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#1
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Cannibal
On Thu, 17 Feb 2011 15:38:35 -0500, "Wilbur Hubbard"
wrote: "Jessica B" wrote in message .. . On Wed, 16 Feb 2011 12:22:02 -0500, "Wilbur Hubbard" wrote: "Jessica B" wrote in message ... snip I have no idea where the Florida Bay is... is that on the west side? I'm guessing, but it seems like there's ocean all around. Florida Bay is the water between the Keys and the mainland peninsular. Much of it is way too shallow except for canoes, kayaks, etc. It has lots of little mangrove islands. But, closer to the Keys island chain the water is deep enough to sail and the Intracoastal Waterway runs though it. Oh... Fort Jefferson... I looked it up and it looks like it's the same as the Dry Tortugas, which is what I was thinking of... http://www.nps.gov/drto/index.htm That looks beautiful! Can your boat go there? Sure she can. I've never been out there but it would make a nice trip. Probably would take a couple weeks to do a round trip right. According to google maps it's about 60 or 70 miles away? Sounds about right. Well, if the boat sinks, there's always the dinghy! You could rig it with a sail for just in case! I guess you have to be good at navigation! That would leave me out. :-( Jessica, you'd make a good fisherman. LOL! Of course you'd never be left out. I could give you a handheld GPS, chart navigation, private lesson you'd understand in less than five minutes. All you'd have to do is make the cursor (boat) follow the line to the waypoint(s). Bruce in Bangkok might have trouble doing so as he's become somewhat feeble-minded in his dotage but I'm sure you could handle it. I had one of those units in my other car... "Turn left in 1.2 miles...." Maybe they should make one for a boat! Or, you could go due south and go to Cuba! Even I could figure that out! I wish the stupid U.S. government would allow citizens to take a sailboat cruise to Cuba but they don't unless you jump though all kinds of ridiculous hoops. I've looked at the charts and there is some fine sailing to be had along the north coast of Cuba. Looks like thousands of little barrier islands with a bay or sound between them and the big island. Can you speak any Spanish? I know... it would solve a lot of stuff if they were exposed to free enterprise! I guess the Cuban expats are really a strong lobby in DC. Maybe you can claim to be a journalist? I think there's an exception for that. I also heard that things are a bit less restrictive these days, but it might just be for sending money. I don't really follow it much... wrong coast. I took it in high school, but it's been a while. |
#2
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Cannibal
"Jessica B" wrote in message
... a snip According to google maps it's about 60 or 70 miles away? Sounds about right. Well, if the boat sinks, there's always the dinghy! You could rig it with a sail for just in case! If conditions were rough enough to sink the mother ship I sure wouldn't want to be out there in an open dinghy. It probably wouldn't last two minutes. snip I had one of those units in my other car... "Turn left in 1.2 miles...." Maybe they should make one for a boat! Pretty much, they do. But, I don't know of any that speak to you. The one(s) I use you have to look at it and adjust the autopilot manually to follow the track which you plot in advance. You can set an alarm that beeps if you get too far off-course or if you arrive at a waypoint so you can re-adjust the course the auto pilot is steering. I wish the stupid U.S. government would allow citizens to take a sailboat cruise to Cuba but they don't unless you jump though all kinds of ridiculous hoops. I've looked at the charts and there is some fine sailing to be had along the north coast of Cuba. Looks like thousands of little barrier islands with a bay or sound between them and the big island. Can you speak any Spanish? I know... it would solve a lot of stuff if they were exposed to free enterprise! I guess the Cuban expats are really a strong lobby in DC. It seems dumb to me. The so-called embargo has obviously failed as every other country in the world trades with Cuba. All it does is punish American citizens who'd like to travel to Cuba as tourists. If anything is going to overthrow the dictatorship it's Cuban citizens who become more affluent because they can get ahold of dollars. Maybe you can claim to be a journalist? I think there's an exception for that. I also heard that things are a bit less restrictive these days, but it might just be for sending money. I don't really follow it much... wrong coast. Cuba, itself, is kind of a pain in the ass to cruise because you have to clear into and out of each and every port of call. They need to change that aspect before they can attract cruisers in any kind of significant numbers. In the Bahamas, for example, you clear in at one port and get a cruising permit good for six months and you can go anywhere in the country without having to clear in and out of whatever port you might happen to visit. I don't know about most people, but I often change my mind as to destinations depending on the winds and, if I clear out of one port and declare I am to arrive at another port at such and such a date and the wind shifts and I can't get there so I have to go someplace else, then I get a bunch of bureaucratic crap when I arrive there for not sticking to the plan then who the hell needs that kind of hassle. I took it in high school, but it's been a while. I took French but I wish I would have taken Spanish. |
#3
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Cannibal
On Fri, 18 Feb 2011 09:31:08 -0500, "Wilbur Hubbard"
wrote: "Jessica B" wrote in message .. . a snip According to google maps it's about 60 or 70 miles away? Sounds about right. Well, if the boat sinks, there's always the dinghy! You could rig it with a sail for just in case! If conditions were rough enough to sink the mother ship I sure wouldn't want to be out there in an open dinghy. It probably wouldn't last two minutes. snip I guess I'll just put on my life jacket and hold on to something that floats! I had one of those units in my other car... "Turn left in 1.2 miles...." Maybe they should make one for a boat! Pretty much, they do. But, I don't know of any that speak to you. The one(s) I use you have to look at it and adjust the autopilot manually to follow the track which you plot in advance. You can set an alarm that beeps if you get too far off-course or if you arrive at a waypoint so you can re-adjust the course the auto pilot is steering. I think that would be cool.. if it talked to you. "Hey, do you realize that you're at least 5 miles from a nightclub? Turn to the left immediately!" I wish the stupid U.S. government would allow citizens to take a sailboat cruise to Cuba but they don't unless you jump though all kinds of ridiculous hoops. I've looked at the charts and there is some fine sailing to be had along the north coast of Cuba. Looks like thousands of little barrier islands with a bay or sound between them and the big island. Can you speak any Spanish? I know... it would solve a lot of stuff if they were exposed to free enterprise! I guess the Cuban expats are really a strong lobby in DC. It seems dumb to me. The so-called embargo has obviously failed as every other country in the world trades with Cuba. All it does is punish American citizens who'd like to travel to Cuba as tourists. If anything is going to overthrow the dictatorship it's Cuban citizens who become more affluent because they can get ahold of dollars. Exactly! Looks like freedom is on the march in the middle-east! Maybe you can claim to be a journalist? I think there's an exception for that. I also heard that things are a bit less restrictive these days, but it might just be for sending money. I don't really follow it much... wrong coast. Cuba, itself, is kind of a pain in the ass to cruise because you have to clear into and out of each and every port of call. They need to change that aspect before they can attract cruisers in any kind of significant numbers. In the Bahamas, for example, you clear in at one port and get a cruising permit good for six months and you can go anywhere in the country without having to clear in and out of whatever port you might happen to visit. I don't know about most people, but I often change my mind as to destinations depending on the winds and, if I clear out of one port and declare I am to arrive at another port at such and such a date and the wind shifts and I can't get there so I have to go someplace else, then I get a bunch of bureaucratic crap when I arrive there for not sticking to the plan then who the hell needs that kind of hassle. Ah.. yes... you wouldn't want to go against that particular government. I don't think their jails are nice. :-} I took it in high school, but it's been a while. I took French but I wish I would have taken Spanish. Dos Cervesas? That's about it these days. |
#4
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Cannibal
"Jessica B" wrote in message Dos Cervesas? That's
about it these days. And don't forget your banana. You'd be lost without it. -- Waldo |
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