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I never said "all." I said multihullers. Perhaps they were drunk?
Hobies flying? no way. they heel. "Nav" wrote in message ... Jonathan Ganz wrote: I've never heard anyone on a multihull say this. I have heard it from mono sailors. From multihullers I hear, "I was going along, flying the port hull, and we a gust hit and we capsized." I see. Are you saying multihull sailors can't speak properly? Do they all just capsaize in gusts - s'funny the only problem I can really remember on Hobies was a nasty tendency to pitchpole when really flying -but then again that might faulty memory. Cheers Don't they have a command of the english language "Nav" wrote in message ... Donal wrote: "Nav" wrote in message ... Heeled only means tilted and would include listing. The catamaran _is_ heeled -it may even lift a hull out if heeled far enough! Live with it -he's right (or look it up yourself in the OED). I know that the dictionary says that it is heeled when it is sailing on one hull. However, I dispute the fact that a real sailor would ever use the term "heeled" to describe the excitement that accompanies the act of sailing a Hobie 15 on a single hull. No? How about "She heeled over so far that I almost lost control and capsized". Sailors who have been there would immediately empathize. "Heeled" is dull. "A hull" is exciting! They are two completely different things - to any sailor who has actually experienced them. The inability to use language precisely is not something to be cherished. Why not reduce it to a gutteral " It was WOW man and I mean WOW!" and then we will all know what you are talking about... Cheers |
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