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rOn Sun, 14 Oct 2012 12:34:09 -0400, "Wilbur Hubbard"
wrote: "Bruce" wrote in message .. . On Sat, 13 Oct 2012 19:07:13 -0500, Richard Casady wrote: On Thu, 11 Oct 2012 18:12:20 +0700, Bruce wrote: the famous guys like Joshua Slocam, Bernard Mansurie, Bruce Roberts, George Beuller made/make their money from book sales so they have had to stretch & modify the truth. :-) Slocum had no engine. He ended up being lost at sea, not on the beach drinking royalties. Casady Read up on his round the world voyage. He contacted newspapers in every port he entered to publish a notice that Capt. Slocum and the Spray were in port on a single handed round the world voyage and you could actually go aboard the Spray upon payment of money. He had contacted a publisher and made a deal to write a book before he sailed and the book was an international best seller. He apparently died on a voyage to the West Indies in 1909 although no wreckage or other evidence was ever found. He was declared dead in 1924. The fact that the Spray did not have an engine was hardly an unusual situation in 1895. True! Those were the REAL sailors and those where honest times. Too bad the passage of a century and some odd years has turned all too many sailors into engine-addicted non-sailors who write to their pals about a short leg of a voyage and the FIRST thing they proudly proclaim as an accomplishment is how much diesel fuel they've burned in their stink pot engines. Slocum's book about his voyage alone around the world was/is a best-seller because it's interesting. It's all about sailing and the sailing life. All about harnessing the winds and currents and making ones way without fuss around the world. Do you think he could have sold as many books writing a book about his auxiliary sailboat in which the first thing he talked about was how he burned 363 gallons in what amounts to a short hop from port to port? No harnessing the elements and living in harmony with the sea but plenty of bull headed burning of fuel and polluting the air and water? Most certainly not! People would be bored halfway to death as there is nothing interesting about putting an engine in gear, turning on the autopilot and going below to scratch one's ass for days at a time. This is the life of motor heads. Drab, boring, stupid, useless and wasteful. And, BTW, motor-sailers as a class of vessels are little more than sail-assisted motor boats. Might as well get a trawler with a riding sail and at least be honest about it. Wilbur Hubbard Ah yes. Another report from the Arm-Chair Sailor. So tell us, Oh Great Arm-Chair, about the time you were sailing up the Malacca Straits without an engine and with no wind and had to drift with the tide and anchor every time the tide changed? Or about the time you were becalmed in the middle of the Atlantic, running low on water,or about sailing up the Red Sea and having to sail 100 miles across and then 100 miles back to make 50 miles northing, or about the time you were embayed and couldn't get out for a week. I hate to disillusion you but sitting at anchor hardly qualifies you as a sailor, nor does reading sailing magazines. -- Cheers, Bruce |
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