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#1
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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"NE Sailboat" wrote Did she not know that this weather was approaching? And if she knew, why didn't she stay south of the front.. I've been reading her reports daily since just before Cape Horn and it's interesting to follow her thinking. She could have easily been in Bermuda before the storm but didn't want to extend the length of her trip. She had weather reports but thought, how bad could it be after the roaring 40's? She was basically making some of the same judgement errors as S&L which shows how much less forgiving rocks are than waves. The kind of voyage she is making is much easier in some ways than coastal crusing and much harder than others. Despite all the miles behind her, I wouldn't charter her my boat for a cruise along the coast of Maine. That takes a lot more navigation and piloting skill as well as boat handling in confined waters. She still doesn't have the experience for that. Offshore sailing generally requires less skill but the toughness to keep functioning in extreme fatigue and apalling conditions are absolutely essential. You can get the skill with experience but the toughness is harder to come by. You have it or you don't which is why so many are banging on keyboards talking about cruising instead of being out there. Skill in offshore sailing is a big factor at times. With more experience, she probably would still be riding on her sea anchor. Still, this mistake just means she has lost an option. She isn't banging on rocks. My concern for her now is making the landfall in Bermuda. She will be coming from the direction of the extensive reefs that she could hit before getting any good visual references. She carries few charts and may not even have one for a place she didn't plan to visit. She managed to run into South America (which she presumably knew was there . If it were not for the extensive kelp beds and padding it provided against the rocks, the story would have ended there. -- Roger Long |
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#2
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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What mistake?
Well, as an engineer, I know that objective data can look quite different depending on your mindset when you start looking at it. If you look at your weather reports in terms of your schedule, you are very apt to come up with a different answer than if you look at your schedule in terms of the weather reports. -- Roger Long |
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#3
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Roger ,, I'm not sure but I think it is the Pardey's who wrote something to
the effect: Cruising under sail is getting from one place to the next as pleasantly as possible.. or at least that was the meaning of their thoughts. Could be wrong on the author .. but the thinking seems to be sound. While I admire Donna's toughness, I also think she is reckless. She isn't the first sailor to sail around the globe. Many have done it. Most have a crew. And most of the sailors who are off cruising around the globe watch the weather, the seasons, and plan accordingly. No one would set out during hurricane season to cross the Atlantic, it would be crazy. The smart sailor waits, plans according to the season and weather. Then heads off for a safe pleasant trip. I almost seems to me as if Donna wants to push her boat and herself to the edge, so her accomplishment of arriving is considered a major accomplishment, not just a pleasant cruise. Watching and reading of her near disaster sailing is getting tiresome. I do hope she gets to Bermuda .. and then calls it quits. =========================================== "Roger Long" wrote in message ... What mistake? Well, as an engineer, I know that objective data can look quite different depending on your mindset when you start looking at it. If you look at your weather reports in terms of your schedule, you are very apt to come up with a different answer than if you look at your schedule in terms of the weather reports. -- Roger Long |
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