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On Aug 8, 3:06*pm, Goofball_star_dot_etal
wrote: On Fri, 8 Aug 2008 11:05:49 -0700 (PDT), wrote: On Aug 7, 6:14*pm, "Wilbur Hubbard" wrote: wrote in message .... snip "Just as a flower, which seems beautiful has color but no perfume, so are the fruitless words of a man who speaks them but does them not." Dahammpada Hmmmm? Speaks them but does them not? Now where does that apply so well? *Oh, I know! I recall somebody speaking words about delivering several tons of coffee beans by sail from Belize to Texas. Does that fit into the category of speaking them but doing them not? You will have to ask Joe that, but from what I have read in the news about El Lago Coffee they are still selling lots of coffee. I ordered some myself off e-bay. They are using the profits to get another boat and finish what they started. You should buy some of the coffee and support the El Lago Coffee Co. efforts to reduce carbon emissions and dependence on oil. Unless you're one of them who thinks there is no future in sail transport. "Only in Den Helder in Holland did we meet the same idealism, will, pride and hope as our own project is based on – the same deep interest in ship building and square-rig sailing. There, volunteer boat builders were building a brigantine for “fair transport” of “fair trade” goods and products. They had what looked like an impossible project – an old iron hull from WWII that needed covering with wooden planks, a hull without mast, rig or sail, never mind internal structures for mess rooms or cabins. But you could see the spark in their eyes and their stories brought the ship alive for us. Perhaps because we have been in their shoes, been through the start phase, the building phase, and when it all looks a mess, we could understand their idea, see what was fantastic about the empty hull and the plans. The ship is called Tres Hombres and will hopefully be finished within the next six months. Then they hope to sail with delicacies and “fair trade” goods on various routes between Europe and the rest of the world – also with inexperienced ship assistants who will have to learn the art of sailing a brigantine. We shared a few pleasant hours taking with these fellow “nerds” about the details. It was great to find a project on our way home that could put ours in perspective. " http://www.havhingsten.dk/index.php?...&L=1&tx_ttnews[tt_news]=1996&tx_ttnews[backPid]=1092&cHash=27b59793ca Tell Joe..- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I passed the info on, interesting. They must be big ZZ top fans. Could not find any pictures of the hull on-line. Check this out http://freakonomics.blogs.nytimes.co...xaggerated/?hp Fred |
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