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"JAXAshby" wrote in message ... | bill you ain't never seen any part of LIS. *if* had seen anything, you would | not make the posts you do, even if you were as drunk as moron. Flattery will get you nowhere jaxxies! CM |
ngtr,
I've been away from LIS for over fifty years but if your looking to see new sailing grounds the Peconic Sound use to be a very pleasant place. Greenport, thru Plum Gut can be damn interesting with some good Restaurants and a good Chandlery. Sag Harbor good marina as well as Greenport's and a Whaling Museum. Also good food and chance to stretch your legs. I give Jax full permission to edit this post due to my time away from the Sound and my aging memory. Good sailing Ole Thom |
t if your looking to see
new sailing grounds the Peconic Sound use to be a very pleasant place. Greenport, thru Plum Gut can be damn interesting with some good Restaurants and a good Chandlery. Sag Harbor good marina as well as Greenport's and a Whaling Museum. Also good food an the Peconic is shallow, and with strong currents. I enjoy Greenport, but you gotta tie up to a mooring (meaning YOU want to). Sag Harbor I have not enjoyed. pretenious to say the least. |
billie, that guy has also sailed his 19 foot daysailor to Boston and back,
twice. I also know a woman who crossed LIS from CT to Plum Gut on a Thistle. She just got back from a trip to the Maritimes in a small cruiser (well under 30 feet). The only real issues going CI to BI is the currents through The Race (they need to be timed for best transport) and some attention to the wind direction when crossing BI Sound. This ain't a North Atlantic crossing in January. It is just a nice trip. How much sailing have you done? Are we talking about a 15-20 footer that can't make any headway to windward if the seas are more than 2 feet, and averages less than 4 knots in ideal scruddy dood, I personally know a guy with a 19 foot day sailor who has gone CI to BI and back perhaps as many as a dozen times. I am not sure he remembers how many times. Ain't no big thing, except to a bathtub sailor. Jax, you are living up to your reputation. I did not even come close to saying that you can't cruise the LIS in a small boat. As a teen, I cruised it extensively in a 14 foot bluejay with a tarp over the boom for shelter. The poster asked about cruising the length of the LIS in what he called a "mini-cruiser". I asked a few pertinent questions, because the answers will change my advice of route and places to consider for stopping along the way. Since you have never sailed, knowing what sort of boat he actually has, and how much time for the trip, won't help you answer intelligently anyway. The answers to his query cannot be found with google, so you may as well shut up now and go back to your kiddy porn. BB |
hey, bill, cut the guy a break. Gardiner's Bay or Block Island Sound, or
whatever. It *is* the Peconic Bay (actually two bays, but what the hey) and both Greenport AND Sag Harbor are on the edge of the Peconic. t if your looking to see new sailing grounds the Peconic Sound use to be a very pleasant place. Greenport, thru Plum Gut can be damn interesting with some good Restaurants and a good Chandlery. Sag Harbor good marina as well as Greenport's and a Whaling Museum. Also good food an the Peconic is shallow, and with strong currents. I enjoy Greenport, but you gotta tie up to a mooring (meaning YOU want to). Sag Harbor I have not enjoyed. pretenious to say the least. There is no such place as the Peconic Sound. Any sailor who has been there would know that. BB |
So, deciding a ----------------- route ------------------
on LIS???? What a hoot! Let's see, should I take the Great Polar Route or the Southern Cross Rooote or the Majestic Central Meander Rout/oot? and where to stop over will be the same regardless of whether he can make 20 miles per day or 60? Okay. of course. LIS ain't that wide. Pick your anchorage by where you are when you want to anchor. Ain't no big thing. BB |
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Yeah, you're really impressive.
BB sorry to have embarrassed you, britchy bill. I really think it ordinary stuff. didn't mean to show you up. |
Horvath wrote:
I once crossed the Atlantic on a raft made out of toothpicks, in December. Uphill, all the way. Twice. That would be the Atlantic Gentleman's Club on Sylvania Avenue in Toledo, Ohio. Cost twice as much as a lap dance, but I'm sure it was worth it. -- // Walt // // There is no Volkl Conspiracy |
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