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#1
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Where you at?
If your in or around Long Island Sound, New York, Connecticut, or Jersey, I would recommend "A Crusing Guide to The New England Coast" It's probably out of print but you may be able to get a copy on eBay. But if you only want to carry just one book, it should be Chapman. Tony --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.698 / Virus Database: 455 - Release Date: 06/02/2004 |
#2
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"Tony Van" wrote:
Where you at? If your in or around Long Island Sound, New York, Connecticut, or Jersey, I would recommend "A Crusing Guide to The New England Coast" It's probably out of print but you may be able to get a copy on eBay. But if you only want to carry just one book, it should be Chapman. Tony --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.698 / Virus Database: 455 - Release Date: 06/02/2004 I would highly recommend " Boat Navigation for the Rest of Us" by Captain Bill Brogdon, Published by International Marine, Camden, ME. It is much better for basic practical small boat navigation than Chapman's in my view although Chapman's is certainly worth reading and is still a valuable reference. |
#3
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On Sat, 12 Jun 2004 17:35:59 GMT, "Tony Van"
wrote: Where you at? If your in or around Long Island Sound, New York, Connecticut, or Jersey, I would recommend "A Crusing Guide to The New England Coast" It's probably out of print but you may be able to get a copy on eBay. But if you only want to carry just one book, it should be Chapman. Chapman's fine, but I find Rousmaniere's "Annapolis Book of Seamanship" better because new crew can read it and "get" it thanks to the clear diagrams and whatnot. Personally, I refer most often to "Heavy Weather Sailing" and Wally Ross's "Sail Power", which despite being 30 years old, has taught me a great deal about my boat. For sheer reading pleasure, anything by Ferenc Mate "The Finely Fitted Yacht" and "From a Bare Hull" and others. Mate sounds like a slightly more pompous and erudite version of every old salt I've met, equivalent to a double espresso of sarcasm mixed with solid boat tips and techniques, as opposed to the local "coffee, black" For literary tales of the sea, I like Conrad, O'Brien (of course), the Smeatons, the Hiscocks and Monteisser and the recently dead David Lewis (Ice Bird). And for "music to sail by" (keeping well clear of other boats, of course), I favour Wagner, Beethoven, Bartok, Orff, Debussy and Mahler...but it's hard to beat "The Moldau" by Smetana...even though it's a short orchestral piece about a river, it is entirely suitable for a full hoist beam reach in 12-15 knots. Try it: you'll agree. G R. |
#4
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![]() "Tony Van" wrote in message news:3aHyc.24988$0y.9038@attbi_s03... Where you at? If your in or around Long Island Sound, New York, Connecticut, or Jersey, I would recommend "A Crusing Guide to The New England Coast" It's probably out of print but you may be able to get a copy on eBay. But if you only want to carry just one book, it should be Chapman. Chapman has gotten so much larger (larger type and more white space, I think) it's going to be hard to carry. The Cruising Guide is in print in its 12th Edition. I agree with another poster that the Annapolis Book of Seamanship is an easier read than Chapman, and I like it more now than when I first bought it. Nigel Calder's Cruising Guide is not for dummies, it's dense and detailed, and I trust his information and opinions. (His favorite anchor is a Delta, and that's one of the reasons I got one.) I'm a bookworm, so one book on a subject would never satisfy me. The Morrow Guide to Knots is the best little knot book I've seen. I just read an excellent survival at sea story, In the Heart of the Sea, about the sinking of a Nantucket whaling boat, but it could give you some distasteful ideas... |
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