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#1
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I am in touch with Coronado owners the world over. These people
are a happy bunch and they check in with me now and then when they get a chance. Here is an an example of a typical letter from a happy Coronado owner. In this case, a Coronado 25. Name withheld to protect the writer against the likelyhood of theft of his fine vessel. Hi Neal, Just an update on becoming a real sailor... First, I'm not there yet but have been getting good experience. I love my Coronado 25. It's the best small boat ever built. Period. I went through hurricane Claudett. I mean smack dab through it. The eye actually passed right over the top of me. I got tons of pictures if you ever want to see any. I rode it out on the boat. All the other liveaboards were cowering in the marina dayroom. It's probably a good thing for them too as many of their boats got wrecked. One was dismasted. Most of the damage to the boats came from other boats that broke their lines. Mine all held fine and my rigging which is taunt and in excellent condition simply whistled me tunes as the 90mph winds screamed through. I loved it every minute of it. Frankly, I was expecting a little more excitement. The roughest part was the first half of the storm where I took the brunt of the wind on port side aft. After the eye passed, I took the second half pretty much over the bow. I believe that particular storm would have been better weathered at anchor or on a mooring. In that case, the aerodynamics would have harmoniously matched boat and wind. One boat, a Columbia 40 was victim of the harbor masters boat which broke it's dock lines and came down on it. Just cosmetic damage occurred to it but the dock broke in two places. The finger dock completly seperated from the main dock and the concrete on the main dock snapped in two. You can see the styrofoam through the crack. My boat is at the xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Marina in Port xxxxxxxxx, Texas. What a **** hole that town is. But the marina people are all very friendly even if a bit clickish. They are much better people than exist in the town in general though. They are good to each other. I havent moved aboard full time yet but will keep going back and forth from Dallas til November. One of my new buddies and I will be heading down to the keys then. Generally, I'm planning on the Tank Island anchorage or the Key West mooring field but could change on a whim. He has a Hunter 37. If Key West is too much of a fag set up as I keep hearing, I may look for another place. I just need to find a place to work. I have been to KW but did not find it to be too repulsive. There were a lot of pretty cool regular people there but I was only there a week. Anyway, thanks for all your advice. |
#2
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I am in touch with Coronado owners the world over. These people
are a happy bunch Both of them?? RB |
#3
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and they check in with me now and then when
they get a chance. When parole kicks in. RB |
#4
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S'matter Booby? Jealous because nobody talks well of
their flimsy C&Cs? Bwwaaaaaaha ha hahahhahahah ! "CANDChelp" wrote in message ... I am in touch with Coronado owners the world over. These people are a happy bunch Both of them?? RB |
#5
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In article ,
Simple Simon wrote: I am in touch with Coronado owners the world over. These people are a happy bunch and they check in with me now and then when they get a chance. Here is an an example of a typical letter from a happy Coronado owner. In this case, a Coronado 25. Name withheld to protect the writer against the likelyhood of theft of his fine vessel. Hi Neal, Just an update on becoming a real sailor... First, I'm not there yet but have been getting good experience. I love my Coronado 25. It's the best small boat ever built. Period. I went through hurricane Claudett. I mean smack dab through it. The eye actually passed right over the top of me. I got tons of pictures if you ever want to see any. I rode it out on the boat. All the other liveaboards were cowering in the marina dayroom. It's probably a good thing for them too as many of their boats got wrecked. One was dismasted. Most of the damage to the boats came from other boats that broke their lines. Mine all held fine and my rigging which is taunt and in excellent condition simply whistled me tunes as the 90mph winds screamed through. I loved it every minute of it. Frankly, I was expecting a little more excitement. The roughest part was the first half of the storm where I took the brunt of the wind on port side aft. After the eye passed, I took the second half pretty much over the bow. I believe that particular storm would have been better weathered at anchor or on a mooring. In that case, the aerodynamics would have harmoniously matched boat and wind. One boat, a Columbia 40 was victim of the harbor masters boat which broke it's dock lines and came down on it. Just cosmetic damage occurred to it but the dock broke in two places. The finger dock completly seperated from the main dock and the concrete on the main dock snapped in two. You can see the styrofoam through the crack. My boat is at the xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Marina in Port xxxxxxxxx, Texas. What a **** hole that town is. But the marina people are all very friendly even if a bit clickish. They are much better people than exist in the town in general though. They are good to each other. I havent moved aboard full time yet but will keep going back and forth from Dallas til November. One of my new buddies and I will be heading down to the keys then. Generally, I'm planning on the Tank Island anchorage or the Key West mooring field but could change on a whim. He has a Hunter 37. If Key West is too much of a fag set up as I keep hearing, I may look for another place. I just need to find a place to work. I have been to KW but did not find it to be too repulsive. There were a lot of pretty cool regular people there but I was only there a week. Anyway, thanks for all your advice. ----== Posted via Newsfeed.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeed.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= 19 East/West-Coast Specialized Servers - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
#6
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I don't understand your lengthy comments, Ronald.
"Ronald Hugh Roberts" wrote in message ... In article , Simple Simon wrote: I am in touch with Coronado owners the world over. These people are a happy bunch and they check in with me now and then when they get a chance. Here is an an example of a typical letter from a happy Coronado owner. In this case, a Coronado 25. Name withheld to protect the writer against the likelyhood of theft of his fine vessel. Hi Neal, Just an update on becoming a real sailor... First, I'm not there yet but have been getting good experience. I love my Coronado 25. It's the best small boat ever built. Period. I went through hurricane Claudett. I mean smack dab through it. The eye actually passed right over the top of me. I got tons of pictures if you ever want to see any. I rode it out on the boat. All the other liveaboards were cowering in the marina dayroom. It's probably a good thing for them too as many of their boats got wrecked. One was dismasted. Most of the damage to the boats came from other boats that broke their lines. Mine all held fine and my rigging which is taunt and in excellent condition simply whistled me tunes as the 90mph winds screamed through. I loved it every minute of it. Frankly, I was expecting a little more excitement. The roughest part was the first half of the storm where I took the brunt of the wind on port side aft. After the eye passed, I took the second half pretty much over the bow. I believe that particular storm would have been better weathered at anchor or on a mooring. In that case, the aerodynamics would have harmoniously matched boat and wind. One boat, a Columbia 40 was victim of the harbor masters boat which broke it's dock lines and came down on it. Just cosmetic damage occurred to it but the dock broke in two places. The finger dock completly seperated from the main dock and the concrete on the main dock snapped in two. You can see the styrofoam through the crack. My boat is at the xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Marina in Port xxxxxxxxx, Texas. What a **** hole that town is. But the marina people are all very friendly even if a bit clickish. They are much better people than exist in the town in general though. They are good to each other. I havent moved aboard full time yet but will keep going back and forth from Dallas til November. One of my new buddies and I will be heading down to the keys then. Generally, I'm planning on the Tank Island anchorage or the Key West mooring field but could change on a whim. He has a Hunter 37. If Key West is too much of a fag set up as I keep hearing, I may look for another place. I just need to find a place to work. I have been to KW but did not find it to be too repulsive. There were a lot of pretty cool regular people there but I was only there a week. Anyway, thanks for all your advice. ----== Posted via Newsfeed.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeed.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= 19 East/West-Coast Specialized Servers - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
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