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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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"Bruce" wrote in message
... Ah Willie, I see you've been reading the Pardey's. If you read Lynn's earliest stories you world have discovered that the major reason for building Seraffyn (24'7") was lack of money to build bigger and the Pardey's first published exercise was a letter to the editor of a sailing magazine, in response to a published article, in which they argue that a little boat can be as seaworthy as a big boat. But your argue that a 27-30 ft. boat is ideal is just a pipe dream. A VLCC or Box Carrier will be doing 30 K in weather that will keep you in the harbor. Obviously you (once again) don't know what you are talking about. As for being pooped, boat length has nothing to do with it. If the wave travels faster then the boat you get pooped, if the boat is at wave speed, or faster, then you don't. But then, you don't have to read a book to discover that little gem... just go sailing. Boy, you sure display your sailing ignorance with each and every post. If you have a boat that is fifty feet LOA and she is in a wave train that is 45 feet crest to crest just imagine what happens when running. Yes, the bow goes up the wave in front and the stern drops just in time for the crest of the following wave to poop the hell out of the transom. A 25-foot boat is totally unaffected. How so Backwater? Are you comparing your S. Florida cove with Bali, Jakarta, Singapore, Port Klang, Pinang, Or any of the Thai ports, and that just covers a fraction of the places I've anchored in the past few years. Proof? How about some photos. snip I'm beginning to wonder about your continued rabbeting on about goals. What ever are you going on about? My "goals" have been varied over the years but have never been to sail a boat somewhere. It isn't a "goal" to somehow be accomplished any more then driving to the convenience store to get a can of beer. You just get in and go. You see Willie-boy, you are romanticizing a subject that is just an everyday occurrence. One of the shortcomings of reading rather then doing. Like I said, I have thousands of miles under my keel. I regularly sail in more challenging conditions than you dream of. I've been on the open ocean several times and it's nothing. Piece of cake and a rather boring one at that. The real challenge is coastal cruising. The real enjoyment is coastal cruising. snip The more you talk the more it appears that you really know nothing about sailing. Your talk about winners and losers, failure and winning, and all the other bumph that you spout is just that and exposes your utter lack of knowledge about boats. Says the ground-to-a-halt voyager (since 35 years) who doesn't even understand simple wavelength concepts. Says the dock dweller. Pah! Boats are not some sort of Everest that has to be conquer. It is just a form of transportation. Like your bicycle, a motor-car, even shoes. Go you rabbit on about riding your bike to the 7-11 to get a tube of toothpaste? Or extol your shoes and how you walk from house to house reading the water-meters? Now I think I begin to understand why you failed. Modern sailboats to us real sailors represent a lifestyle. A sailboat is a home, a time machine, an interface dancer, a compilation of systems the sailor must be intimately familiar with and able to repair and modify when necessary. A sailboat is FAR more than transportation. Your attitude that a sailboat is just transportion tells me you weren't ever able to appreciate what a sailboat really is by virtue of the fact of your self-centeredness and ungodliness where you place yourself in the center of the universe. This arrogance is why you failed - you failed to appreciated the beauty of the machine and the lifestyle. You viewed it as just another way to move your sorry fat carcass around. This is so sad. Willie-boy you go on about the romance and mystique of boating just exactly like all the other wannabes. Try talking to someone who has actually sailed to somewhere and you will be surprised at the lack of romance there is. Just load the boat, check the mail, and go. Perhaps you are to be pitied because you are too staid to ever appreciate the beauty, romance, utility and connectedness of sailing. But, now all our readers understand why you failed - one cannot master something one does not understand. Wilbur Hubbard |