Iridium
			 
			 
			
		
		
		
			
			On Thu, 2 Aug 2007 12:38:28 -0400, "Wilbur Hubbard" 
 wrote: 
 
 
 wrote in message  
..  . 
 On Wed, 1 Aug 2007 15:48:32 -0400, "Wilbur Hubbard" 
  wrote: 
 
 
"Rusty" blank wrote in message 
  om... 
I think it's time to get an Iridium satellite phone. We're gong to  
have 
way 
 too much time away from cell sites. 
 
 Any suggestions as to a cruiser-friendly source of hardware and 
 airtime? 
 
 Thanks, 
 Rusty 
 
 
It's my observation that people who have to have a phone so they can 
blabbermouth 24/7 while out cruising should just stay home. If you  
need 
to be plugged in to the communications grid 24/7 you're not cut out  
for 
cruising - just stay home and leave the waterways open for real 
cruisers, please.  Today's men are turning into girly men. Bunch of 
sissies.  Spend the money on a EPIRB instead. Cruise and try shutting 
your mouth for a week or a month. You might learn something for the 
first time in your life. 
 
Wilbur Hubbard 
 
 
 Wilbur, 
 
 While I realize that weather is of little interest to you on your 
 trailer-sailer anchored in your snug little Bayou but to people out 
 there on the water it is one of their primary concerns and there are 
 three basic ways to get weather reports once you're out of sight of 
 land (1) H.F. radio, (2) Iridium phone or (3) satellite (immersat, for 
 example). 
 
 I've done cost comparisons and going from nothing to a complete 
 installation is cheaper using Iridium so more and more cruisers are 
 opting for Iridium as weather reports through Iridium can be received 
 24 hours a day while H.F. is greatly dependent upon daily propagation 
 variations. 
 
 As you say, " try shutting your mouth for a week or a month. You might 
 learn something for the first time in your life." 
 
 
Correction, there is a fourth and more reliable way of getting weather  
reports. That's knowing how to look at the glass and the sky and being  
able to interpret what they tell you for your part of the world. How do  
you think sailors got around before your exclusive reliance on  
technology? 
 
Your little do-it-like-a-lubber screed simply reinforces my opinion that  
you're no sailor. 
But, then again, anybody who has good opportunity to do coastal cruising  
in your part of the world, (considered premiere cruising grounds) but  
instead sits in a marina on the Internet probably won't ever understand  
that. 
 
Wilbur Hubbard  
 
Wilbur, that is one of the stupidest posts I've ever had the 
misfortune to read.  
 
You are right, years ago people didn't have any technology and relied 
on all kind of signs and portents to determine what to do.  
 
Originally no one could figure out how where they were once they were 
out of sight of land. Then came the compass so we could tell what 
direction we were going. Then somebody made a clock that would keep 
accurate time and people learned how to take sun shots and we got even 
better at knowing where we were, now we have GPS and we know down to a 
yard, or so exactly where we are. 
 
Sure, there a lot of old sailor's rhymes and jingles -- Red sky at 
night, sailor's delight....., most of them wildly inaccurate, but now 
we have a little more science in weather forecasting. Satellites, 
weather buoys, there is even a US Navy buoy system in most oceans 
where you can get real time wave height, and you want to go back to 
looking at clouds to predict the weather? Why? Because you think it is 
"lubberly" to use technology? 
 
Throughout history those who adopted the latest technology win and 
those who stuck with the old traditional ways end up in the garbage 
can. 
 
Hubert, do a little reading about the Tea Clippers. They sailed the 
way you are recommending -- lousy charts, poor navigation systems, no 
communications, no weather information except clouds. Real Sailor! No 
Lubbers here! 
 
And the average life of a tea clipper was something like two years. 
Their records read "lost on Scudder's Bank", "demasted in Bay of 
Bengal", "believed sunk in typhoon in S. China Seas"....... 
 
If you want to go back to the days of Salt Junk and Biscuits for 
breakfast, pulling ropes by hand and drowning because you ran into a 
typhoon that you didn't know was coming then you are welcome to it. 
 
But for me, I'm going to have every technical advantage I can get. 
 
 
 
Bruce in Bangkok 
(brucepaigeATgmailDOTcom) 
		 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
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