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The Smolenski's February 15th 04 12:09 AM

your favorite sailing adventure book
 
What's your favorite Sailing book

Mine's Sopranino by Patrick Ellam and Colin Mudie
It's a narrative about a 20 footer crossing the atlantic

How about yours???


smo



Jeff Morris February 15th 04 04:10 AM

your favorite sailing adventure book
 
"The Boat That Wouldn't Float" by Farley Mowat



"The Smolenski's" wrote in message
...
What's your favorite Sailing book

Mine's Sopranino by Patrick Ellam and Colin Mudie
It's a narrative about a 20 footer crossing the atlantic

How about yours???


smo





Qwerty February 15th 04 03:38 PM

your favorite sailing adventure book
 

"The Smolenski's" wrote in message
...
What's your favorite Sailing book

Mine's Sopranino by Patrick Ellam and Colin Mudie
It's a narrative about a 20 footer crossing the atlantic

How about yours???


'Racundra's First Cruise' by Arthur Ransome, the author of the enchanting
children's books about sailing - the Swallows and Amazons series.

The book details the author's experiences having a yacht built in 1921 in
Riga, Latvia, and his cruise in the Baltic to Estonia and Finland and back
to Riga.

The book is worth owning if only for the opening sentence, which I have
remembered all my adult life:
"Houses are but badly built boats so firmly aground that you cannot think of
moving them."

Best,

Q.



Larry Tate February 17th 04 01:47 PM

your favorite sailing adventure book
 
What's your favorite Sailing book

Mine's Sopranino by Patrick Ellam and Colin Mudie
It's a narrative about a 20 footer crossing the atlantic

How about yours???


Very easily 'Riddle of the Sands', by Erskine Childers. It's about a chap
sailing around the Baltic with a college friend who uncover a sinister
German plot. Aside from being a great sailing narrative, written around
1900, it is also credited as being one of the precursors to the modern
espionage thrillers.

--LT



DirtCrashr February 17th 04 05:13 PM

your favorite sailing adventure book
 
the Swallows and Amazons series.

Wow! I read those when I was a kid, overseas, almost forty years ago
-- it suddenly comes back. I think that's when I first wished to go
sailing.
I remember the idea of lights in-line, guiding a boat into a harbor at
night. My brother and I used to make maps of imaginary harbors with
rocks and secretive "light-lines" that would enable passage.
Our land-based adventures as kids of that age group were pretty
similar.

-keith
mtn. view

Qwerty February 17th 04 07:59 PM

your favorite sailing adventure book
 

"DirtCrashr" wrote in message
...
the Swallows and Amazons series.


Wow! I read those when I was a kid, overseas, almost forty years ago
-- it suddenly comes back. I think that's when I first wished to go
sailing.
I remember the idea of lights in-line, guiding a boat into a harbor at
night. My brother and I used to make maps of imaginary harbors with
rocks and secretive "light-lines" that would enable passage.
Our land-based adventures as kids of that age group were pretty
similar.

-keith
mtn. view


There must be many of my generation (don't ask) who's first stirrings of
wanting to sail and go to sea were stimulated, even initiated by Arthur
Ransome and those books; I know I was. I introduced my children to them but
somehow, it didn't work with them - a bit dated perhaps if the original urge
isn't there, and a character called 'Titty' didn't help. They are based on
the east coast of England and the north west lake district where he
eventually retired to.

He led an interesting life, was in Russia as a correspondent for the
Manchester Guardian at the time of the Bolshevik revolution; interviewed
Lenin; married Trotsky's secretary. After he died she went back to Russia, a
very old lady, and found, after a lifetime of living in England and only
speaking English that she could no longer remember how to speak Russian.

Q.



DirtCrashr February 17th 04 11:12 PM

your favorite sailing adventure book
 
"Qwerty" wrote:

There must be many of my generation (don't ask) who's first stirrings of
wanting to sail and go to sea were stimulated, even initiated by Arthur
Ransome and those books; I know I was. I introduced my children to them but
somehow, it didn't work with them - a bit dated perhaps if the original urge
isn't there, and a character called 'Titty' didn't help. They are based on
the east coast of England and the north west lake district where he
eventually retired to.


Wow, Coniston. I didn't know until now. Once, ages and ages ago I
hitchiled get up there, from my Aunt's house off the North Circular.
And as a kid I played "explorer" in a forest from which we could see
the *real* Kanchenjunga... Reading dated books, some as much as
20-years out of date, was sort of normal over there. It was hard to
find recent english-langauage material - I read Biggles and all that.

He led an interesting life, was in Russia as a correspondent for the
Manchester Guardian at the time of the Bolshevik revolution; interviewed
Lenin; married Trotsky's secretary. After he died she went back to Russia, a
very old lady, and found, after a lifetime of living in England and only
speaking English that she could no longer remember how to speak Russian.


Maybe the spoken, colloquial, Russian had changed. Among other things
a lot of "Comarad" this-and-that back then, with a lot of whispering
and suspicion. Trotsky had been assassinated and maybe it wasn't safe
to be a former secretary, no matter how old...

Q.


-keith
mtn.view

gjoyce February 17th 04 11:53 PM

your favorite sailing adventure book
 
DirtCrashr wrote in message . ..
the Swallows and Amazons series.


Wow! I read those when I was a kid, overseas, almost forty years ago
-- it suddenly comes back. I think that's when I first wished to go
sailing.
I remember the idea of lights in-line, guiding a boat into a harbor at
night. My brother and I used to make maps of imaginary harbors with
rocks and secretive "light-lines" that would enable passage.
Our land-based adventures as kids of that age group were pretty
similar.

-keith
mtn. view


I've got three (plus one) of them ...(and I liked Riddle of the Sands
as well)

In order:
"The Strange Last Voyage of Donald Crowhurst " ... read this I don't
know how many times, and still find it riveting ... by Nicholas
Tomalin and Ron Hall

H.W. Tillman's "The Eight Sailing/Mountain Exploration Books" (I also
liked "The Seven Mountain Travel Books" ... I also climb) ...
fantastic stuff to places to mostly cold places... man, was that guy
ahead of his time..

Spike Walker's "Working on the Edge" about the king crab fishery ...
hard core stuff and makes you wish you acted on all those "I'm gonna
go work on the pipeline" bar conversations back in the 70s ....

And here's one that's not really a boat book, but makes for
fascinating reading if you're into treasure, science, boats, history,
etc. .. "Ship of Gold" by Gary Sanders ...about the wreck and recovery
of the cargo of the Gold-Rush-era steamship Central America ... really
fascinating stuff, overcoming the obstacles of 1000 fathom salvage
....

Later

Gary Joyce

Qwerty February 18th 04 09:32 AM

your favorite sailing adventure book
 

"DirtCrashr" wrote in message
...
"Qwerty" wrote:


...... she went back to Russia, a
very old lady, and found, after a lifetime of living in England and only
speaking English that she could no longer remember how to speak Russian.


Maybe the spoken, colloquial, Russian had changed. Among other things
a lot of "Comarad" this-and-that back then, with a lot of whispering
and suspicion. Trotsky had been assassinated and maybe it wasn't safe
to be a former secretary, no matter how old...

No, the memory channels get blocked, especially with age. I knew a girl who
emigrated with her parents from Switzerland at age 8 and returned at age
18 - had togo to language classes to get her German back.

I had worked in Madrid long enough to become fluent in Spanish; moved to
Switzerland and, after about ten years, had a project in Spain. When I got
there and tried to speak Spanish, only German came out; took me two days to
get back to being able to communicate again and it was never with my old
fluency. Then when I had to answer the phone from head office, had trouble
to switch back to German. Some people have great talent with languages
(definitely not me) but it helps to start young and to keep practicing.

Regards,

Q.



Michael February 19th 04 03:29 AM

your favorite sailing adventure book
 
The log of my own boat.

M.

"The Smolenski's" wrote in message
...
What's your favorite Sailing book

Mine's Sopranino by Patrick Ellam and Colin Mudie
It's a narrative about a 20 footer crossing the atlantic

How about yours???


smo





Ferg February 19th 04 02:07 PM

your favorite sailing adventure book
 


In order:
"The Strange Last Voyage of Donald Crowhurst " ... read this I don't
know how many times, and still find it riveting ... by Nicholas
Tomalin and Ron Hall


You may be interested in these recent photos of his boat, Teignmouth
Electron. It's really fallen apart in the last 8 years. Some of these
photos are only a month old:

http://www.teignmouthelectron.org/view.php?v=thefuture

John.



Rob February 20th 04 04:24 PM

your favorite sailing adventure book
 
"Close to the Wind" by Pete Goss- It is about the 1996-97 Vende Globe
Single-Handed Non-Stop Round-the-World Race.


"The Smolenski's" wrote in message ...
What's your favorite Sailing book

Mine's Sopranino by Patrick Ellam and Colin Mudie
It's a narrative about a 20 footer crossing the atlantic

How about yours???


smo


brad February 20th 04 11:22 PM

your favorite sailing adventure book
 
On 14 Feb 2004 18:09:10 -0600, "The Smolenski's"
wrote:

What's your favorite Sailing book

Mine's Sopranino by Patrick Ellam and Colin Mudie
It's a narrative about a 20 footer crossing the atlantic

How about yours???


smo



Sailing Alone Around the World, Joshua Slocum

The autobiographical story of the first man to sail single handed
around the world.

allan February 21st 04 03:42 PM

your favorite sailing adventure book
 
Slocum Around the world alone.
God father of solo sailors

--
ooooO
( ) Allan
\ (
(__) The Netherlands
Better to be thought a fool,
than open my mouth and remove all doubt





Brien Alkire February 23rd 04 12:22 AM

your favorite sailing adventure book
 
Saga of Cimba is my favorite. It's not the story that I like so much, it's
the wonderful way in which Maury describes the joys of being at sea that I
love.


"Qwerty" wrote in message
...

"DirtCrashr" wrote in message
...
the Swallows and Amazons series.


Wow! I read those when I was a kid, overseas, almost forty years ago
-- it suddenly comes back. I think that's when I first wished to go
sailing.
I remember the idea of lights in-line, guiding a boat into a harbor at
night. My brother and I used to make maps of imaginary harbors with
rocks and secretive "light-lines" that would enable passage.
Our land-based adventures as kids of that age group were pretty
similar.

-keith
mtn. view


There must be many of my generation (don't ask) who's first stirrings of
wanting to sail and go to sea were stimulated, even initiated by Arthur
Ransome and those books; I know I was. I introduced my children to them

but
somehow, it didn't work with them - a bit dated perhaps if the original

urge
isn't there, and a character called 'Titty' didn't help. They are based on
the east coast of England and the north west lake district where he
eventually retired to.

He led an interesting life, was in Russia as a correspondent for the
Manchester Guardian at the time of the Bolshevik revolution; interviewed
Lenin; married Trotsky's secretary. After he died she went back to Russia,

a
very old lady, and found, after a lifetime of living in England and only
speaking English that she could no longer remember how to speak Russian.

Q.





Brien Alkire February 23rd 04 08:54 PM

your favorite sailing adventure book
 
I really enjoyed that one too. What an amazing story. That picture of
Raphael standing on his submerged hull is absolutely amazing.

"Rob" wrote in message
m...
"Close to the Wind" by Pete Goss- It is about the 1996-97 Vende Globe
Single-Handed Non-Stop Round-the-World Race.


"The Smolenski's" wrote in message

...
What's your favorite Sailing book

Mine's Sopranino by Patrick Ellam and Colin Mudie
It's a narrative about a 20 footer crossing the atlantic

How about yours???


smo




Danny March 16th 04 07:58 PM

your favorite sailing adventure book
 
Ok. Somebody has to mention "The Incredible Voyage" by Tristan Jones. It's
such a good blend of a lifetime of accurate cruising observations and a wee
bit of imagination that few know where one leaves off and the other begins.
It launched me into reading all of his books. One can smell the sea and
shore in some passages.



"Larry Tate" wrote in message
news:7YoYb.50740$_44.48536@attbi_s52...
What's your favorite Sailing book

Mine's Sopranino by Patrick Ellam and Colin Mudie
It's a narrative about a 20 footer crossing the atlantic

How about yours???


Very easily 'Riddle of the Sands', by Erskine Childers. It's about a chap
sailing around the Baltic with a college friend who uncover a sinister
German plot. Aside from being a great sailing narrative, written around
1900, it is also credited as being one of the precursors to the modern
espionage thrillers.

--LT





John Smith August 13th 04 11:43 PM

your favorite sailing adventure book
 
Buried At Sea by Paul Garrison

"The Smolenski's" wrote in message
...
What's your favorite Sailing book

Mine's Sopranino by Patrick Ellam and Colin Mudie
It's a narrative about a 20 footer crossing the atlantic

How about yours???


smo





George Homme August 16th 04 09:47 PM

Shipkiller by Justin Scott. Great story! Novel.


"John Smith" wrote in message
...
Buried At Sea by Paul Garrison

"The Smolenski's" wrote in message
...
What's your favorite Sailing book

Mine's Sopranino by Patrick Ellam and Colin Mudie
It's a narrative about a 20 footer crossing the atlantic

How about yours???


smo







Dieter August 18th 04 09:01 PM

I don't know if it is the right title, but "a father, a son and the sea"
from Daniel and David Hays is realy great!!!!

Dieter



[email protected] August 19th 04 02:09 AM

I don't know if it is the right title, but "a father, a son and the sea"
from Daniel and David Hays is realy great!!!!

Dieter




Hands down! My favorite is 'The Long Way' Bernard Moitissier


--
-=The answer is simple...send pretzels to the Whitehouse!=-
MonteP
"Against stupidity, the very gods themselves contend in vain." - Friedrich
von Schiller


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