Thread: Bad Luck
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Edgar
 
Posts: n/a
Default Bad Luck

Pointy bits attract lightning. therefore it is important to keep your head
well down and ensure that your butt is your highest point. Do not move
until all the storm has gone past. Obviously you must be in open ground and
not under a tree.

"Capt. JG" wrote in message
...
Don't lie down either. Crouch on the front part of your feet to reduce

your
connectivity profile with the ground.

--
"j" ganz @@
www.sailnow.com

"Maxprop" wrote in message
nk.net...

"Capt. Rob" wrote in message
ups.com...

It's strange that every lightning strike I hear of at City Island is on
a mooring and never at a slip. Everyone I spoke to says this is just
luck since our marina is just 1/2 mile away from her mooring area.


On a mooring a boat is a solitary object with a metal 'lightning rod'
protruding into the air above. When the charge in the sky attempts to
find a route of least resistance to the opposing charge on the Earth a
solitary mast is serendipitous. At the dock there are many masts
protruding upward, but there are also land-based objects nearby which
probably offer as favorable an opportunity to equalize those charges as
the masts.

The principle is the same for golfers--don't stand alone in the open

with
a 9-iron over held aloft over your head in the thunderstorm unless

meeting
your makers is chief on your list of things to do. Stay in the

proximity
of trees, which will take the strike most likely.

Max