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I agree with you, it's not a black and white situation. I have respect for
the sea but too often, questions about seaworthiness reflects a fear of the unknown. I lost a few friends at sea, one very close and after that loss, for while, I had a real but irrational fear of making any passage longer than 50 NM. It's gone know but respect for the sea is still there. My attitude is more of a "Inch'Allah" type: I do all what I can to have a good boat and be well prepared, to a point and after that, I'll handle it as it comes. Your words: "quasi-mystical insight into the awesome power of the sea" are exactly how I feel. Respect for the sea doesn't mean that passive safety should be an overwhelming priority in choosing a boat or a design, that's what I wanted to say. -- Jacques http://www.bateau.com "Peter Ward" wrote in message ... Just to finish the story - the above-mentioned experience gave me a quasi-mystical insight into the awesome power of the sea. For anyone who's never heard the obscene shrieking of triple screws unsheathed from the brine at full power for minutes at a time as a gargantuan vessel pitches, rolls & yaws simultaneously to the extremes of the envelope; followed by the thunderous explosion of a flat-face bow smashing into a bottomless trough at thousands of tonnes mass ...then loop the sequence for hours on end; it's probably difficult to conjure just what horrors the sea can deliver I now understand why coconuts-in-husk are probably the only *_truly seaworthy_* design. However the 'takeaway' from all of the exceptionally good advice on offer in this thread appears to be that 'seaworthiness is a multi-dimensional challenge' & preparing for the worst involves garnering a wide range of skills & resources ...including a first rate liferaft & epirb. If "fear of the sea" inspires one to take every precaution possible right from the getgo, in order that others will not have to put their lives at risk in order to extract one from what would otherwise be one's watery grave; then surely its not such a bad thing? |