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Rick Morel August 1st 08 10:51 PM

Soul searching about a sailor in trouble
 
On Fri, 01 Aug 2008 16:52:17 -0400, wrote:

Yes, and the water that collects in each one makes a dandy little mosquito
factory. In many locales, that spells "West Nile Virus".



That's why holes are drilled in the bottoms.

According to the CDC, the best way to deal with West Nile is to get
it. Then you're immune. A CDC doctor stated that one is 800 times more
likely to die or have serious damage from the regular yearly flu than
from West Nile. He blamed the media for all the scare stories.

Most people who get it don't even know it, some think it's the flu,
some (like in my case) suffer what seems the worst case of flu ever,
and some die or suffer permanent damage. Remember the later are 1/800
of those who die or suffer permanent damage from the "regular" flu.

Rick


** Posted from
http://www.teranews.com **

Richard Casady August 2nd 08 04:23 AM

Soul searching about a sailor in trouble
 
On Fri, 01 Aug 2008 16:52:17 -0400, wrote:

Yes, and the water that collects in each one makes a dandy little mosquito
factory. In many locales, that spells "West Nile Virus".


Only if you are too dumb to provide a drain hole. When they just lie
arround in piles, they collect rainwater, and one hole won't deal with
that.

Casady

Bruce in Bangkok[_7_] August 2nd 08 08:20 AM

Soul searching about a sailor in trouble
 
On Fri, 01 Aug 2008 18:56:13 -0000, Justin C
wrote:

In article , Bruce in Bangkok wrote:

On a less frivolous note, there is a boat down the dock from me that
has real car tires for fenders - carefully covered by custom sewed
covers made from Sunbrella fabric.......And tied to the lifelines with
sparkling white double-braid.


That's another way of recycling. The tyres will probably last longer
than regular fenders too. I guess that without the fabric covers the
tyre rubber will mark the boat, so they're not just to improve
appearances.

Justin.


BTW: Tyres are those air-filled rubber things on the wheels of an
automobile, tires is what one does when one works hard ;-)



Nope, won't mark the boat at all! Been aboard many tugs and work
boats. Never seen a fender mark at all.

Just paint the hull black.....


Bruce-in-Bangkok
(correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom)

Bruce in Bangkok[_7_] August 2nd 08 08:23 AM

Soul searching about a sailor in trouble
 
On Fri, 01 Aug 2008 16:52:17 -0400, wrote:

On Fri, 01 Aug 2008 18:56:13 -0000, Justin C wrote:

In article , Bruce in Bangkok wrote:

On a less frivolous note, there is a boat down the dock from me that
has real car tires for fenders - carefully covered by custom sewed
covers made from Sunbrella fabric.......And tied to the lifelines with
sparkling white double-braid.


That's another way of recycling. The tyres will probably last longer
than regular fenders too. I guess that without the fabric covers the
tyre rubber will mark the boat, so they're not just to improve
appearances.

Justin.


BTW: Tyres are those air-filled rubber things on the wheels of an
automobile, tires is what one does when one works hard ;-)


Yes, and the water that collects in each one makes a dandy little mosquito
factory. In many locales, that spells "West Nile Virus".


Nope, the modern trend is to bore a hole in the bottom to let the
water out....don;t got no West Nile Fever over here. Here we got
Dinghy Fever.... Nautical all then way :-)




Bruce-in-Bangkok
(correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom)

Bruce in Bangkok[_7_] August 2nd 08 08:25 AM

Soul searching about a sailor in trouble
 
On Fri, 01 Aug 2008 18:15:27 -0400, wrote:

On Fri, 01 Aug 2008 16:51:56 -0500, Rick Morel wrote:

On Fri, 01 Aug 2008 16:52:17 -0400,
wrote:

Yes, and the water that collects in each one makes a dandy little mosquito
factory. In many locales, that spells "West Nile Virus".



That's why holes are drilled in the bottoms.


Which end of a tire is the bottom? LOL


Easy enough to figure out. Just hang the damned thing up and the side
opposite the top is the bottom :-(

Bruce-in-Bangkok
(correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom)

Herodotus August 2nd 08 09:43 AM

Soul searching about a sailor in trouble
 
On Sat, 02 Aug 2008 14:20:32 +0700, Bruce in Bangkok
wrote:

On Fri, 01 Aug 2008 18:56:13 -0000, Justin C
wrote:

In article , Bruce in Bangkok wrote:

On a less frivolous note, there is a boat down the dock from me that
has real car tires for fenders - carefully covered by custom sewed
covers made from Sunbrella fabric.......And tied to the lifelines with
sparkling white double-braid.


That's another way of recycling. The tyres will probably last longer
than regular fenders too. I guess that without the fabric covers the
tyre rubber will mark the boat, so they're not just to improve
appearances.

Justin.


BTW: Tyres are those air-filled rubber things on the wheels of an
automobile, tires is what one does when one works hard ;-)



Nope, won't mark the boat at all! Been aboard many tugs and work
boats. Never seen a fender mark at all.

Just paint the hull black.....


Bruce-in-Bangkok
(correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom)


Most of the ones I have seen on boats just have thick plastic garbage
bags around them to prevent hull marking.

Peter

Bruce in Bangkok[_7_] August 2nd 08 10:51 AM

Soul searching about a sailor in trouble
 
On Sat, 02 Aug 2008 18:43:00 +1000, Herodotus
wrote:

On Sat, 02 Aug 2008 14:20:32 +0700, Bruce in Bangkok
wrote:

On Fri, 01 Aug 2008 18:56:13 -0000, Justin C
wrote:

In article , Bruce in Bangkok wrote:

On a less frivolous note, there is a boat down the dock from me that
has real car tires for fenders - carefully covered by custom sewed
covers made from Sunbrella fabric.......And tied to the lifelines with
sparkling white double-braid.

That's another way of recycling. The tyres will probably last longer
than regular fenders too. I guess that without the fabric covers the
tyre rubber will mark the boat, so they're not just to improve
appearances.

Justin.


BTW: Tyres are those air-filled rubber things on the wheels of an
automobile, tires is what one does when one works hard ;-)



Nope, won't mark the boat at all! Been aboard many tugs and work
boats. Never seen a fender mark at all.

Just paint the hull black.....


Bruce-in-Bangkok
(correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom)


Most of the ones I have seen on boats just have thick plastic garbage
bags around them to prevent hull marking.

Peter


Obviously not Real Sailors! =:-)

As discussed with Larry, a real yachtie would use tires from a compact
car, not from a truck (ugh), and then swath them in a custom made
Sunbrella cover with a white double braid mooring line. At least the
guy down the dock did.

Better yet to anchor out where you don't need fenders. If you are
using a hard dinghy just let your significant other stick her leg over
the side to keep the dinghy off the topsides paint.


Bruce-in-Bangkok
(correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom)

Bruce in Bangkok[_7_] August 2nd 08 01:20 PM

Soul searching about a sailor in trouble
 
On Sat, 02 Aug 2008 08:13:38 -0400, wrote:

On Sat, 02 Aug 2008 03:23:58 GMT,
(Richard Casady)
wrote:

On Fri, 01 Aug 2008 16:52:17 -0400,
wrote:

Yes, and the water that collects in each one makes a dandy little mosquito
factory. In many locales, that spells "West Nile Virus".


Only if you are too dumb to provide a drain hole. When they just lie
arround in piles, they collect rainwater, and one hole won't deal with
that.

Casady


First you have to be dumb enough to use old tires for fenders.

I don;t know. Sure are a lot of boats using them... maybe somebody
knows something we don;t know?

Bruce-in-Bangkok
(correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom)

Rick Morel August 2nd 08 02:04 PM

Soul searching about a sailor in trouble
 
On Fri, 01 Aug 2008 18:15:27 -0400, wrote:

That's why holes are drilled in the bottoms.


Which end of a tire is the bottom? LOL


I knew that was coming!! LOL


According to the CDC, the best way to deal with West Nile is to get
it.


Total baloney.


The CDC web link you gave basically backs me up, without coming out
and saying so plainly. You have to dig through the stats. The very
young, infirmed and elderly are at even more risk from the "common"
flu. Or anything else for that matter.

Let's not debate it, okay? Neither of us will change the other's
mind, so let it be enough that two views were shown.

Rick
** Posted from
http://www.teranews.com **

Herodotus August 2nd 08 04:38 PM

Soul searching about a sailor in trouble
 
On Sat, 02 Aug 2008 19:20:19 +0700, Bruce in Bangkok
wrote:



First you have to be dumb enough to use old tires for fenders.

I don;t know. Sure are a lot of boats using them... maybe somebody
knows something we don;t know?

Bruce-in-Bangkok
(correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom)


A lot of cruising boats traveling through the European canals swear by
them as they often lie alongside barges. I have often seen them in use
(small car ones, not trucks) in harbours in Spain and Italy where
boats are moored to the quay or marina dock and packed in so tightly
that it is normal to touch each other. Normal boating fenders can get
torn off as one yacht rocks in a swell and pulls its neighbour's
fenders downwards.

Makes sense to use tyres in this case.

Peter


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