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Ultimate skinny water boat drive
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Ultimate skinny water boat drive
On 4/4/10 7:04 PM, mmc wrote:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hPexW...eature=related These damned things tear up oyster beds, and slightly under water grass beds where fish breed and eat. Damned things ought to be banned. Their owners ought to be tossed with bleeding cuts into a nest of alligators. -- http://tinyurl.com/ykxp2ym |
Ultimate skinny water boat drive
On Apr 4, 5:31*pm, hk wrote:
On 4/4/10 8:28 PM, wrote: On Sun, 04 Apr 2010 19:10:35 -0400, wrote: On 4/4/10 7:04 PM, mmc wrote: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hPexW...eature=related These damned things tear up oyster beds, and slightly under water grass beds where fish breed and eat. Damned things ought to be banned. Their owners ought to be tossed with bleeding cuts into a nest of alligators.. I agree about the grass, they are illegal to run over a grass bed right now *in Florida(as is grinding through with any boat). $1000 fine and you may have to pay to fix it. As for the oyster bar, I bet on the oysters, particularly if they were seeded on coral rock. The oyster beds I recall in and along the ICW were seeded on a muddy/sandy bottom. --http://tinyurl.com/ykxp2ym I see a lot of these and they are not a problem for grass beds because ti is illegal to run them over shallow grass beds. |
Ultimate skinny water boat drive
wrote in message ... On Sun, 04 Apr 2010 20:31:50 -0400, hk wrote: As for the oyster bar, I bet on the oysters, particularly if they were seeded on coral rock. The oyster beds I recall in and along the ICW were seeded on a muddy/sandy bottom. Some of the restoration does use coral rock like rip rap stones to anchor the new beds until they get established. The other method involves bolding the seeded shell together in wire mesh. Neither are very "prop friendly". Florida Gulf Coast University has an active restoration program going on here using the wire mesh method. Running over one of these beds is about like hitting a pile of crab traps full of rocks I guess the ultimate is still the airboat. Too damn noisy though. |
Ultimate skinny water boat drive
On 4/5/10 8:38 AM, mmc wrote:
wrote in message ... On Sun, 04 Apr 2010 20:31:50 -0400, wrote: As for the oyster bar, I bet on the oysters, particularly if they were seeded on coral rock. The oyster beds I recall in and along the ICW were seeded on a muddy/sandy bottom. Some of the restoration does use coral rock like rip rap stones to anchor the new beds until they get established. The other method involves bolding the seeded shell together in wire mesh. Neither are very "prop friendly". Florida Gulf Coast University has an active restoration program going on here using the wire mesh method. Running over one of these beds is about like hitting a pile of crab traps full of rocks I guess the ultimate is still the airboat. Too damn noisy though. I proudly participated in an effort to have airboats banned from the ICW north of St. Augustine, Florida, because of noise pollution. That wasn't the only reason to ban them...there were a couple of airboaters who got their jollies running over the salt marshes. The airboats were noisier than the jet engines the air national guardies played with at the guard's facilities at the st. augustine airport. *That* was simply boys and their toys, and the sonic intrusions were rare. I recall bassfishing at Orange Lake in Florida many years ago. We were only catching a couple of fish, but the area was beautiful and it was the first place where I saw a bald eagle. A few hours into our sojourn with nature, a pair of airboaters came out, pretending they were 16-year-olds on jetskis. Crikey! Why those who lived around the lake didn't use the airboats for target practice is beyond me. -- http://tinyurl.com/ykxp2ym |
Ultimate skinny water boat drive
On 4/5/10 11:04 AM, wrote:
On Mon, 05 Apr 2010 08:54:55 -0400, wrote: I recall bassfishing at Orange Lake in Florida many years ago. We were only catching a couple of fish, but the area was beautiful and it was the first place where I saw a bald eagle. You never saw one in Maryland? We used to see them occasionally in Southern Maryland and they were on the Eastern Shore quite often in the 50s and 60s. Nope. Only saw airboats in Florida. I suspect southern Maryland is a bit less "southern" than when you lived in the area. In the 1950s and early 1960s, the shore I saw the most of was of Long Island Sound off Milford and Branford, Connecticut, and Lakes Zoar and Candlewood, inland. :) Don't recall seeing or hearing any airboats... -- http://tinyurl.com/ykxp2ym |
Ultimate skinny water boat drive
On Apr 4, 7:10*pm, hk wrote:
On 4/4/10 7:04 PM, mmc wrote: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hPexW...eature=related These damned things tear up oyster beds, and slightly under water grass beds where fish breed and eat. Damned things ought to be banned. Their owners ought to be tossed with bleeding cuts into a nest of alligators. --http://tinyurl.com/ykxp2ym Yep, as well as gas hog Parkers |
Ultimate skinny water boat drive
On Apr 5, 11:47*am, Loogypicker wrote:
On Apr 4, 7:10*pm, hk wrote: On 4/4/10 7:04 PM, mmc wrote: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hPexW...eature=related These damned things tear up oyster beds, and slightly under water grass beds where fish breed and eat. Damned things ought to be banned. Their owners ought to be tossed with bleeding cuts into a nest of alligators. --http://tinyurl.com/ykxp2ym Yep, as well as gas hog Parkers There are huge differences in noise level from one air boat to another mostly depending on how the prop is made. 2 bladed props are noisiest and the more blades, the less noise generally. The 6 blade ones I have seen are far quiter than the old 2 bladed ones. Note that the noise produced by the unmuffled exhaust is much less than the prop noise. |
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