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#1
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Capt. Rob wrote:
Offshore the wind waves are superimposed on top of long ocean swells. Its the combination of these two that can get to people who are normally immune. Most people get used to it within a few days. Read that AGAIN, Doug!!! So Jeff, who sadly owns a cat proves you WRONG! The best is when you trip eachother up!!!! Doug is BUSTED!!! RB 35s5...a no-seasickness design hull, as long as it stays in the slip! NY Uh, and your point is that you stay in LIS because you get seasick? Isn't that what everyone is saying? If you get seasick on a cat in calm weather, the its best you never go cruising. The bendy is the perfect choice for you. |
#2
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Uh, and your point is that you stay in LIS because you get seasick?
Isn't that what everyone is saying? If you get seasick on a cat in calm weather, the its best you never go cruising. Never got seasick in my life and we sailed the cat in pretty choppy conditions. Never said I stay in LIS for any reason. It gets rough even on the sound, or haven't you heard? The cat was awful. I'm hardly the first person to complain about a Cat's motion in chop. Thanks for proving Doug wrong! RB 35s5 NY |
#3
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Capt. Rob wrote:
Uh, and your point is that you stay in LIS because you get seasick? Isn't that what everyone is saying? If you get seasick on a cat in calm weather, the its best you never go cruising. Never got seasick in my life and we sailed the cat in pretty choppy conditions. Never said I stay in LIS for any reason. It gets rough even on the sound, or haven't you heard? The cat was awful. I'm hardly the first person to complain about a Cat's motion in chop. Thanks for proving Doug wrong! You're so full of ****, Booby! If you had really sailed a PDQ you have mentioned it when you did. In fact until a few days ago you always talked about only sailing a Gemini. Suddenly, you had sailed a PDQ and Suzy didn't like it. Then it was a rough ride. Now its a horrible ride. Its pretty clear, booby, that this is another cheap troll and you've never actually seen a PDQ. Busted! |
#4
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You're so full of ****, Booby! If you had really sailed a PDQ you
have mentioned it when you did. In fact until a few days ago you always talked about only sailing a Gemini. Suzanne's friend, Anthony had a PDQ 36 that we sailed twice. I believe you have a larger cat. I said I sailed two cats, ONE of which was a Gemini. At the time I said that I was actually thinking you had a Prout. Calm yourself. I don't think your heart can take it. RB 35s5....a boat that sails like a sailboat should! NY |
#5
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I've sailed on several cats on the SF bay in moderate chop of 4-5 feet.
There's not much to the motion created by this kind of chop. The cats (PDQ and a Seawind 1000) tracked straight and steady, and we could hardly tell there was chop present. The last time I had the 1000 out (a couple of years ago), the wind was a fairly steady 25-30 kts. The boat was so smooth that we forgot to reef until I happened to glance at the wind indicator. -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com "Capt. Rob" wrote in message oups.com... Uh, and your point is that you stay in LIS because you get seasick? Isn't that what everyone is saying? If you get seasick on a cat in calm weather, the its best you never go cruising. Never got seasick in my life and we sailed the cat in pretty choppy conditions. Never said I stay in LIS for any reason. It gets rough even on the sound, or haven't you heard? The cat was awful. I'm hardly the first person to complain about a Cat's motion in chop. Thanks for proving Doug wrong! RB 35s5 NY |