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HK[_6_] March 17th 10 04:26 PM

Why we Float
 
On 3/17/10 12:22 PM, anon-e-moose wrote:
HK wrote:
On 3/17/2010 11:26 AM, HK wrote:
On 3/17/10 11:12 AM, Wayne.B wrote:
On Wed, 17 Mar 2010 07:58:22 -0400,
wrote:

Since I am *not* retired and, hopefully, will be able to avoid such a
state

I think you'll be quite successful based on what we know about your
life and employment history.


I'm sorry for you, w'hine. You've got nothing of consequence to do.

I guess my father-in-law is my model in some ways. He's 76 now, and
still working two to three days a week when he wants because that's what
he wants to do, and the professional firms that retain his services wish
he would work five days a week for them. He also devotes a lot of his
spare time to meaningful charitable work and travels widely.

You, on the other hand spend your time whistling and tooting from port
to port in the Carib.

To each his own.




By the way, I normally allocate about 60 hrs a week to my volunteer
work, not counting the pro-bono work I do for Democratic candidates.


60 hrs volunteer work (doubtful)
56 hrs sleep

That leaves 52 hrs for rec.boats and all of the other important things
you do.

How do you find the time.
Snerk.



One ID spoofer snerking another...the very best of rec.boats.

Morons, the both of you. Or the one of you.

--


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then it isn't me, it's an ID spoofer.

John H[_2_] March 17th 10 05:39 PM

Why we Float
 
On Wed, 17 Mar 2010 08:07:33 -0400, "Eisboch" wrote:


"HK" wrote in message
...

On 3/17/10 7:06 AM, Eisboch wrote:


wrote in message
m...


Plus all that watchstanding, never-ending maintenance, gear that craps
out, the joy of searching for parts or a decent repair yard or both,
why,
there's just no rest for the weary cruiser. And when you do get some
sleep, it's in a marina with a boat full of drunks down the dock or in a
quiet, charming cove where the local druggies row out, slit your
throats,
and steal your boat.

Right?


Apparently your traumatic boating experiences have affected your respect
for
boating.
I have two suggestions:

a. Purchase a quality boat.
b. Move to a quality marina.

Eisboch




D'oh. I've had no "traumatic" boating experiences. My response was based
upon what I've read here and in the cruising newsgroup in the *charm*
of long-distance cruising. The only "issues" I've had with boat quality
the last two decades have actually been with two Merc engines with blown
stators. I've had no "quality" issues with either of my Parkers or their
Yamaha outboards.

The sort of "cruising" most frequently described here...well, as I have
stated previously, to each his own. Some of you boys seem to have a rough
time understanding that concept, eh? :)


Some of you boys seem to have a rough time understanding the concept of
humor.

It was a joke.

Eisboch


He's already in a 'quality' marina.

http://tinyurl.com/yf6jde7

or:

http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&sour...08272&t=h&z=17

That may explain some of his rancor.
--

"You may give it away, but your honor can never be taken from you. Cherish it."
John H

John H[_2_] March 17th 10 05:42 PM

Why we Float
 
On Wed, 17 Mar 2010 08:37:00 -0400, anon-e-moose
wrote:

HK wrote:
On 3/17/10 1:59 AM, D.Duck wrote:
mgg wrote:


"Loogypicker" wrote in message
...

On Mar 16, 12:39 pm, HK wrote:
On 3/16/10 11:14 AM, Loogypicker wrote:





On Mar 16, 10:23 am, wrote:
On 3/16/10 10:13 AM, Wayne.B wrote:

On Mon, 15 Mar 2010 21:02:05 -0400,
wrote:

I used to sail quite a bit and, in fact, owned a sailboat very
similar
to yours. I found sailing it on Chesapeake Bay to be very
relaxing and
peaceful.

Sailing is a slow and outmoded form of transportation which
usually
results in going around in circles while cursing power boaters.
I'd
rather fly to where I'm going than waste my time slogging around
with
something like that.

Well, sailing doesn't have to be slow...I saw one sailboat out in
San
Diego in 2008 that could sail circles around your barge...she
just won
the America's cup.

I enjoyed my sailboat the three years on the bay I had her. She
*was*
not very fast.

--

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Gecko/20100227 Thunderbird/3.0.3 (or higher)

then it isn't me, it's an ID spoofer.

WHHHOOOOSSSSHHHHHH!!!!!!
Don't you remember spewing THIS gem, fatass?

Naw. I'd rather fly. My round trip to costa rica cost me about $370
in
airfare, and took about seven hours in the air. Once there, did
plenty
of boating and fishing. To me, being where I want to be is a lot
more
fun than slogging my way there. To each his own

You still cannot think in the abstract, eh, s.f.b.?

Sailing around on a relatively small body of water, like Chesapeake
Bay,
was fun for me when we did it. Taking a slow trawler barge to get to
Costa Rica would not be fun for me, now or back then. I wanted to
get to
C.R. so I could enjoy my time off *there*, not waste my off getting
there. And, as I have posted many times, "to each his own."

With a couple of breaks, this summer one of my clients will want me to
attend a week-long meeting in Geneva. It's very tentative at the
moment,
but...I hope to fly to London, grab the Eurostar to Paris, and then
the
Lyria TGV to Geneva. On the way back, we'll rent a car so we can see
some more of Switzerland and a decent part of France. High speed
planes,
high speed trains, lower speed car... :)

You know, to each his own.

--

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then it isn't me, it's an ID spoofer.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -

You just don't mind making yourself look like a complete idiot, do
you? Do you honestly think that one single person believes you here
after all of the lies you've told?

Hehe... Geneva... he's funny....

No, not a soul here believes one word he writes. Even his buddies...
they just won't admit it. Now, if he said he *wasn't* going to Geneva,
I'd think that he was. What a putz that boy is.

--Mike

--Mike


He doesn't care what nayone here thinks. Yeah, right.



Wait...you think I should care what people I don't know and never will
meet who post in a usenet newsgroup think? People who post with an
alias? People who are right-wing trash? I'm supposed to care what people
like you think? Why?

One of the remaining advantages of this country is that it is fairly
large. The odds are in my favor that I'm never going to encounter you or
your fellow teabaggers in the real world. Heck, the odds are in my favor
that I'll never encounter john herring in person again, and we both live
in the same general area. In fact, I haven't seen that particular chunk
of racist right-wing trash since...the summer of 2003, nearly seven
years ago. He was an unpleasant prick then, and as he's aged and
deteriorated further, has only gotten worse.

Ta-ta.







You've carried all that hate with you for 7 years? Wow. Just because the
guy rejected your offer of a boat ride. Get over it man. Move on with
your life.


He didn't offer me a ride on the 'big' boat, only on the little Parker.
--

"You may give it away, but your honor can never be taken from you. Cherish it."
John H

HK[_6_] March 17th 10 06:39 PM

Why we Float
 
On 3/17/10 1:39 PM, John H wrote:
On Wed, 17 Mar 2010 08:07:33 -0400, wrote:


wrote in message
...

On 3/17/10 7:06 AM, Eisboch wrote:


wrote in message
m...


Plus all that watchstanding, never-ending maintenance, gear that craps
out, the joy of searching for parts or a decent repair yard or both,
why,
there's just no rest for the weary cruiser. And when you do get some
sleep, it's in a marina with a boat full of drunks down the dock or in a
quiet, charming cove where the local druggies row out, slit your
throats,
and steal your boat.

Right?


Apparently your traumatic boating experiences have affected your respect
for
boating.
I have two suggestions:

a. Purchase a quality boat.
b. Move to a quality marina.

Eisboch




D'oh. I've had no "traumatic" boating experiences. My response was based
upon what I've read here and in the cruising newsgroup in the *charm*
of long-distance cruising. The only "issues" I've had with boat quality
the last two decades have actually been with two Merc engines with blown
stators. I've had no "quality" issues with either of my Parkers or their
Yamaha outboards.

The sort of "cruising" most frequently described here...well, as I have
stated previously, to each his own. Some of you boys seem to have a rough
time understanding that concept, eh? :)


Some of you boys seem to have a rough time understanding the concept of
humor.

It was a joke.

Eisboch


He's already in a 'quality' marina.

http://tinyurl.com/yf6jde7

or:

http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&sour...08272&t=h&z=17

That may explain some of his rancor.



It's a nice marina, and convenient, with a pair of well-maintained, deep
boat ramps. The guy who runs it is a very decent fellow. What's the
matter, herring...did you see a black guy there launching his boat...and
find that offensive to you?




--


If the X-MimeOLE "header" doesn't say:

Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; U; Intel Mac OS X 10.6; en-US; rv:1.9.1.8)
Gecko/20100227 Thunderbird/3.0.3 (or higher)

then it isn't me, it's an ID spoofer.

HK[_6_] March 17th 10 06:40 PM

Why we Float
 
On 3/17/10 1:42 PM, John H wrote:
On Wed, 17 Mar 2010 08:37:00 -0400,
wrote:

HK wrote:



He didn't offer me a ride on the 'big' boat, only on the little Parker.



Liar.


--


If the X-MimeOLE "header" doesn't say:

Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; U; Intel Mac OS X 10.6; en-US; rv:1.9.1.8)
Gecko/20100227 Thunderbird/3.0.3 (or higher)

then it isn't me, it's an ID spoofer.

jps March 17th 10 06:47 PM

Why we Float
 
On Wed, 17 Mar 2010 06:03:01 -0400, anon-e-moose
wrote:

mgg wrote:


"Loogypicker" wrote in message
...
On Mar 16, 12:39 pm, HK wrote:
On 3/16/10 11:14 AM, Loogypicker wrote:





On Mar 16, 10:23 am, wrote:
On 3/16/10 10:13 AM, Wayne.B wrote:

On Mon, 15 Mar 2010 21:02:05 -0400,
wrote:

I used to sail quite a bit and, in fact, owned a sailboat very
similar
to yours. I found sailing it on Chesapeake Bay to be very
relaxing and
peaceful.

Sailing is a slow and outmoded form of transportation which usually
results in going around in circles while cursing power boaters. I'd
rather fly to where I'm going than waste my time slogging around
with
something like that.

Well, sailing doesn't have to be slow...I saw one sailboat out in San
Diego in 2008 that could sail circles around your barge...she just
won
the America's cup.

I enjoyed my sailboat the three years on the bay I had her. She *was*
not very fast.

--

If the X-MimeOLE "header" doesn't say:

Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; U; Intel Mac OS X 10.6; en-US; rv:1.9.1.8)
Gecko/20100227 Thunderbird/3.0.3 (or higher)

then it isn't me, it's an ID spoofer.

WHHHOOOOSSSSHHHHHH!!!!!!
Don't you remember spewing THIS gem, fatass?

Naw. I'd rather fly. My round trip to costa rica cost me about $370
in
airfare, and took about seven hours in the air. Once there, did
plenty
of boating and fishing. To me, being where I want to be is a lot more
fun than slogging my way there. To each his own

You still cannot think in the abstract, eh, s.f.b.?

Sailing around on a relatively small body of water, like Chesapeake Bay,
was fun for me when we did it. Taking a slow trawler barge to get to
Costa Rica would not be fun for me, now or back then. I wanted to get to
C.R. so I could enjoy my time off *there*, not waste my off getting
there. And, as I have posted many times, "to each his own."

With a couple of breaks, this summer one of my clients will want me to
attend a week-long meeting in Geneva. It's very tentative at the moment,
but...I hope to fly to London, grab the Eurostar to Paris, and then the
Lyria TGV to Geneva. On the way back, we'll rent a car so we can see
some more of Switzerland and a decent part of France. High speed planes,
high speed trains, lower speed car... :)

You know, to each his own.

--

If the X-MimeOLE "header" doesn't say:

Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; U; Intel Mac OS X 10.6; en-US; rv:1.9.1.8)
Gecko/20100227 Thunderbird/3.0.3 (or higher)

then it isn't me, it's an ID spoofer.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -

You just don't mind making yourself look like a complete idiot, do
you? Do you honestly think that one single person believes you here
after all of the lies you've told?


Hehe... Geneva... he's funny....

No, not a soul here believes one word he writes. Even his buddies...
they just won't admit it. Now, if he said he *wasn't* going to Geneva,
I'd think that he was. What a putz that boy is.

--Mike

--Mike


I agree. Krause lies and gets caught at it. What a putz.


The difference being you don't get caught?

What's your name or, if you're concerned, just your initials?

jps March 17th 10 06:52 PM

Why we Float
 
On Wed, 17 Mar 2010 11:08:54 -0400, Wayne.B
wrote:

On Wed, 17 Mar 2010 03:24:25 -0400, "Eisboch" wrote:

I gotta go buy a boat.


Oh, oh, now we've done it

It's that time of year of of course, and everybody should have at
least one.


Good news for those of us who depend on the wealthy for good deals. We
know that Richard buying a boat will be followed shortly by Richard
selling a boat. One of us lucky folks will get a good deal.

An example of trickle down, or more realistically, tinkledown.

HK[_6_] March 17th 10 07:09 PM

Why we Float
 
On 3/17/10 2:52 PM, jps wrote:
On Wed, 17 Mar 2010 11:08:54 -0400, Wayne.B
wrote:

On Wed, 17 Mar 2010 03:24:25 -0400, wrote:

I gotta go buy a boat.


Oh, oh, now we've done it

It's that time of year of of course, and everybody should have at
least one.


Good news for those of us who depend on the wealthy for good deals. We
know that Richard buying a boat will be followed shortly by Richard
selling a boat. One of us lucky folks will get a good deal.

An example of trickle down, or more realistically, tinkledown.



Actually, I think he buys one boat and ends up selling two. I'm not sure
how he does that. :)

Richard El Eisboch can be a bit too sharp sometimes, but I think he's a
decent fellow. I don't hold his "Republicanism" against him. Hey, my own
mama was active in the GOP in New Haven back then. Of course, it was a
different Republican party, one that was far more progressive than
today's version. I'd even let him buy me lunch. :)

Most of the rest of the Republicans here are teabaggers, and no more
valuable to society than road kill.



--


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Gecko/20100227 Thunderbird/3.0.3 (or higher)

then it isn't me, it's an ID spoofer.

jps March 17th 10 07:15 PM

Why we Float
 
On Wed, 17 Mar 2010 03:04:06 -0400, "Eisboch" wrote:


"D.Duck" wrote in message
m...


Have fun with your guitars.


The fun part of the guitars is the people you meet and the education I am
getting from the
luthier I work with.


As in, paying the right sum for the piece so you can have him work it
back into shape and still make a profit.

Painful education.

jps March 17th 10 08:53 PM

Why we Float
 
On Wed, 17 Mar 2010 15:09:48 -0400, HK
wrote:

On 3/17/10 2:52 PM, jps wrote:
On Wed, 17 Mar 2010 11:08:54 -0400, Wayne.B
wrote:

On Wed, 17 Mar 2010 03:24:25 -0400, wrote:

I gotta go buy a boat.

Oh, oh, now we've done it

It's that time of year of of course, and everybody should have at
least one.


Good news for those of us who depend on the wealthy for good deals. We
know that Richard buying a boat will be followed shortly by Richard
selling a boat. One of us lucky folks will get a good deal.

An example of trickle down, or more realistically, tinkledown.



Actually, I think he buys one boat and ends up selling two. I'm not sure
how he does that. :)

Richard El Eisboch can be a bit too sharp sometimes, but I think he's a
decent fellow. I don't hold his "Republicanism" against him. Hey, my own
mama was active in the GOP in New Haven back then. Of course, it was a
different Republican party, one that was far more progressive than
today's version. I'd even let him buy me lunch. :)

Most of the rest of the Republicans here are teabaggers, and no more
valuable to society than road kill.


I love that Clarence Thomas' wife is now an active teabagger.

Knowing she'd engage in such banal advocacy indicates how
unenlightened the Thomas clan truly is. He married an idiot and she
married a clueless asshole. The founding fathers would be embarassed
to witness this mental midget sitting on our highest court.

Richard is an okay guy, with unreasonably sharp elbows. Apart from
his inappropriate knee jerk responses, there's a hint of humanity that
shines through at least as often as February 29th.


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