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#14
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"Geoff Schultz" wrote in message .. . "Wilbur Hubbard" wrote in anews.com: wrote in message oups.com... ... So you can cruise and you can telephone. But it's not the same as doing one or the other and doing it well. ... I'm not sure I follow. Are you saying that I'm cruising less well when, lets say, just for the sake of historical accuracy, I'm anchor down in Kanton Atoll on a day when it's so calm I can't tell where the air ends and the water starts and so hot that even the flies have taken cover in the shade I call my father on my Iridium phone? Are you telling me that this offends you in some way? Do we need to be reduced to sail cloth pants and latitude sailing to be cruising "well"? -- Tom. And sooner or later your phone will make you lazy and inept just like the poor fella further up this thread who couldn't even figure out how to get up the mast without making telephone calls and asking people how to do it safely. That's pretty disgusting in my humble opinion. People like him, when they get their friends advice about going up the mast, and then they manage to fall off will likely crawl to their cell phone, dial up their lawyer and enquire as to how to sue their friends for giving bad advice. Ocne again you're making assumptions about things that you know nothing about. In this case I was calling someone who used to work for Freedom to ask what the load rating was for the flag halyard rollers. As it turns out, the rollers designed to support a person. I wasn't about to go up the mast while underway without checking. It sounds like you would have goen up as you wouldn't have had any other option. I did and I took it. I have learned that making assumptions about things I know little or nothing about is always a good way to get the straight skinny because it motivates people to want to straighten me out. Flag halyard rollers(?) do you mean sheeves? It seems to me pretty dumb to over engineer flag halyard sheeves to carry the weight of a man. Going up a mast using the old fashioned methods is totally unnecessary these days when mast steps are easily installed. Again, you're sailing by committee. You have somebody winch you up the mast, relying on flag halyard sheeves and winches and their steady hand and shouting back and forth when you should be going up the mast under your own power on steps. Doh! Such a radical concept that. You act like I know nothing about sailing. I typically spend 6-7 months a year sailing and I've logged over 30,000 miles. I believe that know a lot about my boat and sailing. Check my web site if you have any doubt. I sort of can't seem to have much respect for people who go to sea with an unstayed rig. It's an invitation to disaster or should I say, dismasting? You're just an arrogant SOB who thinks that everyone should do things your way. Based upon your discourse in this and other threads, I'm very glad that most of the world isn't like you. I suggest that you go back to alt.sailing.asa where you're quite prolific and the people in that group enjoy bashing one another. I could do that but I think my logical sense of - doing it right, doing it safe and knowing your boat like the back of your hand BEFORE you decide to cruise or voyage needs to be emphasized. Bad habits beget more bad habits. People read about phoning an engineer for something simple like going up the mast and they think, OK, that's how I'll do it. Sorry, but that's not the way it should be done. Consider what I do is set the record straight. People can take it or leave it. In my opinion, my relatives just have to accept the fact that I'll be out of touch. I will not enable them to be worrywarts every time they don't get a daily or weekly telephone call. Did you ever consider that they don't want to hear from you if you act this way towards them? Possibly. They were raised by the same parents as I was. They share many of the same attitudes. They are rugged individualists, too. Nothing wrong with that. It's only Hillary and girly-men who really think it takes a village . . . Wilbur Hubbard |
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