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#31
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There are three kinds of sailors... those who've run aground,
those who will run aground, and those who've lied about not running aground. "John Cairns" wrote in message ... Somebody told me once that if you haven't run aground, you're not a sailor. John Cairns "Scout" wrote in message ... Thanks Katy, I went from age 15 to 43 without sailing a day, absorbed and distracted with life's other pursuits. But the joy of sailing that I had found in my youth stayed with me; it became a dream deferred. My father, an old navy man, found a Styrofoam sailboat for me when I was about 13, I think it was called Snark or something. Anyway, he would anchor his cabin cruiser at certain points, and I would launch my sailboat from his boat. I would sail it for hours around Long Beach Island, capsizing it, swimming it to shore, playing games (like seeing how close I could come to Dad's boat without hitting it), and just generally loving it. To put things in a time perspective, I was sailing it past Dad's boat when he came out and told me he had just heard over the radio that Neil Armstrong had walked on the moon (July 69). When the boat was stolen, I was heartbroken and didn't manage to get another until now. But I remembered two things distinctly from my childhood sailing experiences: it's incredibly exciting to harness a good breeze and, the damned things flip easy! With that in mind, I decided to buy a more serious boat (all things being relative, I'm comparing my current boat to a 12' Styrofoam toy). Here's what I said: I'm looking for a boat I can afford to sink, or destroy, if it comes to it. I then found this Starwind, with a trailer and a new Honda outboard, full sails, needed some work, blah blah blah, for $2800. I've beaten it a bit, unintentionally of course. I've not only gone aground, but slammed it on a sandbar by missing the inlet channel and getting dropped by a wave onto the sandy bottom, I've forgotten to put the engine in neutral while docking, and the grimaced when I realized the chomping sound I heard was my prop taking bites out of my rudder, I stepped my mast, lost my balance, and grimaced some more as the mast tilted a few degrees to port and ripped out two base screws, I dropped my boat on a winch, while trying to dry dock it in my yard, and put a hole in the hull, and... plenty of other neat stuff. But I've learned a lot too. I think I'm ready for comfort, a bit more safety, and of course, bigger, costlier mistakes! Scout |
#32
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yep, similar to an old motorcycling adage, "two kinds of riders: those who
have fallen, and those who have not fallen yet." Scout "Jonathan Ganz" wrote There are three kinds of sailors... those who've run aground, those who will run aground, and those who've lied about not running aground. |
#33
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Scout,
No matter what you read here or on any other ng, ListServ, or whatever, sailing is the best way to learn how to sail. The discussions here of a technical nature can be interesting and sometimes fun, but the reality is that some of the posters here are...how shall I put this politely?....erudite techno-heads?...you know...college professor types with advanced degrees. They do know how to sail...very well...but they just can't seem to get away from dissecting everything to death...(to wit: the Bernoulli vs Newtonian force stuff...who cares as long s it goes like it's supposed to?) The saving grace is that they haven't sunk so low into their academia that they still can't rise up and act human at times. And Scout, all those kids you think you're getting rid of within the next few years? Ain't gonna happen...they'll take turns over the years coming back, just to see if you've kept your parental skills honed. Go out there and buy a bigger boat (with a survey, please) and get sailing! -- katysails s/v Chanteuse Kirie Elite 32 http://katysails.tripod.com "Women and cats will do as they please, and men and dogs should relax and get used to the idea." - Robert A. Heinlein |
#34
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used to hear,'' if you don't crash, you're not going fast enough''.
I always rode at 98%. ![]() Scotty "Scout" wrote in message ... yep, similar to an old motorcycling adage, "two kinds of riders: those who have fallen, and those who have not fallen yet." Scout "Jonathan Ganz" wrote There are three kinds of sailors... those who've run aground, those who will run aground, and those who've lied about not running aground. |
#35
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On Sat, 2 Aug 2003 07:04:39 -0400, "Scout" wrote:
yep, similar to an old motorcycling adage, "two kinds of riders: those who have fallen, and those who have not fallen yet." Theres 10 types of people in the world. Those that get binary, and those that don't get binary. S/V Cat's Meow http://www.catsmeow.org |
#36
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You plan to stay on the Joisey shore? Just asking because sailing the Chessy
favours a shallow draft. Scotty "Scout" wrote in message ... Thanks for the O'Day background. We're tall too and I'd like to be able to stand inside the cabin, so that's a consideration. I'm getting it narrowed down slowly but surely. I've read a lot of discussion here regarding hull types, keel types, etc. I plan on staying with a fiberglass mono-hull. I prefer stability to speed, but would like to keep up in a group sail (my marina organizes group coastal sails). I'm not real interested in racing (I have enough stress in my life) but want to be able to extract the best performance possible from my boat. I'm leaning away from swing keels and wing-keels, and more toward a fixed or full keel. I'm not rushing out to buy anything, I'm just keeping my eyes open, because I'm slowly accepting how much there is to know about sailing (efficiently). I base that statement on the number of threads posted here in which I'm lost. Added to that is the fact that we are moving soon, and my wife has her heart set on something grand, we have one kid who just graduated college, two more still in college, a daughter hinting about a wedding, etc., and I'm thinking that when I buy this boat, it had better be the right one because it may be the last one for a long, long time. I'm crawling up the learning curve with the help of this group. I don't think a person could buy a book with the kind of information, honesty, and debate seen here everyday, and certainly not with as many laughs. BTW, I've purchased a couple of professional vhs videos/dvd's on sail trimming, rough weather sailing, etc. I'd be willing to mail them around to any interested parties, just promise to mail them back. Anyone interested can email me. First come first serve kind of thing, but no problem if they go through a circuit. Scout "katysails" wrote Ahem...Scout...ask former O'Day owners about O'Days...not former Catalina people...We have owned 2 O'Days. Bith were great boats, although the 22 was a trifle squashy inside *we're both tall people* We sailed the crud out of the 22 and then went on to the 27...by the time we were ready to go up from there, the options decreased since real O'Day's were amde before 1982 and we didn't want that old of a boat. The newer ones were made Lear siegler from whatever Pearson bought from O'Day....they went to what they termed a European interior...pretty bleak... |
#37
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Well said Mom.
You might want to set your word wrap. If you do, click on tools; options; send; (in news sending format), plain text settings; automaticly wrap text at ___ charachters, when sending. I use 76. Scotty "katysails" wrote in message ... Scout, No matter what you read here or on any other ng, ListServ, or whatever, sailing is the best way to learn how to sail. The discussions here of a technical nature can be interesting and sometimes fun, but the reality is that some of the posters here are...how shall I put this politely?....erudite techno-heads?...you know...college professor types with advanced degrees. They do know how to sail...very well...but they just can't seem to get away from dissecting everything to death...(to wit: the Bernoulli vs Newtonian force stuff...who cares as long s it goes like it's supposed to?) The saving grace is that they haven't sunk so low into their academia that they still can't rise up and act human at times. And Scout, all those kids you think you're getting rid of within the next few years? Ain't gonna happen...they'll take turns over the years coming back, just to see if you've kept your parental skills honed. Go out there and buy a bigger boat (with a survey, please) and get sailing! -- katysails s/v Chanteuse Kirie Elite 32 http://katysails.tripod.com "Women and cats will do as they please, and men and dogs should relax and get used to the idea." - Robert A. Heinlein |
#38
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I had planned to spend a lot of time in the Chessy, with occasional jaunts
along the coast. All I want is everything! Scout "Scott Vernon" wrote You plan to stay on the Joisey shore? Just asking because sailing the Chessy favours a shallow draft. |
#39
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![]() Theres 10 types of people in the world. Those that get binary, and those that don't get binary. That's funny....do you think Scott will get it? -- katysails s/v Chanteuse Kirie Elite 32 http://katysails.tripod.com "Women and cats will do as they please, and men and dogs should relax and get used to the idea." - Robert A. Heinlein |
#40
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![]() Daniel and Issac I don't think Isaac made any money from it...don't know about Daniel... -- katysails s/v Chanteuse Kirie Elite 32 http://katysails.tripod.com "Women and cats will do as they please, and men and dogs should relax and get used to the idea." - Robert A. Heinlein |
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