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[email protected] September 4th 08 06:31 PM

Skip on the move
 
Just looked at Skip's spot log. He's left the anchorage inside Coecles
Harbor on Shelter Island and appears to be headed back towards the
LIS. Via Email, he had mentioned going to Three Mile harbor while out
between the forks, but apparently he has changed his plans. I advised
him earlier via email that he needs to find a well protected anchorage
with good holding before Saturday, when Hanna's remnants will be
passing through. Where he just left would have been ideal. Three Mile
Harbor would have been good as well.

His immediate problem may be that he is about to try transiting Plum
Gut against an outgoing tide. He'll be up against as much as 5 knots
of opposing current and depending on wind, he may encounter an 8 foot
standing wave that he will have to sail through. Plum Gut can be
pretty easy if you do it during slack tide. Second best would be
having the tide pushing you through. He picked the worst option.
Hopefully there is almost no wind there when he arrives and he can
motor through (slowly) without issues. It will also be quite a
"washing machine". Moreso if the wind is opposing.

Wonder where he's headed?


[email protected] September 4th 08 07:09 PM

Skip on the move
 
On Thu, 04 Sep 2008 13:31:44 -0400, wrote:

Just looked at Skip's spot log. He's left the anchorage inside Coecles
Harbor on Shelter Island and appears to be headed back towards the
LIS. Via Email, he had mentioned going to Three Mile harbor while out
between the forks, but apparently he has changed his plans. I advised
him earlier via email that he needs to find a well protected anchorage
with good holding before Saturday, when Hanna's remnants will be
passing through. Where he just left would have been ideal. Three Mile
Harbor would have been good as well.

His immediate problem may be that he is about to try transiting Plum
Gut against an outgoing tide. He'll be up against as much as 5 knots
of opposing current and depending on wind, he may encounter an 8 foot
standing wave that he will have to sail through. Plum Gut can be
pretty easy if you do it during slack tide. Second best would be
having the tide pushing you through. He picked the worst option.
Hopefully there is almost no wind there when he arrives and he can
motor through (slowly) without issues. It will also be quite a
"washing machine". Moreso if the wind is opposing.

Wonder where he's headed?



Well, Skip is sailing a weird course. It's beginning to look like the
diagram of a complex math problem. Sort of like he's hunting around
for something that he can't find. Does anyone know if Skip has good
local charts for the area between the forks of Long Island? I'm
beginning to wonder, as he also mentioned to me that he was unable to
find Greenport a few days ago. He also calls things by strange names
that are not on the charts. If he lacks charts for the area, that
would explain a lot.

Maybe he's trying to fond Greenport again. If he is trying to find
Three Mile Harbor, he's gone in the wrong direction, completely. Or,
maybe he's just sailing around seeing the sights and will head back to
Coecles Harbor for the night. It's interesting following the spot
track as he zigs and zags.

Wilbur Hubbard[_2_] September 4th 08 07:18 PM

Skip on the move
 

wrote in message
...
On Thu, 04 Sep 2008 13:31:44 -0400, wrote:

Just looked at Skip's spot log. He's left the anchorage inside Coecles
Harbor on Shelter Island and appears to be headed back towards the
LIS. Via Email, he had mentioned going to Three Mile harbor while out
between the forks, but apparently he has changed his plans. I advised
him earlier via email that he needs to find a well protected anchorage
with good holding before Saturday, when Hanna's remnants will be
passing through. Where he just left would have been ideal. Three Mile
Harbor would have been good as well.

His immediate problem may be that he is about to try transiting Plum
Gut against an outgoing tide. He'll be up against as much as 5 knots
of opposing current and depending on wind, he may encounter an 8 foot
standing wave that he will have to sail through. Plum Gut can be
pretty easy if you do it during slack tide. Second best would be
having the tide pushing you through. He picked the worst option.
Hopefully there is almost no wind there when he arrives and he can
motor through (slowly) without issues. It will also be quite a
"washing machine". Moreso if the wind is opposing.

Wonder where he's headed?



Well, Skip is sailing a weird course. It's beginning to look like the
diagram of a complex math problem. Sort of like he's hunting around
for something that he can't find. Does anyone know if Skip has good
local charts for the area between the forks of Long Island? I'm
beginning to wonder, as he also mentioned to me that he was unable to
find Greenport a few days ago. He also calls things by strange names
that are not on the charts. If he lacks charts for the area, that
would explain a lot.

Maybe he's trying to fond Greenport again. If he is trying to find
Three Mile Harbor, he's gone in the wrong direction, completely. Or,
maybe he's just sailing around seeing the sights and will head back to
Coecles Harbor for the night. It's interesting following the spot
track as he zigs and zags.


He's probably hooked up his GameBoy to his autopilot by mistake . . .

Wilbur Hubbard



[email protected] September 4th 08 07:28 PM

Skip on the move
 
On Thu, 4 Sep 2008 14:18:32 -0400, "Wilbur Hubbard"
wrote:


wrote in message
.. .
On Thu, 04 Sep 2008 13:31:44 -0400, wrote:

Just looked at Skip's spot log. He's left the anchorage inside Coecles
Harbor on Shelter Island and appears to be headed back towards the
LIS. Via Email, he had mentioned going to Three Mile harbor while out
between the forks, but apparently he has changed his plans. I advised
him earlier via email that he needs to find a well protected anchorage
with good holding before Saturday, when Hanna's remnants will be
passing through. Where he just left would have been ideal. Three Mile
Harbor would have been good as well.

His immediate problem may be that he is about to try transiting Plum
Gut against an outgoing tide. He'll be up against as much as 5 knots
of opposing current and depending on wind, he may encounter an 8 foot
standing wave that he will have to sail through. Plum Gut can be
pretty easy if you do it during slack tide. Second best would be
having the tide pushing you through. He picked the worst option.
Hopefully there is almost no wind there when he arrives and he can
motor through (slowly) without issues. It will also be quite a
"washing machine". Moreso if the wind is opposing.

Wonder where he's headed?



Well, Skip is sailing a weird course. It's beginning to look like the
diagram of a complex math problem. Sort of like he's hunting around
for something that he can't find. Does anyone know if Skip has good
local charts for the area between the forks of Long Island? I'm
beginning to wonder, as he also mentioned to me that he was unable to
find Greenport a few days ago. He also calls things by strange names
that are not on the charts. If he lacks charts for the area, that
would explain a lot.

Maybe he's trying to fond Greenport again. If he is trying to find
Three Mile Harbor, he's gone in the wrong direction, completely. Or,
maybe he's just sailing around seeing the sights and will head back to
Coecles Harbor for the night. It's interesting following the spot
track as he zigs and zags.


He's probably hooked up his GameBoy to his autopilot by mistake . . .

Wilbur Hubbard


funny.

[email protected] September 4th 08 07:40 PM

Skip on the move
 
On Sep 4, 11:09*am, wrote:
....
Well, Skip is sailing a weird course. It's beginning to look like the
diagram of a complex math problem....


If the weather is nice maybe he's just gone out for a day sail... In
any case given Skip's propensity for reporting we're unlikely to be
left guessing for long :)

-- Tom.

[email protected] September 4th 08 08:10 PM

Skip on the move
 
On Thu, 4 Sep 2008 11:40:29 -0700 (PDT), "
wrote:

On Sep 4, 11:09*am, wrote:
...
Well, Skip is sailing a weird course. It's beginning to look like the
diagram of a complex math problem....


If the weather is nice maybe he's just gone out for a day sail... In
any case given Skip's propensity for reporting we're unlikely to be
left guessing for long :)

-- Tom.


It now looks like he is headed over towards Greenport or Dering
Harbor. Greenport would be an interesting stop for them. Nice place to
walk around.

I'm sure we'll get a F- U - L- L report. G


.... I just checked and the new position shows him entering Sterling
Basin, which is next to Greenport. I hope he hasn't mistaken Greenport
Dock Marine for the Greeport Town Dock, which I mentioned to him.
Greenport Dock Marine builds docks. The Town Dock is way over on the
other side of Greenport from Sterling Basin.

There aren't any "inexpensive" options in Sterling Basin.

I'll hold off hitting send on this post for a few minutes to see if
the track updates again.

3:03 PM - He's headed back out of Sterling.

Round and round and round he goes... where he stops, nobody knows!

Wayne.B September 4th 08 08:16 PM

Skip on the move
 
On Thu, 04 Sep 2008 13:31:44 -0400, wrote:

Wonder where he's headed?


Looks to me like he tacked into Greenport Harbor against a shifty
westerly.


Roger Long September 4th 08 08:17 PM

Skip on the move
 
Kind of fun these SPOT's, are they not?

I was kind of surprised to return from my last cruise and not find any
comments about my track although friends and family enjoyed being able to
follow along immensely.

I sent an OK just after anchoring each night to fix the position and then
shut the unit down until morning, turning it on again just before leaving.
Skip often seems to leave his on all night. They are pretty good on
batteries. Mine's still on the first set I put in just after I bought it.

--
Roger Long



Jeff September 4th 08 08:18 PM

Skip on the move
 
wrote:

Well, Skip is sailing a weird course. It's beginning to look like the
diagram of a complex math problem.


Maybe he's just out for a daysail to nowhere. Stranger things have
happened!

How can we join the fun and track Skip?

[email protected] September 4th 08 08:31 PM

Skip on the move
 

On Thu, 04 Sep 2008 15:18:01 -0400, jeff wrote:

wrote:

Well, Skip is sailing a weird course. It's beginning to look like the
diagram of a complex math problem.


Maybe he's just out for a daysail to nowhere. Stranger things have
happened!

How can we join the fun and track Skip?



http://share.findmespot.com/shared/f...PLcZGvSb3 nMe

It's sometimes a little unsettling. The track goes point-to-point, and
occasionally it appears he has sailed across land where it juts out.

He was at his last anchorage for a few days, so I think he's looking
for somewhere new to anchor.

I'm headed for MY boat now, so I'll have to check later when I get
home to see where he ends up.


Larry September 5th 08 12:19 AM

Skip on the move
 
wrote in :

Wonder where he's headed?




The last fix I see is 4 hours old #49. #48 was headed into Stirling Basin
but #49 looks like he's coming back out. No fixes after 49 to see where he
is now.....??


Wilbur Hubbard[_2_] September 5th 08 12:25 AM

Skip on the move
 

"Larry" wrote in message
...
wrote in :

Wonder where he's headed?




The last fix I see is 4 hours old #49. #48 was headed into Stirling Basin
but #49 looks like he's coming back out. No fixes after 49 to see where
he
is now.....??


It's obvious that he anchored behind the breakwater. Duh!

Wilbur Hubbard



[email protected] September 5th 08 02:12 AM

Skip on the move
 
On Thu, 4 Sep 2008 19:25:58 -0400, "Wilbur Hubbard"
wrote:


"Larry" wrote in message
.. .
wrote in :

Wonder where he's headed?




The last fix I see is 4 hours old #49. #48 was headed into Stirling Basin
but #49 looks like he's coming back out. No fixes after 49 to see where
he
is now.....??


It's obvious that he anchored behind the breakwater. Duh!

Wilbur Hubbard


No, it's not. If you had ever been there, you'd know why. If Skip has
anchored there, he'll probably spend the night wishing he hadn't.




Roger Long September 5th 08 02:01 PM

Skip on the move
 
wrote

No, it's not. If you had ever been there, you'd know why. If Skip has
anchored there, he'll probably spend the night wishing he hadn't.


I don't think they anchored. Usually Skip leaves his SPOT on and there
would be a few fixes in nearly the same place. It looks to me like it
stopped transmitting for some reason.

--
Roger Long




Larry September 5th 08 02:07 PM

Skip on the move
 
"Roger Long" wrote in news:g9rajs$c8v$1
@registered.motzarella.org:

It looks to me like it
stopped transmitting for some reason.


What I can't figure out is why the Spot box doesn't have a 12V input. Skip
told me in an email it takes some kind of expensive battery pack.

Ooops....answered my own question...(c;


Bob September 5th 08 04:29 PM

Skip on the move
 
On Sep 4, 9:31*am, wrote:

Just looked at Skip's spot log.


His immediate problem may be that he is about to try transiting Plum
Gut against an outgoing tide.


Wonder where he's headed?


Not to worry my concerned friend................
Skip should be very aware of that area since he is now a licensed
Captain. Many of the navigation/plotting questions are most likly from
that chart and he would have had to determine tides, plot course and
drift and all that good stuff from interesting places that included:

Plum Gutt
The Race
Little Gull Island
Lake Montauk
Great Salt Pond
Pt. Judith harbor

With his documented Captainish knowledge of Chart 13205 TR he'll be
fine........

Bob
Now.... time to go back to sailing
Later and all that other cute huggy kissy crap that some people use in
their Signature.

Roger Long September 5th 08 06:59 PM

Skip on the move
 
"Larry" wrote

What I can't figure out is why the Spot box doesn't have a 12V input.
Skip
told me in an email it takes some kind of expensive battery pack.


The SPOT just used two AA batteries but they recommend Litihum. Alkaline
can be used in a pinch but they say transmisson power will be reduced.

It really should have a 12 V jack but it was primarily designed for back
packing and other carried on the person applications.

--
Roger Long




Gregory Hall September 5th 08 07:35 PM

Skip on the move
 

"Roger Long" wrote in message
...
"Larry" wrote

What I can't figure out is why the Spot box doesn't have a 12V input.
Skip
told me in an email it takes some kind of expensive battery pack.


The SPOT just used two AA batteries but they recommend Litihum. Alkaline
can be used in a pinch but they say transmisson power will be reduced.

It really should have a 12 V jack but it was primarily designed for back
packing and other carried on the person applications.

--
Roger Long



What it needs more than that is a website that works. It's down again.

--
Gregory Hall



[email protected] September 5th 08 08:18 PM

Skip on the move
 
On Fri, 5 Sep 2008 09:01:56 -0400, "Roger Long"
wrote:

wrote

No, it's not. If you had ever been there, you'd know why. If Skip has
anchored there, he'll probably spend the night wishing he hadn't.


I don't think they anchored. Usually Skip leaves his SPOT on and there
would be a few fixes in nearly the same place. It looks to me like it
stopped transmitting for some reason.


The page has been down for maintenance. Maybe it stopped updating on
their end. It's been down all day, and now they have a temp page up
saying that the "sharing" pages are BETA and there will be frequent
outages for just that feature.


Justin C[_14_] September 6th 08 09:27 AM

Skip on the move
 
In article , wrote:
On Fri, 5 Sep 2008 09:01:56 -0400, "Roger Long"
wrote:

wrote

No, it's not. If you had ever been there, you'd know why. If Skip has
anchored there, he'll probably spend the night wishing he hadn't.


I don't think they anchored. Usually Skip leaves his SPOT on and there
would be a few fixes in nearly the same place. It looks to me like it
stopped transmitting for some reason.


The page has been down for maintenance. Maybe it stopped updating on
their end. It's been down all day, and now they have a temp page up
saying that the "sharing" pages are BETA and there will be frequent
outages for just that feature.


hmmm.... not enough profit in the product to afford the hardware and
bandwidth needed when family and friends of their customers want to use
the exact service they're selling?

Justin.

--
Justin C, by the sea.

Roger Long September 6th 08 11:06 AM

Skip on the move
 
"Justin C" wrote

hmmm.... not enough profit in the product to afford the hardware and
bandwidth needed when family and friends of their customers want to use
the exact service they're selling?


No, it's a large company with a lot of resources. The tracking is a
non-critical service to let a larger group of people follow your route.
Email OK, Help, and 911 messages, which also have position information, are
still active. I'm not aware of any outages all summer. It was down
Memorial Day weekend, probably for last minute tuning. They then seemed to
wait until the main part of the boating and hiking season was over before
doing more maintenance.

The page is up again and seems to show S&L anchored off the breakwater but I
don't think it's updating yet because my page does not show the sail I took
yesterday.

--
Roger Long




Justin C[_14_] September 6th 08 12:41 PM

Skip on the move
 
In article , Roger Long wrote:
"Justin C" wrote

hmmm.... not enough profit in the product to afford the hardware and
bandwidth needed when family and friends of their customers want to use
the exact service they're selling?


No, it's a large company with a lot of resources. The tracking is a
non-critical service to let a larger group of people follow your route.
Email OK, Help, and 911 messages, which also have position information, are
still active. I'm not aware of any outages all summer. It was down
Memorial Day weekend, probably for last minute tuning. They then seemed to
wait until the main part of the boating and hiking season was over before
doing more maintenance.

The page is up again and seems to show S&L anchored off the breakwater but I
don't think it's updating yet because my page does not show the sail I took
yesterday.


Fair enough, it was just a guess. I do like the look of the product
though. Saving one the necessity of telephoning a whole bunch of
concerned people each time you touch land. I'm pretty sure I'll get
one... when I get a boat. For now I'll just enjoy the cruising life
through the likes of Skip, Lydia, Zac, and anyone else who's out there.

Justin.

--
Justin C, by the sea.

Wilbur Hubbard[_2_] September 6th 08 01:38 PM

Skip on the move
 

"Justin C" wrote in message
...
In article , Roger Long wrote:
"Justin C" wrote

hmmm.... not enough profit in the product to afford the hardware and
bandwidth needed when family and friends of their customers want to use
the exact service they're selling?


No, it's a large company with a lot of resources. The tracking is a
non-critical service to let a larger group of people follow your route.
Email OK, Help, and 911 messages, which also have position information,
are
still active. I'm not aware of any outages all summer. It was down
Memorial Day weekend, probably for last minute tuning. They then seemed
to
wait until the main part of the boating and hiking season was over before
doing more maintenance.

The page is up again and seems to show S&L anchored off the breakwater
but I
don't think it's updating yet because my page does not show the sail I
took
yesterday.


Fair enough, it was just a guess. I do like the look of the product
though. Saving one the necessity of telephoning a whole bunch of
concerned people each time you touch land. I'm pretty sure I'll get
one... when I get a boat. For now I'll just enjoy the cruising life
through the likes of Skip, Lydia, Zac, and anyone else who's out there.



Thank you.

Wilbur Hubbard



Roger Long September 6th 08 02:57 PM

Skip on the move
 
I think Justin meant vicariously enjoying real cruises. We all know you are
"out there" but I think he meant it in the nautical sense.

--
Roger Long




Wayne.B September 6th 08 03:30 PM

Skip on the move
 
On Sat, 06 Sep 2008 11:41:04 -0000, Justin C
wrote:

Fair enough, it was just a guess. I do like the look of the product
though. Saving one the necessity of telephoning a whole bunch of
concerned people each time you touch land. I'm pretty sure I'll get
one... when I get a boat. For now I'll just enjoy the cruising life
through the likes of Skip, Lydia, Zac, and anyone else who's out there.


If you have a SSB radio and Pactor modem you can do the same thing via
Sailmail or Winlink. Winlink requires a ham radio license, Sailmail
does not.

http://tinyurl.com/6jp5qd

Zoom in and point to a red dot for the log entry. I prefer the
satellite view.

Roger Long September 6th 08 04:37 PM

Skip on the move
 
"Wayne.B" wrote
If you have a SSB radio and Pactor modem you can do the same thing via
Sailmail or Winlink. Winlink requires a ham radio license, Sailmail
does not.

http://tinyurl.com/6jp5qd

Zoom in and point to a red dot for the log entry. I prefer the
satellite view.


Wayne, is the map in this implementation always so squirrelly? I had to give
up trying to get it to settle down because I was getting a headache watching
it jitter around. The panning doesn't seem to work properly. The SPOT maps
work much better.

No SSB in my plans. I cruise to get away and be out of touch. The thing I
like about the SPOT is that it lets friends and family ashore share in the
adventure somewhat and remain reassured and gives me emergency
communications without the expense, cost, and space of a radio rig which is
more of an issue on my small 32 footer than most cruising craft. Living
aboard, I probably would feel differently but I cruise for short enough
periods that I don't want anyone to be able to contact me.

--
Roger Long




Justin C[_14_] September 6th 08 04:50 PM

Skip on the move
 
In article , Roger Long wrote:
I think Justin meant vicariously enjoying real cruises. We all know
you are "out there" but I think he meant it in the nautical sense.


Correctly spotted, Roger. I must try and re-read what I type before I
send it, to ensure I am expressing what I am meaning.

Damn, I wish they taught English better in this damn country[1].
.... I wish they better taught English in this damned country... maybe,
I dunno.... I wish they taught better English? Aaaarggghh!!!!

Justin.

1. England.
--
Justin C, by the sea.

Justin C[_14_] September 6th 08 05:24 PM

Skip on the move
 
In article , Wayne.B wrote:
On Sat, 06 Sep 2008 11:41:04 -0000, Justin C
wrote:

Fair enough, it was just a guess. I do like the look of the product
though. Saving one the necessity of telephoning a whole bunch of
concerned people each time you touch land. I'm pretty sure I'll get
one... when I get a boat. For now I'll just enjoy the cruising life
through the likes of Skip, Lydia, Zac, and anyone else who's out there.


If you have a SSB radio and Pactor modem you can do the same thing via
Sailmail or Winlink. Winlink requires a ham radio license, Sailmail
does not.

http://tinyurl.com/6jp5qd

Zoom in and point to a red dot for the log entry. I prefer the
satellite view.


Like Roger said, that map is enough to give you a headache... until it's
downloaded all the dots (why does it take so long?!).

I looked at Sailmail, looks complicated, and what sort of range do you
get? Major down-side for both Winlink and Sailmail for me a Windows.
Been using it since version 3, and I will not have it installed on
anything I own. Any software has to be either OS X or Linux/BSD
compatible or I'm not interested.

Justin.

--
Justin C, by the sea.

[email protected] September 6th 08 05:31 PM

Skip on the move
 
On Sat, 6 Sep 2008 09:57:48 -0400, "Roger Long"
wrote:

I think Justin meant vicariously enjoying real cruises. We all know you are
"out there" but I think he meant it in the nautical sense.


good one.

[email protected] September 6th 08 05:47 PM

Skip on the move
 
On Sep 6, 8:37*am, "Roger Long" wrote:
"Wayne.B" wrote

If you have a SSB radio and Pactor modem you can do the same thing via
Sailmail or Winlink. *Winlink requires a ham radio license, Sailmail
does not.


http://tinyurl.com/6jp5qd


Zoom in and point to a red dot for the log entry. *I prefer the
satellite view.


Wayne, is the map in this implementation always so squirrelly? I had to give
up trying to get it to settle down because I was getting a headache watching
it jitter around. *The panning doesn't seem to work properly. *The SPOT maps
work much better.

....

There are a couple of trackers out there for people who are checking
into YOTREPS. You can check in via SSB voice or digital or any kind
of email (a digital sat phone would work). You can see a bit of our
track using AH6QR. Some of the more tech savy folks in my clan follow
us along. But, YOTREPS isn't really a tracking service. Historically
it is a weather reporting service that has developed 'net tracking as
the technology has become available and as volunteers have developed
the apps. Reporting into a net or directly to YOTREPS via email has
some benefits when you are offshore. Apparently Wayne is using it
near shore, too. I can't see any reason not to use it that way, too.
My only concern is that the guy who provides the bandwidth does it for
the wx reporting and I don't know how concerned he is with reports
from places that have fixed wx stations.

The way the map plots the reports is a little goofy with 300 plus
points but once it has finished placing them it seems to work fine for
me even on a slow computer.

-- Tom.

[email protected] September 6th 08 06:02 PM

Skip on the move
 
On Sep 6, 9:24 am, Justin C wrote:
....
I looked at Sailmail, looks complicated, and what sort of range do you
get? ...


From time to time HF radio signals travel right around the world. In
practice sailmail and winlink have worldwide coverage and with voice
nets with relays it is unusual to drop a boat with working gear during
a scheduled net. I would be nice if the guy who gives us the airmail
software would port it to *nix but since he does the work for free in
his spare time it is hard to complain.

-- Tom.

Capt. JG September 6th 08 06:26 PM

Skip on the move
 
wrote in message
...
On Sat, 6 Sep 2008 09:57:48 -0400, "Roger Long"
wrote:

I think Justin meant vicariously enjoying real cruises. We all know you
are
"out there" but I think he meant it in the nautical sense.


good one.



Neal is definitely out to sea.

--
"j" ganz @@
www.sailnow.com




Wayne.B September 6th 08 06:30 PM

Skip on the move
 
On Sat, 06 Sep 2008 16:24:44 -0000, Justin C
wrote:

I looked at Sailmail, looks complicated, and what sort of range do you
get? Major down-side for both Winlink and Sailmail for me a Windows.


Like all HF radio it depends on the sun spot cycle, conditions in the
ionosphere and time of day. Typically 1,000 to 2,000 miles is quite
doable with a little patience, sometimes a great deal more.

AFAIK the Winlink and Sailmail clients are Windows only, not that bad
in my experience. I use Win2K on all my boat laptops and they never
crash.


Wayne.B September 6th 08 06:32 PM

Skip on the move
 
On Sat, 6 Sep 2008 11:37:05 -0400, "Roger Long"
wrote:

Wayne, is the map in this implementation always so squirrelly?


Wait for it to finish loading, takes a minute or so. Once it stops
loading dots from the database it is quite stable.



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