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Capt. Neal®
 
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That Mysterry Mermaid is a knock-out and no mistake.

That is one ugly boat, though. I suppose the beauty Joe sees
is in its functionality. After all that's what us real sailors
value above all else . . . functionality. For Joe and Terry
it functions primarily as a floating home tied indefinitely
to a dock.

CN

"Bart Senior" wrote in message ...
sweet curves on the girl, not the boat.

"Joe" wrote

Kinda plain Doug

Here is a hull with sweet curves, lots of room and solid as steel.

http://community.webshots.com/photo/...42722704VskyTX



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Gilligan
 
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Very nice. I like the simplicity and functionality. You have good taste.

Gilligan


"DSK" wrote in message
...

http://www.yachtworld.com/core/listi..._boats=1312127

The Dutch have a long tradition of building sweet curves into steel
hulls, and this is a good example. They also have a tradition of
building burdensome, shallow, bluff-bowed boats but this is isn't one
like that!

DSK



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Capt. Neal®
 
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Yes, I agree. Joe is simple and functionally illiterate. Hee hee!

CN

"Gilligan" wrote in message .net...
Very nice. I like the simplicity and functionality. You have good taste.

Gilligan


"DSK" wrote in message
...

http://www.yachtworld.com/core/listi..._boats=1312127

The Dutch have a long tradition of building sweet curves into steel
hulls, and this is a good example. They also have a tradition of
building burdensome, shallow, bluff-bowed boats but this is isn't one
like that!

DSK



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Joe
 
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"Hee hee!"

You giggle like a little girl.

Whats up?

Pathetic. Simply pathetic.

Joe

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Remco Moedt
 
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On Mon, 14 Feb 2005 13:16:21 -0500, DSK wrote:

http://www.yachtworld.com/core/listi..._boats=1312127

The Dutch have a long tradition of building sweet curves into steel
hulls, and this is a good example. They also have a tradition of
building burdensome, shallow, bluff-bowed boats but this is isn't one
like that!



Heh, that's only a few miles from my home...



Cheers!


Remco


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DSK
 
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You might be interested to know that there's a botter at our home
sailing club. It's a great boat for the North Carolina estuaries & sounds.

Fresh Breezes- Doug King

Remco Moedt wrote:
Heh, that's only a few miles from my home...


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Remco Moedt
 
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On Tue, 15 Feb 2005 07:06:32 -0500, DSK wrote:

You might be interested to know that there's a botter at our home
sailing club. It's a great boat for the North Carolina estuaries & sounds.


Nice! A Botter was used in the Northern part of the Netherlands,
mainly in the Zuiderzee (now known as IJsselmeer). I live in Zeeland
atm, and there another type of ship was used, named Hoogaars.

http://www.visserman.net/fotos/HB3_big.jpg


Cheers!


Remco







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DSK
 
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You might be interested to know that there's a botter at our home
sailing club. It's a great boat for the North Carolina estuaries & sounds.



Remco Moedt wrote:
Nice! A Botter was used in the Northern part of the Netherlands,
mainly in the Zuiderzee (now known as IJsselmeer). I live in Zeeland
atm, and there another type of ship was used, named Hoogaars.

http://www.visserman.net/fotos/HB3_big.jpg


Thanks for the link. The Hoogaar looks like it's got less bluff a bow,
more "point-y" and possibly faster. I wonder if the word Hoogaar comes
from the same origin as the English word (used as name of type of
vessel) Hooker.

Fresh Breezes- Doug King

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Capt. Neal®
 
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"DSK" blathered thusly:

You might be interested to know that there are botters at our home,
we've been using them for years for dropping acid . . . . We also
use them for all the oil drips and leaks under the diesel in our
trawler.
Fresh Breezes- Doug King


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Bart Senior
 
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The price seems very reasonable for a steel boat.

"DSK" wrote

The Dutch have a long tradition of building sweet curves into steel
hulls, and this is a good example. They also have a tradition of
building burdensome, shallow, bluff-bowed boats but this is isn't one
like that!

DSK





 
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