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You are an idiot. Why don't you get two wheels and some electric winches.
-- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com "Jim Cate" wrote in message ... katysails wrote: Does that answer your question Katy? Yeah...it says a lot about you..... The boat has two knot meters (one providing speed over the bottom and another showing speed through the water; I have a hand-held anemometer; it has a GPS chartreader, several sources of weather reports, etc. With these instruments plus observations of the effects of the wind on the boat and the water, and since I don't intend to make long blue water voyages, I don't see the great urgency of having a permanent anemometer on board. Even if I get into racing, I think the two knotmeters are more important for providing an immediate indication of how the boat is doing under the particular conditions, and how it is responding to adjustments in the sails, rigging, etc. In other words, if changes in the sails under the particular wind conditions result in better speed, pointing, etc., then the boat is doing what I want it to do. Katy, I'm not sure you have a proper appreciation for the great traditions and history of sailing through the years. - With respect to the suggestion that the Macs aren't real sailing vessels because most of the dealers don't advertise the availability of anemometers for them, did Columbus, or Magellan, or the captain of the Mayflower, etc., have anemometers onboard their vessels? Did the clipper ships, or even more modern, transitional sailing vessels? For example, The Elissa, launched in 1873, on which I crewed several years, was in service for so many years that it is thought to have more miles at sea than any other sailing vessel, all without the benefits of an anemometer. I also don't recall the Vikings having anemometers aboard their boats, or the Greeks or Romans, etc., - In other words, are you saying that these people were not true SAILORS, or that their ships weren't true SAILBOATS because they didn't have anemometers? For thousands of years sailors have been carrying on the great traditions and adventures of sailing relying on their own observations of wind and sea conditions. They navigated and sailed around the world under the most extreme conditions relying on their observations of current conditions interpreted in light of their experience at sea, their training, and their knowledge of the characteristics of their respective vessels. - I hope to do the same with my new Mac 26M, with or without a permanently mounted anemometer. Jim |
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