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#11
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![]() "KLC Lewis" wrote in message et... "Wilbur Hubbard" wrote in message anews.com... "KLC Lewis" wrote in message et... Around the Horn, several times and in both directions? One would think that this accomplishment would be lauded in the annals of sailing. Do you feel slighted to have been so widely and universally ignored? You're new around here, Karin, so you can be forgiven for not being aware of my sailing philosophy. I sail strictly for the sake of my own personal sailing satisfaction. I do it right and I never fail at it. My voyages have always been and remain quite trouble-free and routine. However, I feel it is an uttermost waste of time and space to attempt to share my accomplishments and acquired expertise with those who will never be able to understand any of it, let alone emulate it. Therefore, my accomplishments remain undocumented for the general public which continues to display little or no ability to appreciate them in the first place. Wilbur Hubbard Not so new, William. I've been participating in this forum off and on since 1995. The idea of your hiding your light under a bushel is amusing. You've got to know that I, Wilbur Hubbard, am a staunch conservative/libertarian/objectivist. Those three words should clue you in on my value system. They indicate that I am satisfied with the rock solid, foundational, real world substance which defines my life and deeds. I have no need, whatsoever, to rely upon outgoing braggadocio and incoming accolades to realize my true God-given worth. The reason most people brag about their doings and insist a spotlight shine upon them at all times so the whole world can see them is because they have no real substance in their pitiful lives. Rather than being happy with whom they are and with what they accomplish they become miserable publicity hounds seeking to skew reality by believing they are the apple of everybody else's eye. This is a totally untenable situation in which the seeker of accolades is doomed to experience a miserable life. If you cannot be satisfied with yourself then no outside source can provide that satisfaction for you Wilbur Hubbard |
#12
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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slide wrote:
You haven't specified if you are single handing. I'd not try the Canal single handed esp as a new seaman. As to the Horn, the W to E transit is at least possible for a new sailor, but again, single handing? Aside from trying stuff like the NW passage, I can't think of a tougher thing than the Horn. Well if you want tougher, what about going out on your own for an evening stroll in down-town Panama City or Colon? ;-) |
#13
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On Dec 22, 12:07*pm, IanM wrote:
slide wrote: You haven't specified if you are single handing. I'd not try the Canal single handed esp as a new seaman. As to the Horn, the W to E transit is at least possible for a new sailor, but again, single handing? Aside from trying stuff like the NW passage, I can't think of a tougher thing than the Horn. Well if you want tougher, what about going out on your own for an evening stroll in down-town Panama City or Colon? ;-) thats not tougher its just suicidal. |
#14
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On Dec 22, 8:23*am, "Janet O'Leary"
wrote: Looking at a boat book.. *wondering about the boats that go from S Calif all the way to the Panama Canal . and through. How far is that? *And does it cost lots of money to go through the canal? Any of you world cruisers ever do this? Tell all,, interested in learning. its an easy run down from so cal, lots to see and some really nice ports. distance you can figure on a simple map. IIRC the cost is around that qoted by slide. I would say hitting the crack is easy but you would want some other folks on the boat for the trip across. not so much for handeling as for defence. the guys lock side will try to charge you "tips" (Bribes), and other things (on ocasion out and out lercenry).so having a couple folks who can do stuff while you navigate is a good idea. the horn would be fun but not realistic for a single hander unless you spent a goodly bit of time making sure you are rounding at the correct time. its a bit rough on the pointy end of patigonia. |
#15
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On Mon, 22 Dec 2008 11:39:10 -0500, "Wilbur Hubbard"
wrote: My voyages have always been and remain quite trouble-free and routine. And always successfully reaching the far end of the bath tub with his maintenance free rubber duck. |
#16
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On Mon, 22 Dec 2008 12:39:18 -0800 (PST), Two meter troll
wrote: its an easy run down from so cal, lots to see and some really nice ports. distance you can figure on a simple map. Can we assume that you have not heard of the infamous Gulf of Tehuantepec and its winds, the "Tehuantepeckers" ? http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q...r+&btnG=Search http://oldseals.com/misty/page9.htm http://www.noonsite.com/Members/doina/R2007-03-02-2 |
#17
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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On Mon, 22 Dec 2008 12:39:18 -0800 (PST), Two meter troll
wrote: On Dec 22, 8:23*am, "Janet O'Leary" wrote: Looking at a boat book.. *wondering about the boats that go from S Calif all the way to the Panama Canal . and through. How far is that? *And does it cost lots of money to go through the canal? Any of you world cruisers ever do this? Tell all,, interested in learning. its an easy run down from so cal, lots to see and some really nice ports. distance you can figure on a simple map. IIRC the cost is around that qoted by slide. I would say hitting the crack is easy but you would want some other folks on the boat for the trip across. not so much for handeling as for defence. the guys lock side will try to charge you "tips" (Bribes), and other things (on ocasion out and out lercenry).so having a couple folks who can do stuff while you navigate is a good idea. the horn would be fun but not realistic for a single hander unless you spent a goodly bit of time making sure you are rounding at the correct time. its a bit rough on the pointy end of patigonia. While I've never been there I thought it was a requirement to have at least two experienced line handlers and at least two mooring lines of a specified length and that you could rent these at either end. Cheers, Bruce (bruceinbangkokatgmaildotcom) |
#18
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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On Dec 22, 2:50*pm, Wayne.B wrote:
On Mon, 22 Dec 2008 12:39:18 -0800 (PST), Two meter troll wrote: its an easy run down from so cal, lots to see and some really nice ports. *distance you can figure on a simple map. Can we assume that you have not heard of the infamous Gulf of Tehuantepec and its winds, the "Tehuantepeckers" ? http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q...r+&btnG=Search http://oldseals.com/misty/page9.htm http://www.noonsite.com/Members/doina/R2007-03-02-2 its one tiny bit of a really long run. if you dont want to deal with it go around. |
#19
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On Dec 22, 4:28*pm, Bruce In Bangkok
wrote: On Mon, 22 Dec 2008 12:39:18 -0800 (PST), Two meter troll wrote: On Dec 22, 8:23*am, "Janet O'Leary" wrote: Looking at a boat book.. *wondering about the boats that go from S Calif all the way to the Panama Canal . and through. How far is that? *And does it cost lots of money to go through the canal? Any of you world cruisers ever do this? Tell all,, interested in learning. its an easy run down from so cal, lots to see and some really nice ports. *distance you can figure on a simple map. IIRC the cost is around that qoted by slide. I would say hitting the crack is easy but you would want some other folks on the boat for the trip across. not so much for handeling as for defence. the guys lock side will try to charge you "tips" (Bribes), and other things (on ocasion out and out lercenry).so having a couple folks who can do stuff while you navigate is a good idea. the horn would be fun but not realistic for a single hander unless you spent a goodly bit of time making sure you are rounding at the correct time. its a bit rough on the pointy end of patigonia. While I've never been there I thought it was a requirement to have at least two experienced line handlers and at least two mooring lines of a specified length and that you could rent these at either end. Cheers, Bruce (bruceinbangkokatgmaildotcom)- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - this is true. i would state who do you want aboard two line handelers you dont know or a couple of hands you do know. A knife to the back or having your equipment stolen is a pretty high price to pay for getting a boat through the crack. |
#20
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"Janet O'Leary" wrote in news:P9P3l.509
: Looking at a boat book.. wondering about the boats that go from S Calif all the way to the Panama Canal . and through. How far is that? And does it cost lots of money to go through the canal? Any of you world cruisers ever do this? Tell all,, interested in learning. I'm sorry that you got sucked into the Wibur rampage and as usual, that the signal to noise ratio of any discussion that he enters into goes to an extreme, making any useful discussion impossible. This is actually a trip that I've considered making several times. For this upcoming year I'm seriously considering making the same trip as I want to sail my boat from RI to Milwaukee, WI and then ship it to the west coast and do the trip to Panama canal. One book that you want to get is called "The Forgotten Middle (A cruisers quide to the Pacific coasts of Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras and Nicaragua) by Roy and Carol Robert. Unfortunately I think that it's out of print and has a copyright date of 1995. I did scan my copy a year or so ago and provide it to someone who was looking at doing the same trip. I might be able to come up with a pointer to that person so that I don't have to scan it again. One of the key things that I'll point out is that you're going against the current, which makes this a difficult trip. And has been mentioned before, make sure that you do not under estimate the Gulf of Tehuantepec, which has tremendous winds. I've spent a lot of years in the NW Caribbean and talked to boats which have tried to make it through there. It's nothing to be triffled with. -- Geoff www.GeoffSchultz.org |
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