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On 2008-04-14 13:27:55 -0400, "Wilbur Hubbard"
said: Because they all ARE! It's a biological fact that the elderly are much diminished from their mental and physical capacites they embodied in their prime. It's nothing to be ashamed of but it IS something that should be taken into consideration. To deny aging equates to diminished capacity is to deny reality. But to assert that they are incapable is to deny reality as well. It's not an either-or, but a "both" solution. My wife can't manhandle systems on our boat the way I do. She needs winch handles, for instance, and couldn't easily haul our current anchor and chain by hand. She's a little girl and never had that sort of strength. But she can handle a properly set-up 46' cat as easily as our pocket cruiser once she learns the systems. All it takes is adapting your systems and techniques to the available skills. Sometimes the system needed *is* a smaller boat. We have a few people on our docks who aren't old or particularly incapable, but don't go out single-handed. They should have smaller boats. (Some got sailing dinks for knocking around.) -- Jere Lull Tanzer 28 #4 out of Tolchester, MD Xan's pages: http://web.mac.com/jerelull/iWeb/Xan/ Our BVI trips & tips: http://homepage.mac.com/jerelull/BVI/ |
#2
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posted to rec.boats.cruising,alt.sailing.asa
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On Tue, 15 Apr 2008 01:45:07 GMT, Jere Lull wrote:
On 2008-04-14 13:27:55 -0400, "Wilbur Hubbard" said: Because they all ARE! It's a biological fact that the elderly are much diminished from their mental and physical capacites they embodied in their prime. It's nothing to be ashamed of but it IS something that should be taken into consideration. To deny aging equates to diminished capacity is to deny reality. But to assert that they are incapable is to deny reality as well. It's not an either-or, but a "both" solution. My wife can't manhandle systems on our boat the way I do. She needs winch handles, for instance, and couldn't easily haul our current anchor and chain by hand. She's a little girl and never had that sort of strength. But she can handle a properly set-up 46' cat as easily as our pocket cruiser once she learns the systems. All it takes is adapting your systems and techniques to the available skills. Sometimes the system needed *is* a smaller boat. We have a few people on our docks who aren't old or particularly incapable, but don't go out single-handed. They should have smaller boats. (Some got sailing dinks for knocking around.) Jere I know a couple sailing a 65 foot sloop. Just the two of them. He is a retired scientist, I'd guess about 70, and she is a few years younger. I met them in Phuket and they were on the way to the Med and then back to the east Coast. No crew, just them. The boat in the next slip to me is a fifty foot sloop and the couple that own it sailed it from Seattle. I knew a chap that was 80, he decided to go to America. Sailed north, alone, to Japan and turned right. The last I heard from him he had made Midway Island and the US Navy had a party for him. Even square riggers with their large crews weren't adverse to making things easier. There was a "patented" topsail that could be reefed in two sections. The last of the cargo schooners carrying lumber from Maine to New York sailed with amazingly small crews by using a gasoline engine powered windlass to haul the lines. I can probably go on but the point isn't age it is rigging the boat so that YOU, or YOURS, can sail it. The much maligned Tristan Jones sailed a boat with no legs at all. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct email address for reply) |
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