Dumbest boaters on the face of the planet...
On Wed, 28 Feb 2007 12:41:23 -0500, "JimH" wrote:
"Don White" wrote in message
...
"JLH" wrote in message
...
Don, please tell me where you got the idea that I no longer own a boat.
You
sound much like JimH, but he's got an excuse.
--
John H
Sorry.. thought I read that you gave it to the kids and took up golfing.
"I'm planning to give the boat to the kids, although I've not figured out
exactly how to do it yet. But, right now the boat is being stored and
maintained at an annual cost of about $3300, and it's getting very little
use." - JohnH, rec.boats, August, 2006
I couldn't find the message you 'quoted', JimH. But I did find the one
below. Note that I put the whole message here, not my 'version' of the
message.
Perhaps reading comprehension is still a problem?
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On Tue, 15 Aug 2006 12:25:23 -0400, "Eisboch" wrote:
"JohnH" wrote in message
.. .
On Tue, 15 Aug 2006 11:24:28 -0400, Harry Krause
wrote:
JohnH wrote:
I will soon be moving my boat down to the Rappahannock River to make it
available to my kids for their use. Right now the drive for them is much
too long. As part of the deal, we three families will share expenses for
storage, maintenance, and insurance. I will retain title to the boat.
I'd like to draw up an agreement of some sort for such a use of the
boat.
Any ideas on what considerations I should include therein?
John
Second, you are headed for disaster. Family members as boat partners is
a bad idea, especially for a guy like you who keeps his boat very clean.
I agree with Harry .... family or not, multiple people owning the same boat
is not good for relationships. (Ask me how I know).
I subscribe to the idea that a gift should be given with no strings attached
and no expectations as to the gift's future. I remember many, many years
ago (early 70's) I acquired a small, beat up 12 foot aluminum boat.
My father-in-law, being the pac-rat that he is, rummaged around in his
garage and came up with a 1950's vintage 5 hp Johnson outboard that was
literally a basket case. It was completely disassembled and the parts were
contained in three wooden boxes. I played with it for a while, then stored
the boxes of parts away. At some point in our many moves and housecleaning
the boxes got thrown in the dump.
23 years later my father-in-law said, "If you aren't going to use that
outboard I gave you, I'll take it back and see if I can get it running".
Eisboch
It's not a gift. I'll retain title. They can share the major expenses for
the use of the boat. Hell, they've offered to pay *all* the expenses if I
let them use the boat.
--
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***** Have a Spectacular Day! *****
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John
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--
John H
"All decisions are the result of binary thinking."
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