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"twoguns" wrote in
ups.com: We were out a few miles and a sudden storm came up. The skipper gave us life vests and told us to put them on. I was having the time of my life going up and down those waves. I didn't realize how much danger we were in until we got back to the dock and some of the locals started talking to the skipper telling him what an idiot he was for being out there. I guess ignorance is bliss but I had a helluva good time. I love it out there, myself, in a well found sailboat. I sail with an Englishman I'd follow anywhere on a French-made Amel Sharki 41 ketch. She's not fast, but very solid with watertight bulkheads 2 fore and 1 aft. Plenty of diesel power if she needs it from a Perkins 50hp 4-cyl diesel with 90 gallons of fuel. Her rigging is very heavy, made for ocean crossings, as is her hull and fittings. With 200 gallons of water tank in the keel, she also has plenty to wash the stink off out there. I think we were in 15-18' seas in a storm about 250 miles off the Georgia coast, last year. Most seas here are in the 5-10' range. She feels very safe in her deep center cockpit under a fiberglass hardtop to deflect the spray. Sometimes we sail just the two or three of us....others we have a nice crew of 6-8 which makes watchstanding much easier on everyone being able to actually sleep 4 hours straight. I've equipped her with all the electronic toys. All of Icom's best radios, Raymarine radar/color chart plotter/gyro compass, B&G sailing instruments and electrohydraulic autopilot directly on the rudder post, Yeoman electronic paper chart plotter for backup, as is the Garmin 185 backup GPS/sonar/chartplotter. Primary Navigation is The Cap'n running on a Dell Latitude notebook....everything networked through it, or switchable for backup if it fails. Cap'n Geoffrey loves the toys...(c; |