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Katie Ohara June 24th 10 02:36 AM

Anchor Question
 
On Jun 23, 5:56*pm, "nom=de=plume" wrote:
"Larry" wrote in message

...



nom=de=plume wrote:


"Larry" wrote in message
om...
nom=de=plume wrote:


"Wayne.B" wrote in message
m...
One of my recent students who shall remain nameless, failed to
complete a homework assignment after apparently losing interest in the
subject. * Therefore I will throw it open to the group.


You are in a 40 something boat, power or sail makes no difference,
anchored in over 40 feet of water with 3/8ths chain and a 60 pound
anchor. * The combination of chain and anchor weigh about 150 pounds
not counting the large mud ball that wants to come up also, easily 200
pounds total. * The chain and anchor are worth something over $1500
and not easily replaced in remote locations.


The problem: *The anchor windlass has failed in some unfortunate way,
and not easily repaired. * How do you retrieve your expensive anchor
and chain?


You'll notice that Larry never once acknowledged his statement "cut and
run" was fundamentally wrong. You'll also notice that I gave a rather
complete solution to this question, and all the "men" have refused to
comment on it, even the "expert" Wayne.


I did respond. *I just don't monitor this group all day long like some
misfits.


So sorry for the lack of a response. *Maybe this pathetic "reminder"
will elicit one.


Maybe you'll finally admit that you lied when you claimed you never said
cut and run. Still waiting... why not be a man and admit it?


You are a man, right? That's what you're claiming?


Of course I said it. *You have chosen to use it out of context and I'm not
playing that silly game.


You used it in context with respect to not being able to retrieve the
anchor.... cut and run was your solution. You're a liar when claiming
otherwise.


Sorry, this is Frogwatch

Tim June 24th 10 11:15 PM

Anchor Question
 
On Jun 23, 6:21*pm, Wayne.B wrote:
On Wed, 23 Jun 2010 14:45:07 -0400, Harry
wrote:

I have
liquor on the lobsta' boat for when I wine and dine the Washington
elite.


Aww shucks, you must be a spoofer. *

Just about everyone knows that the Washington elite would not be seen
dead on anything resembling a lobsta' boat. *Anything less than a 120
ft mega yacht is small change in those circles. *A lobsta' boat might
make a decent tender however if it was well appointed with corinthian
leather upholstery and a few other upscale touches. *A Hinckley picnic
boat would be a better choice however.

http://hubpages.com/hub/Hinckley-Pic...-Lake-St-Clair

http://www.yachtworld.com/boats/cate...Picnic+Boat+Cl...

Looks like there are quite a few on the Chesapeake but very doubtful
that any belong to our hero. * As I recall he couldn't afford the fuel
for a 24 ft cuddy.


Just think. my dream home. No yard mowing!

http://s4.hubimg.com/u/1860299_f520.jpg

Harry[_5_] June 24th 10 11:30 PM

Anchor Question
 
On 6/24/10 6:15 PM, Tim wrote:
On Jun 23, 6:21 pm, wrote:
On Wed, 23 Jun 2010 14:45:07 -0400,
wrote:

I have
liquor on the lobsta' boat for when I wine and dine the Washington
elite.


Aww shucks, you must be a spoofer.

Just about everyone knows that the Washington elite would not be seen
dead on anything resembling a lobsta' boat. Anything less than a 120
ft mega yacht is small change in those circles. A lobsta' boat might
make a decent tender however if it was well appointed with corinthian
leather upholstery and a few other upscale touches. A Hinckley picnic
boat would be a better choice however.

http://hubpages.com/hub/Hinckley-Pic...-Lake-St-Clair

http://www.yachtworld.com/boats/cate...Picnic+Boat+Cl...

Looks like there are quite a few on the Chesapeake but very doubtful
that any belong to our hero. As I recall he couldn't afford the fuel
for a 24 ft cuddy.


Just think. my dream home. No yard mowing!

http://s4.hubimg.com/u/1860299_f520.jpg


A vacation house is certainly a lot more appealing than a vacation boat,
unless the boat is a 90-footer, with lots of space, real bathrooms, real
bedrooms, a real kitchen and plenty of room to stretch out, *and* a
maintenance crew. A few days aboard any smaller boat is enough for me.




Larry[_22_] June 25th 10 12:40 AM

Anchor Question
 
YukonBound wrote:


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


"nom=de=plume" wrote in message
...

"Larry" wrote in message
...
nom=de=plume wrote:

"Wayne.B" wrote in message
...
One of my recent students who shall remain nameless, failed to
complete a homework assignment after apparently losing interest
in the
subject. Therefore I will throw it open to the group.

You are in a 40 something boat, power or sail makes no difference,
anchored in over 40 feet of water with 3/8ths chain and a 60 pound
anchor. The combination of chain and anchor weigh about 150
pounds
not counting the large mud ball that wants to come up also,
easily 200
pounds total. The chain and anchor are worth something over $1500
and not easily replaced in remote locations.

The problem: The anchor windlass has failed in some unfortunate
way,
and not easily repaired. How do you retrieve your expensive
anchor
and chain?

You'll notice that Larry never once acknowledged his statement
"cut and run" was fundamentally wrong. You'll also notice that I
gave a rather complete solution to this question, and all the
"men" have refused to comment on it, even the "expert" Wayne.


I did respond. I just don't monitor this group all day long like
some misfits.

So sorry for the lack of a response. Maybe this pathetic
"reminder" will elicit one.

Maybe you'll finally admit that you lied when you claimed you never
said cut and run. Still waiting... why not be a man and admit it?

You are a man, right? That's what you're claiming?


A pathetic, sorry excuse for one.

I don't support a 30's something "child".


Neither do I ...what's your point?

So he's in his 40's? That's even worse.

Larry[_22_] June 25th 10 12:47 AM

Anchor Question
 
Tim wrote:
On Jun 23, 6:21 pm, wrote:

On Wed, 23 Jun 2010 14:45:07 -0400,
wrote:


I have
liquor on the lobsta' boat for when I wine and dine the Washington
elite.

Aww shucks, you must be a spoofer.

Just about everyone knows that the Washington elite would not be seen
dead on anything resembling a lobsta' boat. Anything less than a 120
ft mega yacht is small change in those circles. A lobsta' boat might
make a decent tender however if it was well appointed with corinthian
leather upholstery and a few other upscale touches. A Hinckley picnic
boat would be a better choice however.

http://hubpages.com/hub/Hinckley-Pic...-Lake-St-Clair

http://www.yachtworld.com/boats/cate...Picnic+Boat+Cl...

Looks like there are quite a few on the Chesapeake but very doubtful
that any belong to our hero. As I recall he couldn't afford the fuel
for a 24 ft cuddy.

Just think. my dream home. No yard mowing!

http://s4.hubimg.com/u/1860299_f520.jpg

If that's up north, you'll have to shovel your 'yard' in the winter!

Harry[_5_] June 25th 10 02:39 PM

Anchor Question
 
In article ,
says...

On 6/24/10 6:15 PM, Tim wrote:
On Jun 23, 6:21 pm, wrote:
On Wed, 23 Jun 2010 14:45:07 -0400,
wrote:

I have
liquor on the lobsta' boat for when I wine and dine the Washington
elite.

Aww shucks, you must be a spoofer.

Just about everyone knows that the Washington elite would not be seen
dead on anything resembling a lobsta' boat. Anything less than a 120
ft mega yacht is small change in those circles. A lobsta' boat might
make a decent tender however if it was well appointed with corinthian
leather upholstery and a few other upscale touches. A Hinckley picnic
boat would be a better choice however.

http://hubpages.com/hub/Hinckley-Pic...-Lake-St-Clair

http://www.yachtworld.com/boats/cate...Picnic+Boat+Cl...

Looks like there are quite a few on the Chesapeake but very doubtful
that any belong to our hero. As I recall he couldn't afford the fuel
for a 24 ft cuddy.


Just think. my dream home. No yard mowing!

http://s4.hubimg.com/u/1860299_f520.jpg


A vacation house is certainly a lot more appealing than a vacation boat,
unless the boat is a 90-footer, with lots of space, real bathrooms, real
bedrooms, a real kitchen and plenty of room to stretch out, *and* a
maintenance crew. A few days aboard any smaller boat is enough for me.


Spoofer alert! Everyone knows that I've spent my whole life aboard
boats. I've done it all.

John H[_2_] June 27th 10 01:40 PM

Anchor Question
 
On Tue, 22 Jun 2010 15:11:44 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote:

On Jun 22, 1:46*pm, Richard Casady
wrote:

Apology? If you mean for mispelling my name, that is no big deal.
People almost always get it wrong. What got old was being asked if I
was related to Hopalong, a not bad western actor who was popular in
the forties and fifties. I was the smartest kid in the school. Not a
fun job, but somebodies luck had to run out.`

Casady- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


I went to school with a kid named Tom Sawyer. He got tired of people
asking him "Where's Huck Finn?"


I would have asked, "Where's Becky?" She was a lot cuter than Huck.

Harry  June 27th 10 01:42 PM

Anchor Question
 
On 6/27/10 8:40 AM, John H wrote:
On Tue, 22 Jun 2010 15:11:44 -0700 (PDT), wrote:

On Jun 22, 1:46 pm, Richard
wrote:

Apology? If you mean for mispelling my name, that is no big deal.
People almost always get it wrong. What got old was being asked if I
was related to Hopalong, a not bad western actor who was popular in
the forties and fifties. I was the smartest kid in the school. Not a
fun job, but somebodies luck had to run out.`

Casady- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


I went to school with a kid named Tom Sawyer. He got tired of people
asking him "Where's Huck Finn?"


I would have asked, "Where's Becky?" She was a lot cuter than Huck.



Have you been off on a boating adventure, Herring?


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