View Single Post
  #13   Report Post  
posted to rec.boats.sailing,alt.sailing
a425couple a425couple is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Aug 2014
Posts: 24
Default VIDEO: Harder than it looks,,How to Tack and Gybe an F50 //SailGP

On 2/11/2021 1:55 PM, Vir Campestris wrote:
On 10/02/2021 17:50, a425couple wrote:
Neat.

So only the one sail, and it's triangular.
So the sail is kind of same as Hobie Cat.

Looks like all sailors are wearing wet-suits.
And lots of splashing.Â* So you get wet a lot?
Do you ever go out with a passenger?
I take it it is all in salt water?
How far out do you go?
How many months a year do you do it?

Mine can be transported in the back of my
pick-up.Â* And then wheeled from parking lot
to boat ramp with the 'shore wheels'.
A couple of years ago the wife helped me and
we went down to Sand Point
(see similar at nearby:
https://www.sailsandpoint.org/
)
and launched, and sailed across Lake Washington
to near Kirkland and back.
Besides our lake, I have also sailed at Lake Ballinger.
I had contemplated sailing it on Puget Sound,
but an experience of capsizing last year kind of
kills that plan.


I don't wear a wetsuit in summer - but then the lake I usually sail on
is only about 60 acres. ---


So it is in the same magnitude of size as the
Lake Ballinger I mentioned I had sailed in earlier.

Lake Ballinger is a freshwater lake with a surface area of 103 acres
in southern Snohomish County, Washington. It is bordered by the
cities of Mountlake Terrace to the east and Edmonds to the west. Wikipedia
Area: 107 acres
Surface elevation: 292′
Length: 3,051′
Width: 1,969′
Island: Edmount Island
Cities: Mountlake Terrace, Edmonds


When the kids were small I used to take one of them out with me, but
there isn't really room for much more than a 5yo. They're grown up now,
and never took to any sport really except hiking.


We care for one or two grandchildren a couple days each week.
Nice. With them I & we most often go out in the pedal boat,
sometimes the old canoe, and only rarely in the sailboat.
Take care and enjoy your time on the water.