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#1
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#2
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Wow! Kind of a sad auction.
I wish her well. RB |
#3
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Vito wrote:
http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/ws/eB...0457 906&rd=1 "Must read"?? You're kidding... do you suppose that the sob story is anything but a shuck to get more & higher bids? Check this out. http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll...tem=4146756343 This ebay auction was a riot- one of the funniest things I've seen in a long time. Unfortunately it's not entirely nonfictional. I began to wonder if this guy posts here at AltSA.... http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/htm...rodeur29m.html DSK |
#4
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Wow! Kind of a sad auction.
I wish her well. RB reports from several sources claiming to be on scene have it as a fake. |
#6
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On Mon, 7 Jun 2004 09:06:40 -0400, "Vito" wrote:
http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/ws/eB...0457 906&rd=1 It must be a community property state...the woman gets the property and the man has to leave the community ![]() Actually I am more than a bit cynical of such tales of woe on the internet to sell things. It has the air of one of those urban legends we used to hear before the internet...you know, like the guy who answers the newpaper ad to buy the nearly new (insert desireable auto name here) for a pittance. Turns out the guy ran off with his secretary and asks the (ex)wife to sell the car and forward him the proceeds. Really, it is true, my cousin's barber knows the guy... ![]() I'll say one thing, if they bought that boat from a nonprofit, you can be reasonably certain that it is a POS. |
#7
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That's not completely true in our case. We've sold several small boats
that didn't fit in our program, but we completely refurbished them first. The ones we didn't refurbish, we priced accordingly. -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com "felton" wrote in message ... On Mon, 7 Jun 2004 09:06:40 -0400, "Vito" wrote: http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/ws/eB...gory=63730&ite m=2480457906&rd=1 It must be a community property state...the woman gets the property and the man has to leave the community ![]() Actually I am more than a bit cynical of such tales of woe on the internet to sell things. It has the air of one of those urban legends we used to hear before the internet...you know, like the guy who answers the newpaper ad to buy the nearly new (insert desireable auto name here) for a pittance. Turns out the guy ran off with his secretary and asks the (ex)wife to sell the car and forward him the proceeds. Really, it is true, my cousin's barber knows the guy... ![]() I'll say one thing, if they bought that boat from a nonprofit, you can be reasonably certain that it is a POS. |
#8
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On Mon, 7 Jun 2004 12:15:55 -0700, "Jonathan Ganz"
wrote: That's not completely true in our case. We've sold several small boats that didn't fit in our program, but we completely refurbished them first. The ones we didn't refurbish, we priced accordingly. That is good to know. Our Power Squadron meetings used to take place in a facility that also served as a "nonprofit" collection center for boats and automobile donations for another organization. What a bunch of crap in that parking lot every time I would go to a meeting or attend a class ![]() same ways that automotive wrecking/salvage/recycling yards are interesting, but I never saw anything that appeared salvageable. Glad to hear that you guys are resurrecting boats and putting them back on the water. |
#9
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I'd say it's about 50/50. Some are just not worth it, and we
usually sell parts or even scrap them. I got my boat that way. It had rainwater in it and a bunch of broken stuff, but the hull was sound. They were getting ready to trash it, but I elected to save it... at least I knew what I was getting into. -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com "felton" wrote in message ... On Mon, 7 Jun 2004 12:15:55 -0700, "Jonathan Ganz" wrote: That's not completely true in our case. We've sold several small boats that didn't fit in our program, but we completely refurbished them first. The ones we didn't refurbish, we priced accordingly. That is good to know. Our Power Squadron meetings used to take place in a facility that also served as a "nonprofit" collection center for boats and automobile donations for another organization. What a bunch of crap in that parking lot every time I would go to a meeting or attend a class ![]() same ways that automotive wrecking/salvage/recycling yards are interesting, but I never saw anything that appeared salvageable. Glad to hear that you guys are resurrecting boats and putting them back on the water. |
#10
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On Mon, 7 Jun 2004 14:15:47 -0700, "Jonathan Ganz"
wrote: I'd say it's about 50/50. Some are just not worth it, and we usually sell parts or even scrap them. I got my boat that way. It had rainwater in it and a bunch of broken stuff, but the hull was sound. They were getting ready to trash it, but I elected to save it... at least I knew what I was getting into. In a weak moment, I was considering buying a "project" Boston Whaler Harpoon a few weeks ago. I have been wanting a sailing dinghy to sail in the evenings at a lake closer to home as my boat is an hour and a half (one way) for me. What a wreck. It was half full of water, missing the rudder/tiller and had a nest of ducks living in it, eggs and all. The guy wasn't exactly giving it away, either ![]() |
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