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Todd Nosler February 7th 10 09:47 PM

Salty Dog R.I.P.
 
Today, a large industrial explosion in central Connecticut claimed the life
of the long time newsgroup subscriber known as "Salty Dog". Hopefully, he's
sailing in the great sailboat in the sky with "Fast Food Fame" Dave. He will
be missed.



Wilbur Hubbard February 7th 10 10:02 PM

Salty Dog R.I.P.
 
"Todd Nosler" wrote in message
...
Today, a large industrial explosion in central Connecticut claimed the
life of the long time newsgroup subscriber known as "Salty Dog".
Hopefully, he's sailing in the great sailboat in the sky with "Fast Food
Fame" Dave. He will be missed.





Was his real name Mike Manners? Did he used to post using the nym "Barnacle
Bill?"


If so, I guess the flood of anonymous " Cecil Warren, "rapist" postings will
stop.


Wilbur Hubbard



Tom Dacon[_4_] February 8th 10 04:34 AM

Salty Dog R.I.P.
 

"Todd Nosler" wrote in message
...
Today, a large industrial explosion in central Connecticut claimed the
life of the long time newsgroup subscriber known as "Salty Dog".
Hopefully, he's sailing in the great sailboat in the sky with "Fast Food
Fame" Dave. He will be missed.


If I can't be your candy man,
I don't want to be your man at all.
Honey let me be your salty dog...

Any of you guys know what the terms candy man and salty dog actually mean?

Tom


Roger Long February 8th 10 12:20 PM

Salty Dog R.I.P.
 
Always a shock to hear such news. For the rest of my sailing days,
whenever I'm port to port on a reciprocal course and half mile CPA
with a commercial vessel and I fail to contact them on the radio to
confirm the passing I'll think of Salty. Life is short and
unpredictable and then it's very, very long and very, very
predictable.

The airwaves are going to be a bit quieter south of the Cape. I hope
they have VHF in heaven.

--
Roger Long


Armond Perretta[_2_] February 8th 10 12:25 PM

Salty Dog R.I.P.
 
On Sun, 07 Feb 2010 20:34:41 -0800, Tom Dacon wrote:

Any of you guys know what the terms candy man and salty dog actually
mean?


Terms like this typically derive from the so-called "race music" of the
early 20th century. Many of the black artists who recorded blues and
country music were able to use terms that combined sexual double meanings
and humor. "Candy Many" refers to a person whose sexual prowess was not
disputed. There were quite a few recordings of the song "Candy Many" that
included lines like: "You must be stuck on the candy man's stick" and so
on. Not sure about "salty dog" but Google will probably be a good friend
in this regard.


Tom Dacon[_5_] February 8th 10 09:28 PM

Salty Dog R.I.P.
 

"Armond Perretta" wrote in message
...
On Sun, 07 Feb 2010 20:34:41 -0800, Tom Dacon wrote:

Any of you guys know what the terms candy man and salty dog actually
mean?


Terms like this typically derive from the so-called "race music" of the
early 20th century. Many of the black artists who recorded blues and
country music were able to use terms that combined sexual double meanings
and humor. "Candy Many" refers to a person whose sexual prowess was not
disputed. There were quite a few recordings of the song "Candy Many" that
included lines like: "You must be stuck on the candy man's stick" and so
on. Not sure about "salty dog" but Google will probably be a good friend
in this regard.


A candy man was a prostitute's first trick of the day (or first sex, if it
was with her pimp), and a salty dog was her last trick of the day.

If I can't be your candy man,
I don't want to be your man at all...

Tom





Roger Long February 9th 10 02:56 AM

Salty Dog R.I.P.
 
On Feb 7, 4:47*pm, "Todd Nosler" wrote:
Today, a large industrial explosion in central Connecticut claimed the life
of the long time newsgroup subscriber known as "Salty Dog". Hopefully, he's
sailing in the great sailboat in the sky with "Fast Food Fame" Dave. He will
be missed.


Just released:

MIDDLETOWN - The five people who died in the Kleen Energy plant
explosion on Sunday included three Connecticut residents, as well as
one man from Missouri and one from Canada.

Peter Chepulis of Thomaston; Chris Walters of Florissant, Missouri,
and Roy Rushton of Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, were killed in the
blast, according to a release from the Middletown Police Department.
Colchester resident Ronald Crabb, 42, and Old Saybrook resident
Raymond E. Dobratz, 58, were also killed.

No Mike Manners. Somebody is pulling our leg. Is it Salty?

--
Roger Long

Wayne.B February 9th 10 09:43 AM

Salty Dog R.I.P.
 
On Mon, 8 Feb 2010 18:56:24 -0800 (PST), Roger Long
wrote:

Peter Chepulis of Thomaston; Chris Walters of Florissant, Missouri,
and Roy Rushton of Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, were killed in the
blast, according to a release from the Middletown Police Department.
Colchester resident Ronald Crabb, 42, and Old Saybrook resident
Raymond E. Dobratz, 58, were also killed.

No Mike Manners. Somebody is pulling our leg. Is it Salty?


My bet would be on Dobratz from Old Saybrook since the "Dog" seemed to
know a lot about that area.

[email protected] February 9th 10 11:16 AM

Salty Dog R.I.P.
 
On Tue, 09 Feb 2010 05:43:45 -0400, Wayne.B
wrote:

On Mon, 8 Feb 2010 18:56:24 -0800 (PST), Roger Long
wrote:

Peter Chepulis of Thomaston; Chris Walters of Florissant, Missouri,
and Roy Rushton of Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, were killed in the
blast, according to a release from the Middletown Police Department.
Colchester resident Ronald Crabb, 42, and Old Saybrook resident
Raymond E. Dobratz, 58, were also killed.

No Mike Manners. Somebody is pulling our leg. Is it Salty?


My bet would be on Dobratz from Old Saybrook since the "Dog" seemed to
know a lot about that area.


I can't believe that you goonies believe anything that
Neal/Wilbur/Ellen posts. Just how gullible are you?


Roger Long February 9th 10 11:39 AM

Salty Dog R.I.P.
 
On Feb 9, 6:16*am, wrote:

(Something from the "grave")

Hey Salty, nice to have you back. Unless, of course, you are actually
Neal/Wilbur/Ellen.

The Usenet is a wilderness of mirrors.

--
Roger Long

Roger Long February 9th 10 05:31 PM

Salty Dog R.I.P.
 
On Feb 9, 7:47*am, wrote:

You remain as clueless and self absorbed as ever.


Ever since my divorce, I've greatly missed annoying someone.

Thanks for being there.

--
Roger Long

Wayne.B February 9th 10 06:56 PM

Salty Dog R.I.P.
 
On Tue, 09 Feb 2010 06:16:58 -0500, wrote:

On Tue, 09 Feb 2010 05:43:45 -0400, Wayne.B
wrote:

On Mon, 8 Feb 2010 18:56:24 -0800 (PST), Roger Long
wrote:

Peter Chepulis of Thomaston; Chris Walters of Florissant, Missouri,
and Roy Rushton of Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, were killed in the
blast, according to a release from the Middletown Police Department.
Colchester resident Ronald Crabb, 42, and Old Saybrook resident
Raymond E. Dobratz, 58, were also killed.

No Mike Manners. Somebody is pulling our leg. Is it Salty?


My bet would be on Dobratz from Old Saybrook since the "Dog" seemed to
know a lot about that area.


I can't believe that you goonies believe anything that
Neal/Wilbur/Ellen posts. Just how gullible are you?


I'll be darned, now we're getting fake obituaries?

Or are we getting resurections, fake or otherwise?

As a famous (real) person once said: "Rumors of my death have been
greatly exagerated".

Salty, if you really are alive, I want you to know that we were so
pleased to hear that you'd finally been able to get a real job. :-)

tom[_3_] February 10th 10 12:52 AM

Salty Dog R.I.P.
 
On Feb 9, 4:16 am, wrote:


I can't believe that you goonies believe anything that
Neal/Wilbur/Ellen posts. Just how gullible are you?


I'm glad to hear you're not dead yet. Tom

[email protected] February 10th 10 01:34 AM

Salty Dog R.I.P.
 
On Tue, 9 Feb 2010 16:52:27 -0800 (PST), tom wrote:

On Feb 9, 4:16 am, wrote:


I can't believe that you goonies believe anything that
Neal/Wilbur/Ellen posts. Just how gullible are you?


I'm glad to hear you're not dead yet. Tom


Thanks, Tom. That's good news to me as well!


Armond Perretta[_2_] February 11th 10 12:21 PM

Salty Dog R.I.P.
 
Tom Dacon wrote:
"Armond Perretta" wrote ...
Tom Dacon wrote:

Any of you guys know what the terms candy man and salty dog actually
mean?


Terms like this typically derive from the so-called "race music" of
the early 20th century. Many of the black artists who recorded
blues and country music were able to use terms that combined sexual
double meanings and humor. "Candy Many" refers to a person whose
sexual prowess was not disputed. There were quite a few recordings
of the song "Candy Many" that included lines like: "You must be
stuck on the candy man's stick" and so on. Not sure about "salty
dog" but Google will probably be a good friend in this regard.


A candy man was a prostitute's first trick of the day (or first sex,
if it was with her pimp), and a salty dog was her last trick of the
day.


I guess you _can_ teach an old dog some new tricks (multi-puns copyrighted).
I have been listening to "Candy Man Blues" by van Ronk, Gary Davis, John
Hurt, and many other performers for probably 50 years, and never knew this
meaning. I don't, however, seem to be having any luck digging up a
reference about this meaning on the Web or elsewhere. Do you perhaps have a
reference or two I can take a look at to learn a bit more? Thanks.

--
Good luck and good sailing.
s/v Kerry Deare of Barnegat
http://home.comcast.net/~kerrydeare




Tom Dacon[_5_] February 11th 10 04:42 PM

Salty Dog R.I.P.
 
Sorry, Armond. This is something that I seem to have known so long that I no
longer remember where I learned it.

Tom

"Armond Perretta" wrote in message
...
Tom Dacon wrote:
"Armond Perretta" wrote ...
Tom Dacon wrote:

Any of you guys know what the terms candy man and salty dog actually
mean?

Terms like this typically derive from the so-called "race music" of
the early 20th century. Many of the black artists who recorded
blues and country music were able to use terms that combined sexual
double meanings and humor. "Candy Many" refers to a person whose
sexual prowess was not disputed. There were quite a few recordings
of the song "Candy Many" that included lines like: "You must be
stuck on the candy man's stick" and so on. Not sure about "salty
dog" but Google will probably be a good friend in this regard.


A candy man was a prostitute's first trick of the day (or first sex,
if it was with her pimp), and a salty dog was her last trick of the
day.


I guess you _can_ teach an old dog some new tricks (multi-puns
copyrighted).
I have been listening to "Candy Man Blues" by van Ronk, Gary Davis, John
Hurt, and many other performers for probably 50 years, and never knew this
meaning. I don't, however, seem to be having any luck digging up a
reference about this meaning on the Web or elsewhere. Do you perhaps have
a
reference or two I can take a look at to learn a bit more? Thanks.

--
Good luck and good sailing.
s/v Kerry Deare of Barnegat
http://home.comcast.net/~kerrydeare






mmc February 13th 10 10:32 PM

Salty Dog R.I.P.
 


35 hours a week and I am not sure they even have my
home phone number.


If you're actually working 35 hours a week, you must be putting 1/2 a dozen
normal gov't types out of a job!



[email protected] February 14th 10 12:02 AM

Salty Dog R.I.P.
 
On Sat, 13 Feb 2010 17:32:38 -0500, "mmc" wrote:



35 hours a week and I am not sure they even have my
home phone number.


If you're actually working 35 hours a week, you must be putting 1/2 a dozen
normal gov't types out of a job!


Compared to my career, this really doesn't seem like work. It was a
huge adjustment, that's for sure.


mmc February 14th 10 06:28 PM

Salty Dog R.I.P.
 

wrote in message
...
On Sat, 13 Feb 2010 17:32:38 -0500, "mmc" wrote:



35 hours a week and I am not sure they even have my
home phone number.


If you're actually working 35 hours a week, you must be putting 1/2 a
dozen
normal gov't types out of a job!


Compared to my career, this really doesn't seem like work. It was a
huge adjustment, that's for sure.

Enjoy it!



Richard Casady February 15th 10 03:53 PM

Salty Dog R.I.P.
 
On Sat, 13 Feb 2010 17:32:38 -0500, "mmc" wrote:



35 hours a week and I am not sure they even have my
home phone number.


If you're actually working 35 hours a week, you must be putting 1/2 a dozen
normal gov't types out of a job!


I had a gov't job once. I remember one occasion when I worked twelve
hours a day, six days a week, for two weeks. Those were 72 hours
weeks. No overtime pay. A magnificant $145 I got for those two weeks.

Casady


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