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I once sailed down the Hudson on the sloop "Clearwater" shortly after
joining their advisory board. The captain, mate, and crew were all women. I was the only man on board. I have seldom, if ever, seen a large and difficult to manage vessel (70 foot boom) handled so well. In my long association with many sail training groups, it was almost universally acknowledged, often reluctantly by some fairly macho males, that women make better sailors both at the entry level and as they rise to command. Good example is Maine's Linda Greenlaw of "Perfect Storm" fame. She was the most successful captain in the most challenging fishery on the east coast. Fishing is different than sailing but many of the same priniciples apply. There is an aspect of sailing that plays directly to the strenght of the way the female mind tends to approach life (whether you believe this is hard wired or socialized in). The sailing vessel has no power source of its own. It is made to move only by changing it's own configuration and subtly influencing the environment around it; not by exerting power to overcome its environment. -- Roger Long |
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"Roger Long" wrote in message
... I once sailed down the Hudson on the sloop "Clearwater" shortly after joining their advisory board. The captain, mate, and crew were all women. I was the only man on board. I have seldom, if ever, seen a large and difficult to manage vessel (70 foot boom) handled so well. In my long association with many sail training groups, it was almost universally acknowledged, often reluctantly by some fairly macho males, that women make better sailors both at the entry level and as they rise to command. Good example is Maine's Linda Greenlaw of "Perfect Storm" fame. She was the most successful captain in the most challenging fishery on the east coast. Fishing is different than sailing but many of the same priniciples apply. There is an aspect of sailing that plays directly to the strenght of the way the female mind tends to approach life (whether you believe this is hard wired or socialized in). The sailing vessel has no power source of its own. It is made to move only by changing it's own configuration and subtly influencing the environment around it; not by exerting power to overcome its environment. -- Roger Long Can I quote you? -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com |
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