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#1
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![]() "Larry" wrote in message ... "Ernest Scribbler" wrote in et: Classy. Some folks might have posted a smart reply. Yours was pleasant. You have to meet Skip to understand just how classy he, and Lydia, are. I've stood for hours watching him fight various problems in his engine room, at the dock in Charleston, with no air conditioning at 115F, sweat pouring off the both of us to the point we couldn't see....and seemingly nothing at all ever frustrates him. He's so calm, no matter what, it's really scary! At some point, I lose touch with reality and just explode....Not Skip. He calmly, almost to a fault, goes on working on the problem until a solution arrives. But, the more important question might be, "What does Skippy do to AVOID problems?" In other words, does his whole cruising life consist of problems that take all his time and energy when he could be using that energy in an active program to avoid problems, to do what it takes to see the problems he labors over never occur again? Until he does so, he is no sailor. Wilbur Hubbard |
#2
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![]() "Ernest Scribbler" wrote in message et... "Skip Gundlach" wrote Nice parody. Aside from the brute force tool (I use something which is directed, not swung), not too far off our early realities. Classy. Some folks might have posted a smart reply. Yours was pleasant. Yes, it was! Darn it all! Maybe there's more to Skippy than meets the eye . . . Wilbur Hubbard |
#3
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On 2007-10-01 13:13:15 -0400, "Wilbur Hubbard"
said: "Ernest Scribbler" wrote in message et... "Skip Gundlach" wrote Nice parody. Aside from the brute force tool (I use something which is directed, not swung), not too far off our early realities. Classy. Some folks might have posted a smart reply. Yours was pleasant. Yes, it was! Darn it all! Maybe there's more to Skippy than meets the eye . . . Wilbur Hubbard You got that right. And the parody *was* pretty funny. -- Jere Lull Tanzer 28 #4 out of Tolchester, MD Xan's new pages: http://web.mac.com/jerelull/iWeb/Xan/ Our BVI pages: http://homepage.mac.com/jerelull/BVI/ |
#4
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On 2007-10-01 13:13:15 -0400, "Wilbur Hubbard"
said: "Ernest Scribbler" wrote in message et... "Skip Gundlach" wrote Nice parody. Aside from the brute force tool (I use something which is directed, not swung), not too far off our early realities. Classy. Some folks might have posted a smart reply. Yours was pleasant. Yes, it was! Darn it all! Maybe there's more to Skippy than meets the eye . . . Wilbur Hubbard I was going to respond to a different post, but I like this one better so am reusing it. Saturday, I ignored the small craft advisories (which mean something to our light-air cork) and blasted down to Annapolis to try to find Flying Pig. Succeeded, and the trip was worth the beating. Skip, Lydia and their "Mum" are charming, and Flying Pig has been wonderfully rebuilt with just about every system a technophile could desire. What struck me almost immediately, though, was a reminder of how *new* they are to cruising -- and sailing. After I sailed around FP and Lydia tied Xan alongside as if she'd done it a thousand times, she remarked it was the first time they'd ever rafted up, one of so many "first times" on this trip. All things considered, my wife Pat probably has more onboard experience than they, even though I allow Pat a life of leisure onboard and single-hand most of the time. Considering that, it's astounding that they haven't given up in dismay. Far less severe challenges early-on nearly scared Pat off of Xan and boating. In my view, their primary errors were (and this won't be news to them): 1) Rushing. Trying to run before "walk" has been mastered. 2) Having and relying on too many complex onboard systems, particularly as most were unproven and have since been discovered to be NFG. (clean version: not found good). Skip and Lydia are compressing the learning curve of sailing and cruising beyond I would consider sanity. That they can be as intensely sane as I found them to be is a wonder. That Skip can be so comfortable about documenting all of their beginners errors (so other beginners can learn from their mistakes) and be so undefensive about the rude remarks engendered is another wonder. -- Jere Lull Tanzer 28 #4 out of Tolchester, MD Xan's new pages: http://web.mac.com/jerelull/iWeb/Xan/ Our BVI pages: http://homepage.mac.com/jerelull/BVI/ |
#5
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On Wed, 03 Oct 2007 02:11:15 GMT, Jere Lull wrote:
That Skip can be so comfortable about documenting all of their beginners errors (so other beginners can learn from their mistakes) and be so undefensive about the rude remarks engendered is another wonder. Agreed. The good news is that there my be a good book opportunity someday if collected and edited. |
#6
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On Wed, 03 Oct 2007 02:11:15 GMT, Jere Lull wrote:
In my view, their primary errors were (and this won't be news to them): 1) Rushing. Trying to run before "walk" has been mastered. 2) Having and relying on too many complex onboard systems, particularly as most were unproven and have since been discovered to be NFG. (clean version: not found good). This may be more common than we may think. I just spent 3 days in Baltimore inner harbor docked next to a couple on a very nice 55 ft ketch. They are from the Great Lakes and have never sailed over night or made an offshore passage of any type. That said, they are planning to go offshore from the southern Chesapeake in late October and sail non-stop to the AVI/BVI without benefit of a stop in Bermuda. From there they are planning to sail around the world. I just didn't have the heart to tell them what I thought of the whole idea. Hopefully we won't be reading about them but you have to wonder. |
#7
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On Mon, 01 Oct 2007 13:31:03 -0000, Skip Gundlach
wrote: The upper jaw on my spinnaker pole has yet to yield to the PBBlaster, however, and the heat and minor impacts I've laid on it. Until I get if freed, I can't take the slider off to the chandlery to attempt a match for the now-gone nylon edge sliders missing. Block and tackle led to a winch? Using strong attachment points of course. |
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