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JAXAshby wrote:
nice hoary. nice. now, with all that incredible knowledge of things nautical why don't you participate in discussions nautical? jes askin Yeah, well, club racing, starting with dinghies, is where one usually learns about sailing. That's where I started, in Milford and Branford, Connecticut. Incredible knowledge? Nah. Just a lot of practical knowledge from many years of salt water boating. I used to participate in such discussions until the place was invaded by a herd of hair-splitting assholes who thought they had some point to prove, over and over and over, and by in-year-face assholes like Karen Smith of Australia, a dispenser of verbosity, if nothing else. I pretty much avoid your discussions, Jax, because they are tediously vacuous. You wouldn't approve of my anchoring procedures, anyway. When I'm fishing and anchored, I use as little line as will hold the boat in one place. Depending upon the depth, the bottom, the wind and the current, my anchor rode sometimes is pretty close to vertical. Annoying, eh? This is especially important in the Annapolis area, where on any given Sunday, weekend sailboaters tend to act as if the Bay exists only for them, and a boat anchored well outside any nav channels is only a target of opportunity. Frankly, I've never bene able to figure out why the Bay attracts so many sailors. For much of the year, there isn't enough wind to float feather, and the body of water itself is shoaled up along the edges quite a distance from shore. Most of them are dock-condo types, methinks. |
#2
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hoary contributes as much as he can thusly:
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