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Off for a bit of boating..
True North wrote:
I feel I know our local conditions good enough to know when to go out into exposed parts of local bays and harbour. If anything I tend to err on the side of caution. I don't enjoy long slow passages riding up over side of a swell or wave and down the other. Even in a larger boat I tend to get seasick if tossed around too much. Actually, owning a small boat probably limits me from going out in questionable circumstances that I might take a chance on in a 20 footer and regret later. Also saves me from the wife's wrath...she wants it as calm as a mill pond. ;-) You should have bought a bigger boat. Why limit yourself to 1-2 foot seas? |
Off for a bit of boating..
"JustWaitAFrekinMinute" wrote in message ... On 8/3/2013 4:52 PM, John H wrote: I used to take my 18' fishing boat 20 miles out into the Atlantic when we lived in NE Florida. There were smaller boats out there, too. OH, what a bunch of bull****.... --------------------------------- Why is that bull****? I know many people who go out 20 miles or more to fish in small boats in good weather. They don't do it in boats designed for fresh water lakes or ponds. |
Off for a bit of boating..
On 8/3/2013 10:05 PM, Eisboch wrote:
"JustWaitAFrekinMinute" wrote in message ... On 8/3/2013 4:52 PM, John H wrote: I used to take my 18' fishing boat 20 miles out into the Atlantic when we lived in NE Florida. There were smaller boats out there, too. OH, what a bunch of bull****.... --------------------------------- Why is that bull****? I know many people who go out 20 miles or more to fish in small boats in good weather. They don't do it in boats designed for fresh water lakes or ponds. It's my opinion that coming from Harry, the whole story is bull****.... Right down to the whole 45 days, ten hours... la, la, la... Why? |
Off for a bit of boating..
wrote:
On Sat, 03 Aug 2013 16:35:31 -0400, Wayne.B wrote: Rough calculations show something like 800 days actually underway since we bought the trawler 9 years ago. Not all of that was blue water of course, maybe half. In terms of actual time onboard, probably about 40 months. I've also done a fair amount of blue water sailing over the years, enough to have a sailing endorsement on my USCG ticket. I have about 9000 hours clocked on my current boat but most of it was in places where I could wade ashore and walk home. All of my USCG time put together was a few months but some of it was pretty exciting (North Atlantic in the winter sort of thing) My Navy time was all ashore. I had no urge to spend my life at sea. Why I turned down a chance to go to the Calif Maritime Academy in my youth. Figure that was foolish now. Lots of jobs that did not require all that time at sea. |
Off for a bit of boating..
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Off for a bit of boating..
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Off for a bit of boating..
On 8/4/13 9:31 AM, iBoaterer wrote:
In article , says... On 8/3/2013 4:52 PM, John H wrote: I used to take my 18' fishing boat 20 miles out into the Atlantic when we lived in NE Florida. There were smaller boats out there, too. OH, what a bunch of bull****.... You stupid twit, there's all sorts of boats out that far in boats less than 18' on just about any decent weather day. Typically, we went out very early in the morning, at dawn, usually, and came back in in the early afternoon in order to miss the typical mid to late afternoon thunderstorms. Most of the time in the late spring through the early fall, offshore boating in small boats was pleasant and if you worked the trip right, you could avoid most of the annoyances of the nor'easters, too. I recall seeing 16' Carolina Skiffs "way out there," and to me that was risky because those boats didn't have much freeboard. But the CS boats are just the best deal going for the ICW and for the great fishing in NE Florida bays, rivers, and just offshore. You don't need much of a boat, size wise, to enjoy Florida fishing. |
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