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Thank you, sir! Glad somebody understands
my point. I didn't really expect the tugboat captains to understand but my love of the sea is so great that I thought I'd give them a chance to see how they are but glorified truck drivers and far less a sailor than even week-end sailors, for example, who go to sea only a day or so at a time. It is really a shame that they are so afraid to be on their own that they have to surround themselves with an entire crew of people and tons and tons of metal driven in haste, noise and polluted air that totally divorces them from any real intimacy with Mother Nature at her finest - the open ocean experienced up close and personal. S.Simon - Master Mariner and USCG licensed Merchant Marine Officer who's happier sailing his small yacht than commanding the largest ship of the line. "Scrappie" wrote in message ink.net... Excellent reasoning Simon! Nothing beats taking to the sea, singlehanded in a small craft. These tugboats captains just live and work on board a spartan ocean liner. The ship is too big and too far removed from the water to give them any sense of the sea. It's the same as an airline pilot claiming he is a bird. Scrappie "Simple Simon" wrote in message ... I've come to a conclusion after having to deal with the likes of Shen44, otnmbrd, and RickyTugs and some others this past year or so that perhaps I have misjudged their motives. I think I owe them all an apology because I underestimated their love of the sea. It dawned on me as I was pedaling to the store a little while ago that, given all their other shortcomings and faults, their love of the sea must be a match or greater than that of the average sailor. Why did I come to this conclusion? Easy. Just examine what they do. They sit in a wheelhouse surrounded by modern technology. They breath air-conditioned air full of noxious fumes from the operation of the ship. They are subject to constant vibration and unnatural motion. Noise is a constant companion. They even admit to becoming seasick on a regular basis. They spend their time alternately gazing at a radar screen a Playboy Magazine and perhaps a video tape or television. If they are willing to ruin their health and well-being and put up with such conditions just to say they work at sea then they must truly love the sea in order to sacrifice everything to it. What one must wonder, though, is why is it they are either too stupid or too afraid to go to sea in a small sailing yacht where they can commune with their love of the sea and actually enjoy what they're doing being close to the sea in a healthy and challenging environment. Go figure! S.Simon - Master Mariner |
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