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![]() Howard wrote: I too would not like to take sides on this debate Agreed. it reminds me of an argument that I had with two friends years ago. The debate: which would kill you faster a .44 or .357 or .45. We were 16- or 17 at the time. Maybe the comparison is not mono or multi but "sea hardened" (to coin a phrase?) or not. Sea hardened... sea capable....? I to have seen thoes sliding glass doors. I wonder how many kids runn into them. Maybe the owners could put black outlines of waves on the glasss so the waves dont get confused and slam into the glass. Seem to work using falcons to scare off song birds. When is was 13 I put a message in a bottle and threw it over the side 5 miles off Oregon coast. Two years later I got a reply from a woman in the Philipines. IN the 1980s I threw another bottle over the side about 20 miles off Oregon coast. It only took one year for it to reach hawaii. Conclusion: If a glass bottle can float across the Pacific so can I. however, the boat I chose was a 39', double ended, cut away, full keel, 26,000 lbs slug with 1 1/2" glass at the water line and have upgraded to mil spec on the refit. If Im going to sink I want to be comfortable on the way down. There are many ways to get the same place. However I will take one thought to the grave. Dont let charter operators, marketing departments, and boat brokers tell you why their boats are safe. Again I I feel compelled to post a quote from a person who was sent to save the hapless soles caught in the Fastnet disaster of 1979: __________________________________________________ ____________________ Interview with Bill Burrows, Chief Engineer Royal Navy Lifeboat Institution. Retrieved three disabled sailboats in a 21 hour rescue during the fatal 1979 Fastnet Storm. "... Look, you get 300 Yachats in poor weather and you're going to have some trouble, almost certainly. But the majority of the trouble was hysteria created by the situation and by inexperienced crews. And that it was. They were blaming rudders and such, but none of those rudders would have snapped if they had put drogues out and storm jibs and run before the weather. They were under bare poles, most of them, and they were getting up on the seas. And the seas were about 45 feet. Not what we around here call big. They got up on these seas and they were running. When the boats were starting to broach, what the helmsmen were doing was hauling on the rudders to stop them from broaching. They were putting too much bloody strain on the rudders, and they had to go. Yes, I know they were racing sailors, not cruising men, but that's no excuse. We went out that night and we passed a little old hooker sort of thing with a family of kids aboard and they were going away to Ireland with no trouble at all...." (The Yacht, April 1987) __________________________________________________ ______________________ BOb Just some thoughts. |
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