Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#4
![]()
posted to alt.sailing.asa
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"jlrogers±³©" wrote in message
... "Capt. JG" wrote in message easolutions... "jlrogers±³©" wrote in message ... My recent employer, as a going away gift (bribe?), gave me a gift certificate for some sailing time at South Coast Sailing Adventures out of Kemah, TX. I have decided to apply it to sailing lessons, beginning with ASA 101 through basic coastal cruising, and bareboat charting. I figure this will give me an opportunity to find out if I am still capable of sailing and enjoying it as much as 25 years ago. Also, I will be staying aboard rather than spending the nights at a motel during class periods. ($50.00 a night). First up is a two day session beginning next Thursday. Hopefully I will meet some folks in the area who need (or at least will settle for) some inexperienced crew help. Any suggestions or helpful advice will be greatly appreciated. jlrogers±³© "Those who would give up a little freedom to get a little security shall soon have neither." Benjamin Franklin Sounds like a great experience in the offing... I think you'll enjoy the class, and my bet is that it'll reenforce your perceptions about your previous experiences. I'm not sure what the conditions are like in Kemah, but one thing to be mindful of is the proper clothing and preparation w.r.t. avoiding being seasick. Out here, it doesn't take much for the level of anxiety some students have during a class, coupled with the wrong kind of clothing (e.g., too much or too little) and/or too much or too little food in the belly, to cause a problem. -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com Good advice. In four years at sea on a destroyer, and four or five years of sailing, in all kinds of weather, including a couple of typhoons, I was seasick only once and that was on a beautiful day on a flat, glassy sea. It was on the USS Boyd DD544, in the western Pacific. We were chasing a carrier at 34 knots and the ship and her deck plates were vibrating so bad it made me (and most others aboard) as sick as a sea scout on his maiden voyage. It's interesting that sometimes fairly nasty conditions yield no problem, when the benign stuff causes problems. I'm usually more prone as the conditions deteriorate, but I usually recover pretty quickly. I had the opposite situation happen while sailing out of Santa Cruz several years ago. It was a beautiful and calm day with light air and lazy, no-dramatic swells. You could see this from shore. We were on a 45' sloop. Yet, I started to feel quesy on the foredeck. Moved back to the cockpit and felt better, but if I would have stayed forward.... -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Starting batteries for 20 HP | Cruising | |||
starting old merc | General | |||
Starting a new newsgroup? | General | |||
Starting out | Boat Building | |||
Starting Problems | Electronics |