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Don White wrote:
"Reginald P. Smithers III, Esq." wrote in message ... Don White wrote: "Reginald P. Smithers III, Esq." wrote in message ... Wayne.B wrote: Arguably one of the most beautiful bodies of water in the world: http://share.findmespot.com/shared/faces/viewspots.jsp?glId=0utTAiadygIUkT4LIXeoYfKADAn2Dkz os Well, I am so stupid, at first I thought that was a map of the west coast of Florida, and I am going, well it looks like he is boating to me. -- Reginald P. Smithers III, Esq. You'd better stick to small shallow lakes...where you can't get lost. Don, Not only have I lived on 3 continents. I have been boating and sailing all over, including lakes smaller than Lanier, all the Great Lakes, except for Superior, the Atlantic and the Caribbean. While I have done out on charter boats in the Pacific, I have never been at the helm when boating in the Pacific. I actually have been boating up and down the coast of NS, we went out about 100 miles off the coast of NS, sailing from Sidney to Halifax. I found Halifax to be a quaint town, nice downtown tourist area, very clean, and the people were very polite and helpful. I would guess either your online persona has nothing to do with the way you behave in the real world, or you are a social outcast in Halifax. If I had to bet, I would go with social outcast. -- Reginald P. Smithers III, Esq. Hee hee... better find someone like Looneytunes to buy your bull When I posted some local pictures last year, you commented that you like to see photos of areas you haven't been to. plus...why would anyone go one hundred miles offshore when sailing from Sydney to Halifax? I'm trying to decide if you sound more like the old Skipper..... or that Teabag character on the recent 'Prison Break series. Guess again, I spent a week in Halifax Harbor. The only pictures I remember you publishing was of you on a lake, but I don't remember making any comment about the pictures at all. I moored at a private facility that had buoy's located in a Southern Finger of the Harbor (or at least it seemed to be south). It was devoted to pleasure boating, versus commercial ships. The water taxi (it was blue, with red seats and white trim, would pick us up, and drop us off at a the service area. I am pretty sure the water taxi was included in the buoy fees, but we would tip the guy. A large white metal service building with a fairly large boat lift. It looked like it could service a 25 ft. sailboat without dropping the mast. There were a number of sailors who raced in the Wed. Night Beer Can races who kept their boat there, but they were the smaller J-22 type boats. It was in June, and the Beer Can Races had not even started yet. They were all out their getting their boats ready. Next door, was an old fancy yachting club that looked like it was built 100 yrs ago, yet was in fairly good shape. They had decent meals at reasonable prices, but it had a very "old money" look to it. Out back of the Yacht club, they had a small swimming pool, but it really did not look like it had been used in years and was in bad shape. Most of the people eating in the restaurant were old as dirt, and I doubt if they had been sailing in decades. The yacht club was hosting a big regatta and was selling T-Shirts a few weeks before the regatta, which surprised me. I think it was the Marblehead to Halifax Race, but I could be wrong. The General Managers office was on the 2nd floor, the stairs were against the far wall, closest to the harbor, and looked like a combination office and storage space. She was sorting out the tshirts by size and double checking the order. It was hard to believe that the GM was doing such simple work, it seemed like a poor utilization of talent. We walked about a mile to 1.5 miles towards town to buy some boating supplies from an independent marine supply house to buy some electronic equipment. Our depth finder was giving us crazy readings. It was a fairly small shop, not much bigger than a small convenience store, but he could order the supplies and get them in a few days. When we took a taxi to downtown, they had the normal restaurants on the harbor, but they had recently closed off a number of streets in the downtown area so it would be like a large mall. I talked to some locals who said I had to come back for a "pub crawl", where a group of people would stumble from one bar to the next all night long. It seems like your son is not the only person in Halifax who enjoys getting loaded. From memory, the reason we took such a long leg to get from Sydney to Halifax had to do with a combination of the wind direction and some bad reef you have in between Sydney to Halifax. Instead of beating into the wind, and making frequent tacks, and getting into the reef's, we just made it one long leg to avoid some place the harbor master in Sydney warned us about. I remember a large rock outcropping that he told us to stay clear of, but the real danger was the shallow rocks that surrounded the area. I thought it was funny, the harbor master referred to it as "The Graveyard of the Atlantic", but I had always heard the area off of the Outer Banks to be called the Graveyard of the Atlantic. I thought it was a Canadian trying to impress us. I can remember your TINY dolphins riding out bow wave, about half the size of the dolphins I was used to. I commented this to one of the locals and he jokingly said, OOHHHHH yeah, everything is bigger in the US. So as with most things, you are wrong. Reginald P. Smithers III, Esq. This Newsgroup post is a natural product. The slight variations in spelling and grammar enhance its individual character and beauty and in no way are to be considered flaws or defects |
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