabinet on the portside, and a lower, enclosed helm station with a seat from which you can steer or sail - with coffee in hand.
GALLEY GOURMET
The galley is designed so the cook isn't shut-off from the crew. There's a sense of airiness about it, and the whole living area, which you won't get onboard flush-deck yachts. What's more, its ventilation is better than many boats. The galley itself is a masterpiece of craftsmanship, with an abundance of teak cabinets and lockers. Tellingly, every door you open, close, slide or lift up does so with aplomb and snaps tight as though made by the finest hands and eyes in the carpentry business.
Features include a life-sized eutectic fridge, deep freezer, microwave, gimballed oven and stove (with a big stainless splash-board), lots of bench space and a deep, circular sink where you can neatly stack the plates for washing up some other time. Opposite the galley is the dayhead, a generous bathroom with easy-clean moulded liner, shower, vanity and toilet.
LIVING ABOARD
The 48's sleeping arrangements are highly desirable. To starboard and amidships is a guest cabin with upper and lower single bunks which boast 125mm thick mattresses.
Though they have more hiproom than many bunks I've seen, they are still the best sea berths on the boat. As with all cabins, there are teak hanging lockers, reading lights, camel-coloured carpets and opening portholes and hatches. The master cabin in the bow is fully teak-lined (think warm wood tones) and available with an island or full-width double berth. There is both dressing space around the bed and plenty of privacy from the rest of the boat.
You even get your own en suite, a generously sized affair which should appease those sailors who complain about having to share. Back aft of the saloon are port and starboard cabins. The former comes fitted with a double bunk. The latter has a single bunk, but also boasts a rather useful nav station.
GREAT OUTDOORS
When the weather fines up, the 48's cockpit is no less accommodating than its commodious interior. Teak laid, it's moulded and fitted up with an array of seats to comfortably take up to 12 sunlovers. Fitted with a dodger, the pick of the seats on a winter's day - or when at sea - is back under the pilothouse overhang alongside the aluminium-framed companionway door. The pick of the forward-facing seats are the pushpit benches at the stern, just an arm's stretch from the drink holders on the pedestal. From the pedestal, not only can you steer but you can also drop or weigh anchor (a 27.5kg plough anchor comes with rode and chain) and tend all the sheets using the matching electric/hydraulic genoa winches and the two manual mainsheet winches. To reduce clutter, there are three storage lockers built into the teak-laid self-draining cockpit.
A wide platform moulded in the transom beckons for warmer days and better bodies than the author's (Ed: ain't that the truth, whitey), while there is a freshwater transom shower that will be popular when you anchor in the Whitsundays during that first adventurous year of yacht ownership.
The sense of spaciousness flows on through to the bow thanks to wide bulwarks backed by high stanchions and safety lines. Like all good cruising boats, the Buizen's mast is a sturdy keel-stepped unit with a double-spreader rig. Unlike many pretend husband-and-wife cruising boats, the rig features a hydraulic mast furling system. Future 48s will be fitted with an in-boom system called Furl Boom.
Either way, both the big overlapping genoa and the mainsail can be unfurled by a simple push of a button and a tug on a few lines back in the cockpit. Setting sail really is a single-handed job which any halfway salty sailor and partner can do. The suggestion of performance comes with Harken deck gear. There's hydraulic steering, a solid boom vang and preventer, and Autohelm tridata self-steering gauges as standard.
SAIL AWAY
With the coffee and cakes out of the way, we started the motor - a four-cylinder, freshwater-cooled 100hp Volvo - and set about looking for some wind.
It was not to be - the wind was maybe 8kt in a narrow corridor pushing down from the hills around Church Point. Typically, the rest of the waterway was a hotch-potch of zephyrs, headers, holes and frustration. In the corridor of wind, the Buizen 48, a moderate displacement yacht drawing just 1.85m, showed signs of how well it can sail. Though we clocked only 4-5kt, experience says you can expect to maintain about 7kt on most long-distance passages. The ability of the vessel was in evidence in the 1994 Sydney-to-Hobart race when David Gough's Eclipse, the Buizen 48 Boat No. 3, finished in second place overall on handicap. The same boat has now put almost 40,000nm under its keel and at the time of writing was on its way to the Great Barrier Reef from its home port of Hobart.
With credentials such as these, it is clear that no matter what the wind or weather conditions, the Buizen 48 rates as the ideal cruising yacht complete with the luxury of the pilothouse.
Locations: Coffs Harbour - Port Macquarie - Pittwater - Sydney Harbour - Batemans Bay
Quality that built to last in a yacht designed to cruise oceans in comfort, style and safety.
"Foxy lady" has had two devoted owners sinch launch with her history including first place in the inaugural Round the World Millennium Odyssey Race in 2000.
The builder Eddie Buizen's vision was to create a cruising yacht with comfortable interior while maintaining vision from main saloon to outside world via wraparound armour glass. Cockpit and saloon being on same level provide interior / exterior connection, easily managing aft cockpit or interior helm positions.
An easy yacht to sail being set up to manage short handed and well suited for cruising couples.
Recently slipped /antifouled/polished/ serviced & surveyed. (Service history & survey available on request).
YACHT REVIEW -DAVID LOCKWOOD 1998
First built in 1990 and launched the following year, the Buizen 48 is one of the world's most charming cruising yachts. Designed and built in Australia, each vessel is the product of five months' labour by Mastercraft Marine. They are also a showcase of the skill of two fine shipwrights - Eddy and Fritz Buizen - who with their Midas touch turn hand laid fibreglass and teak into a floating home with glorious handmade furniture. It's the craftsmanship, comfort and performance that are the real attractions of a Buizen 48.
THE CRUISING FORMULA
Good cruising boats aren't made just for going places any old how. They're built so you can enjoy the journey as much as the destination. Or, as was the case on the day I tested the Buizen 48, enjoying the comforts aboard so much that you end up going nowhere much at all.
So I guess you shouldn't take it from me about this boat's potential. Just look at what it's already achieved. For instance, there's a Hobart-based 48 called Eclipse which has been across Bass Strait 14 times. Nearly all the 48s the Buizen boys have crafted have been to the Great Barrier Reef and back, and one sailed to Noumea. This year, four 48s sailed in convoy from Pittwater to Lord Howe Island.
But most impressive is the fact that a 48 was, at the time of writing, on a ship headed for Tel Aviv to take part in the Millennium Cruise - an 18 month trip with 50 other boats around the world. The Buizen 48 will be a proud - and fitting - Australian flag-bearer.
ON THE WATER
Called "Show Me" our stylish testboat is owned by Tom Wykoff, a gentleman who has worked his way through powerboats and yachts and settled on the something which he says delivers the best of both worlds. Though the ex-pat American began with little working knowledge of sailing, he has since sailed this boat to Lord Howe Island and back.
My time aboard the 48 was less adventurous. I didn't experience the high seas, but instead enjoyed the Buizen 48 as a prestigious home on the water with plenty of shelter from the weather.
And far from dreading being couped up, this gave me enough time to enjoy the handiwork of the brothers Buizen, for though the 48 looks great on the outside, it's even better on the inside.
Everywhere you look there is teak joinery and teak and holly flooring, each finished in a blend of semi or full gloss finishes. The headliner is a buff, suede-like material and you have the option of leather upholstery (as on Tom's boat), and fitted blinds for the windows.
The 48's pilothouse has full headroom and is surrounded by laminated 13mm safety-glass windows which keep you cosy but connected to the outside world. This glass alone costs around $14,000 installed and helps create the Buizen's innovative open plan layout.
Features of the pilothouse include an L-shaped lounge with seating for four, a lounge and cocktail cabinet on the portside, and a lower, enclosed helm station with a seat from which you can steer or sail - with coffee in hand.
GALLEY GOURMET
The galley is designed so the cook isn't shut-off from the crew. There's a sense of airiness about it, and the whole living area, which you won't get onboard flush-deck yachts. What's more, its ventilation is better than many boats. The galley itself is a masterpiece of craftsmanship, with an abundance of teak cabinets and lockers. Tellingly, every door you open, close, slide or lift up does so with aplomb and snaps tight as though made by the finest hands and eyes in the carpentry business.
Features include a life-sized eutectic fridge, deep freezer, microwave, gimballed oven and stove (with a big stainless splash-board), lots of bench space and a deep, circular sink where you can neatly stack the plates for washing up some other time. Opposite the galley is the dayhead, a generous bathroom with easy-clean moulded liner, shower, vanity and toilet.
LIVING ABOARD
The 48's sleeping arrangements are highly desirable. To starboard and amidships is a guest cabin with upper and lower single bunks which boast 125mm thick mattresses.
Though they have more hiproom than many bunks I've seen, they are still the best sea berths on the boat. As with all cabins, there are teak hanging lockers, reading lights, camel-coloured carpets and opening portholes and hatches. The master cabin in the bow is fully teak-lined (think warm wood tones) and available with an island or full-width double berth. There is both dressing space around the bed and plenty of privacy from the rest of the boat.
You even get your own en suite, a generously sized affair which should appease those sailors who complain about having to share. Back aft of the saloon are port and starboard cabins. The former comes fitted with a double bunk. The latter has a single bunk, but also boasts a rather useful nav station.
GREAT OUTDOORS
When the weather fines up, the 48's cockpit is no less accommodating than its commodious interior. Teak laid, it's moulded and fitted up with an array of seats to comfortably take up to 12 sunlovers. Fitted with a dodger, the pick of the seats on a winter's day - or when at sea - is back under the pilothouse overhang alongside the aluminium-framed companionway door. The pick of the forward-facing seats are the pushpit benches at the stern, just an arm's stretch from the drink holders on the pedestal. From the pedestal, not only can you steer but you can also drop or weigh anchor (a 27.5kg plough anchor comes with rode and chain) and tend all the sheets using the matching electric/hydraulic genoa winches and the two manual mainsheet winches. To reduce clutter, there are three storage lockers built into the teak-laid self-draining cockpit.
A wide platform moulded in the transom beckons for warmer days and better bodies than the author's (Ed: ain't that the truth, whitey), while there is a freshwater transom shower that will be popular when you anchor in the Whitsundays during that first adventurous year of yacht ownership.
The sense of spaciousness flows on through to the bow thanks to wide bulwarks backed by high stanchions and safety lines. Like all good cruising boats, the Buizen's mast is a sturdy keel-stepped unit with a double-spreader rig. Unlike many pretend husband-and-wife cruising boats, the rig features a hydraulic mast furling system. Future 48s will be fitted with an in-boom system called Furl Boom.
Either way, both the big overlapping genoa and the mainsail can be unfurled by a simple push of a button and a tug on a few lines back in the cockpit. Setting sail really is a single-handed job which any halfway salty sailor and partner can do. The suggestion of performance comes with Harken deck gear. There's hydraulic steering, a solid boom vang and preventer, and Autohelm tridata self-steering gauges as standard.
SAIL AWAY
With the coffee and cakes out of the way, we started the motor - a four-cylinder, freshwater-cooled 100hp Volvo - and set about looking for some wind.
It was not to be - the wind was maybe 8kt in a narrow corridor pushing down from the hills around Church Point. Typically, the rest of the waterway was a hotch-potch of zephyrs, headers, holes and frustration. In the corridor of wind, the Buizen 48, a moderate displacement yacht drawing just 1.85m, showed signs of how well it can sail. Though we clocked only 4-5kt, experience says you can expect to maintain about 7kt on most long-distance passages. The ability of the vessel was in evidence in the 1994 Sydney-to-Hobart race when David Gough's Eclipse, the Buizen 48 Boat No. 3, finished in second place overall on handicap. The same boat has now put almost 40,000nm under its keel and at the time of writing was on its way to the Great Barrier Reef from its home port of Hobart.
With credentials such as these, it is clear that no matter what the wind or weather conditions, the Buizen 48 rates as the ideal cruising yacht complete with the luxury of the pilothouse.
Locations: Coffs Harbour - Port Macquarie - Pittwater - Sydney Harbour - Batemans Bay
Price
AU $419,000
Vessel Name
Foxy Lady
Launch Year
1993
Length
48' - 14.63m
Beam
4.45 M
Draft
1.95 M
Displacement
5500 KG
Keel / Ballast
Fin Keel / lead ballast
Vessel Location
Port Macquarie Nsw
Region
New South Wales
Registration
DAB 123N
Designer
Eddie Buizen
Builder
Mastercraft Marine
Hull Material
Fibreglass/GRP
Decks Material
GRP + teak
Engine
Engine 4JH2- UTE Freshwater cooled Diesel 100 hp
Engine Make
Yanmar
Number Engines
1
Horsepower
100
Fuel Type
Diesel
Engine Hours
1200
Propulsion
Shaft drive 3 blade propeller Max Prop -Feathering + spare Gori Prop
Thrusters
Bow thruster
Genset
ONAN 7 KVA
Fuel
900 L
Water
900 L
Dinghy
Highfield 3.1 RIB 9.9HP outboard
Outboard
9.9HP Mercury outboard ( 2021 model)
Covers
Window covers, Cockpit Bimini, dodger infill, side covers, winch covers, BBQ cover, Helm cover.
Accommodation
Master cabin queen, Guest cabin (aft port) queen bed. Guest cabin 2 (midship) has twin single beds.
Cabins
Fans, LED lighting
Berths
6 +
Shower
2 Enclosed hot/cold + cockpit
Toilet
2-Enclosed marine electric + holding tank- Vacuflush (freshwater)
Entertainment
Sound system, TV, Cockpit speakers
Air-Con
Yes 2 - Water cooled, heat /cool
Galley
L shaped
Refrigeration
240 V & eutectic Fridge and Freezer
Freezer
90 L
Stove
Gas stove oven, grill, Gas BBQ, Microwave
Water-Maker
Yes operational
Hot Water
Engine heated or 240V heated.
Ground Tackle
Muir Electric winch, 35 kg Stainless Ultra Anchor, 100M Chain + Spare anchor
Safety Gear
Coastal equipped including emergency tiller, dan buoy, man over board kit, Sea anchor
Bilge Pumps
Electric / manual
Epirb
406 mhz
Life Jackets
Yes with tethers
Flares
Yes
Fire Protection
Fire extinguishers, fire blanket
Electrics
12 /240 V 2- 300 amp lithium (2024) engine + genset battery, 500 W solar panels, 3000 W, Solar regulator, Inverter, battery charger. 240 V stray current blocker.
Electronics / Navigation
Garmin plotter /sounder. Simrad Depth sounder. Raymarine radar. 2- Autopilot, Compass, Clock, Barometer, Wind instruments
Sail Inventory
1- Main sail ( Boom furl ) Furling genoa & staysail, two spinnakers
Main and headsail hydraulic furling systems.
Main and headsail hydraulic furling systems.
Mast / Rigging
Alloy spars, Stainless steel rigging wire, last replaced new 2016.
Forestay replaced new 2024
Boom brake.
Forestay replaced new 2024
Boom brake.
Deck Gear
Dinghy davit including winch, SS rear Targa incl Solar panels.
4 Electric sheet winches, Cockpit cushions, Cockpit table, Fenders, mooring lines,
4 Electric sheet winches, Cockpit cushions, Cockpit table, Fenders, mooring lines,
Remarks
In ship shape order.
Equipped to comfortably cruise and presenting in beautiful condition.
Yachts location Port Macquarie - To schedule inspection Contact Jason
Equipped to comfortably cruise and presenting in beautiful condition.
Yachts location Port Macquarie - To schedule inspection Contact Jason
CONTACT DETAILS
Dealer
Coast Wide Marine
Telephone
Address
9/16 Princes Street Marina
Newport NSW Australia
Newport NSW Australia
Website
MORE BOATS FROM COAST WIDE MARINE