I mostly fly a 160 hp Cherokee 150C (30 years) and an O-200 powered J3 (50+ years). Due to search and rescue flying many years ago, the majority of my J3 landings have been off-airport, primarily sandbars. Most of my Cherokee landings have been on grass (based at a grass strip).
The Cherokee airfoil (65 sub 2 - 415) has a very good maximum lift coefficient (around 1.35 unflapped at 18° vs 1.6 to 1.65 unflapped for the USA-35b Mod) and a very docile stall (moreso than the Cub). If I remember correctly, the Cherokee zero lift AOA is about a negative 3.75 degrees. Drag ratio for both airfoils is about the same at 15° (low 20's). I fly the Cherokee the same way I do a Cub. Short field landing performance is very good, takeoff performance, not so hot. Cherokees are prone to skidding sideways in mud and soggy grass, so I recommend using only the handbrake on those surfaces. I've flown Cherokees with Bush drooped leading edges and wingtips, and with Art Mattson's AMRD VGs (not on the same plane). I like both. I've cruised Art's 150 hp Cherokee 140 'Juliet' at over 14,000 feet in the Denver-Oshkosh Airrace, with an average 3 kt headwind, doing 903 statute miles nonstop with an hour of fuel reserve remaining at the finish line. Juliet's short field performance using Art's takeoff technique is extraordinary (for a Cherokee 140 anyway). That said, I'm not entirely comfortable in it when taking off from very short, unimproved airstrips). Again, Juliet's landing performance is great. Don't attempt a takeoff roll with the yoke in your gut though.

