Gulet Beyaz Gul B at 28 meters, she's not the biggest gulet in the water. She's not trying to be. What she offers is something rarer: a layout designed for actual families, not just couples and singles. Launched in 2004 and refit in 2013, she's spent nearly two decades learning what makes groups come back together at the end of the day.
Every family knows the struggle. You want to travel together.…
Gulet Beyaz Gul B at 28 meters, she’s not the biggest gulet in the water. She’s not trying to be. What she offers is something rarer: a layout designed for actual families, not just couples and singles. Launched in 2004 and refit in 2013, she’s spent nearly two decades learning what makes groups come back together at the end of the day.
Every family knows the struggle. You want to travel together. You want meals together, sunsets together, those unplanned moments that become the stories you tell for years. But then bedtime comes, and suddenly everyone scatters across a hotel, or worse—across multiple boats. The togetherness you came for starts slipping away.
Gulet Beyaz Gül B was built by people who noticed this problem and decided to fix it.
The Cabins Where Nobody Gets Left Out
Six cabins sleep sixteen. Two doubles for couples who need their privacy. Four triples for everyone else—parents with kids, three friends traveling together, grandparents with a grandchild who refuses to sleep anywhere else . Every cabin has its own bathroom, its own shower, its own air conditioning that actually works when the Mediterranean sun has done its worst .
The triple cabins are the secret weapon here. While other boats treat three people as an afterthought—a double with a pullout that nobody really fits—Gulet Beyaz Gül B built proper rooms. Real beds. Real space. Room to move. Room to breathe. Room for the kind of conversations that happen when families aren’t spread across separate vessels .
What Twenty-Eight Meters Feels Like
At 28 meters long with a 7.4-meter beam, she’s got space to spare . The 2.2-meter draft lets her slip into shallow coves where bigger boats can’t follow—the kind of places where the water turns that impossible shade of turquoise and you swim alone for hours, wondering if anyone else on earth knows this spot exists .
A 120 HP engine moves her at 8-9 knots. Two thousand liters of fuel, thirty-five hundred liters of fresh water. She can stay out for days, exploring places that feel like they belong to you alone .
The Decks That Hold Everyone
Sunbath cushions and chairs for every guest. Not “enough for most.” For every single person who steps aboard . The aft deck wraps around a dining table where meals stretch into hours—breakfast as Bozburun harbor wakes up, lunch after swimming in water so clear you can count the fish beneath you, dinner under stars that don’t exist anywhere near city lights .
The foredeck offers quiet corners for reading or napping. A deck shower waits for when you climb back aboard, salt water rinsing away, cold drinks appearing as if summoned. The saloon has an LCD TV and DVD player for rainy moments, but most guests find they use them less than expected. The real entertainment is outside.
What Gulet Beyaz Gül B Carries
Snorkel gear for exploring the world below. Fishing equipment for patient souls who want to try their luck. A dinghy with motor to take you ashore—free of charge, because Gulet Beyaz Gül B isn’t about adding costs to every request . Optional toys can be arranged for those who need more speed, more thrills, more reasons to laugh until their cheeks ache.
The Crew Who Makes It Look Effortless
Three people run this boat—captain, chef, sailor. They’ve been together long enough that they don’t need to discuss who does what. The captain knows every hidden bay between Bozburun and Göcek, every anchorage where the water stays calm, every sunset spot that will make you reach for your phone then realize no photo could ever capture it . The chef transforms fresh ingredients into meals that somehow please everyone, from the picky eater to the food snob. The sailor appears when needed, disappears when not, moves through the boat like a helpful presence rather than an intrusive one .
Where Gulet Beyaz Gül B Goes
Bozburun is home, where shipyards have been building boats for generations and the water still runs clear enough to see bottom at twenty feet . Marmaris offers nightlife, shopping, the kind of bustling energy that feels exciting after days of solitude. Fethiye brings the Blue Lagoon and Butterfly Valley—waterfalls that tumble onto pristine beaches, accessible only by sea . Göcek’s twelve islands hide coves you’ll swear no one has ever found before .
The Greek Islands wait just across the water—Rhodes, Symi, Kos—different flags, different flavors, the same sea binding them all together .
The Feeling Gulet Beyaz Gül B Leaves
Sixteen people step aboard Gulet Beyaz Gül B as a group. A week later, they step off closer than when they arrived. Not because the boat forced togetherness—but because she made it possible. Parents and kids in the same triple cabin, waking up together, laughing about someone’s snoring. Meals at the same table, everyone present, no one missing. Sunsets watched from the same deck, arms around shoulders, the kind of silence that doesn’t need filling .
That’s what 28 meters and six cabins and a crew who cares can do. That’s Gulet Beyaz Gül B. Named for a white rose. Built for families who refuse to be separated.