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Reggie Smithers January 8th 06 03:42 PM

Boating Jeopardy
 
JimH wrote:
"Shortwave Sportfishing" wrote in message
...

On Sun, 08 Jan 2006 08:03:45 -0500, JohnH wrote:


On Sun, 08 Jan 2006 12:58:04 GMT, Shortwave Sportfishing

wrote:


On Sun, 08 Jan 2006 07:48:28 -0500, JohnH wrote:


On Sat, 07 Jan 2006 23:29:30 -0600, Skipper wrote:


Bryan wrote:


" JimH" wrote...

A modified mine sweeper used for oceanographic research starting in
1950
by an extraordinary man born in France in 1910.

http://tinyurl.com/399be ;-)

Now that was a great reply!

And I'd bet he plays a mean game of Nautical Quiditch also. I'd further
surmise he rides nothing less than a Nimbus and can catch a flaming
snitch in the crack of his arse on the fly.

No Quiditch in the latest movie. Disappointed I was.

talking like yoda you are. mixed metaphor it is.

care I don't.

Good morning, Tom. How's the arm today?


ok - pain pump is out now - hurts a lot until i take the magic pill
and then everybody goes away in a pink fog. i try not to take them
until i can't stand it anymore. which will probably be about five
minutes from now.



Good to see you back Tom.

Sooooooooo..........................can anyone venture a guess to my
Jeopardy post?


JimH,
What is your Jeopardy post?


--
Reggie
************************************************** *********************
If you would like to make rec.boats an enjoyable place to discuss
boating, please do not respond to the political and inflammatory
off- topic posts and flames.
************************************************** *********************

JimH January 8th 06 03:43 PM

Boating Jeopardy
 

"Reggie Smithers" wrote in message
...
JimH,
What is your Jeopardy post?


--
Reggie
************************************************** *********************
If you would like to make rec.boats an enjoyable place to discuss
boating, please do not respond to the political and inflammatory
off- topic posts and flames.
************************************************** *********************




A modified mine sweeper used for oceanographic research starting in 1950 by
an extraordinary man born in France in 1910.



Reggie Smithers January 8th 06 03:53 PM

Boating Jeopardy
 
JimH wrote:
"Reggie Smithers" wrote in message
...

JimH,
What is your Jeopardy post?


--
Reggie
************************************************ ***********************
If you would like to make rec.boats an enjoyable place to discuss
boating, please do not respond to the political and inflammatory
off- topic posts and flames.
************************************************ ***********************





A modified mine sweeper used for oceanographic research starting in 1950 by
an extraordinary man born in France in 1910.



It was answered by Skipper 4 minutes after you posted the "answer".

Jacques-Yves Cousteau was born on June 11, 1910, in
Saint-André-de-Cubzac (Gironde) in France. He entered the naval academy
in 1930, was graduated and became a gunnery officer. Then, while he was
training to be a pilot, a serious car accident ended his aviation
career. So it was the ocean that would win this adventurer's soul. In
1936, near the port of Toulon, he went swimming underwater with goggles.
It was a breath-taking revelation.

Seeking a way to explore underwater longer and more freely, he
developed, with engineer Emile Gagnan, the Self-Contained Underwater
Breathing Apparatus, or scuba, in 1943, and the world under the sea was
opened up to human beings. After World War II, Cousteau, along with
naval officer Philippe Tailliez and diver Frédéric Dumas, became known
as the " mousquemers " (" musketeers of the sea ") as they carried out
diving experiments in the sea and laboratory. In 1950, Calypso, a former
mine-sweeper, was modified into an oceanographic vessel, endowed with
instruments for diving and scientific research, and the great adventure
began. She and her crews explored the seas and rivers of the world for
the next four decades

--
Reggie
************************************************** *********************
If you would like to make rec.boats an enjoyable place to discuss
boating, please do not respond to the political and inflammatory
off- topic posts and flames.
************************************************** *********************

JimH January 8th 06 03:55 PM

Boating Jeopardy
 

"Reggie Smithers" wrote in message
...
JimH wrote:
"Reggie Smithers" wrote in message
...

JimH,
What is your Jeopardy post?


--
Reggie
*********************************************** ************************
If you would like to make rec.boats an enjoyable place to discuss
boating, please do not respond to the political and inflammatory
off- topic posts and flames.
*********************************************** ************************





A modified mine sweeper used for oceanographic research starting in 1950
by
an extraordinary man born in France in 1910.



It was answered by Skipper 4 minutes after you posted the "answer".

Jacques-Yves Cousteau was born on June 11, 1910, in Saint-André-de-Cubzac
(Gironde) in France. He entered the naval academy in 1930, was graduated
and became a gunnery officer. Then, while he was training to be a pilot, a
serious car accident ended his aviation career. So it was the ocean that
would win this adventurer's soul. In 1936, near the port of Toulon, he
went swimming underwater with goggles. It was a breath-taking revelation.

Seeking a way to explore underwater longer and more freely, he developed,
with engineer Emile Gagnan, the Self-Contained Underwater Breathing
Apparatus, or scuba, in 1943, and the world under the sea was opened up to
human beings. After World War II, Cousteau, along with naval officer
Philippe Tailliez and diver Frédéric Dumas, became known as the "
mousquemers " (" musketeers of the sea ") as they carried out diving
experiments in the sea and laboratory. In 1950, Calypso, a former
mine-sweeper, was modified into an oceanographic vessel, endowed with
instruments for diving and scientific research, and the great adventure
began. She and her crews explored the seas and rivers of the world for the
next four decades

--
Reggie
************************************************** *********************
If you would like to make rec.boats an enjoyable place to discuss
boating, please do not respond to the political and inflammatory
off- topic posts and flames.
************************************************** *********************


Oops. I have him killfiled so I did not see. Sorry.



Skipper January 8th 06 04:11 PM

Boating Jeopardy
 
JimH wrote:

It was answered by Skipper 4 minutes after you posted the "answer".


Oops. I have him killfiled so I did not see. Sorry.


Commodore Joe Redcloud also responded with the correct answer. I'd
suggest you are the wrong person to start such a game. Perhaps a
brighter light should conduct the next challenge.

--
Skipper

Reggie Smithers January 8th 06 04:25 PM

Boating Jeopardy
 
Skipper wrote:
JimH wrote:


It was answered by Skipper 4 minutes after you posted the "answer".



Oops. I have him killfiled so I did not see. Sorry.



Commodore Joe Redcloud also responded with the correct answer. I'd
suggest you are the wrong person to start such a game. Perhaps a
brighter light should conduct the next challenge.

--
Skipper

Skipper,
This is definitely inflammatory and has potential to start a new round of
flames. If you really are interested in a boating group you need to
ignore or kill file those you want to flame.
--
Reggie
************************************************** *********************
If you would like to make rec.boats an enjoyable place to discuss
boating, please do not respond to the political and inflammatory
off- topic posts and flames.
************************************************** *********************

JimH January 8th 06 04:33 PM

Boating Jeopardy
 

Skipper wrote:
JimH wrote:


It was answered by Skipper 4 minutes after you posted the "answer".



Oops. I have him killfiled so I did not see. Sorry.



Commodore Joe Redcloud also responded with the correct answer. I'd
suggest you are the wrong person to start such a game. Perhaps a
brighter light should conduct the next challenge.

--
Skipper


Redcloud is killfiled also, just as you are Skippy, as neither of you have
anything constructive to add to this NG.

Tell us about your boat Skippy and the recent boating adventures on it. And
don't regurgitate the tales of the Tostitos and you fighting 30 foot waves
on the Sea of Cortez on your beat up old 24 foot Bayliner with 55 gallon
drums of gasoline strapped to the deck.



JohnH January 8th 06 04:37 PM

Boating Jeopardy
 
On Sun, 8 Jan 2006 11:33:53 -0500, " JimH" jimh_osudadATyahooDOT com wrote:


Tell us about your boat Skippy and the recent boating adventures on it. And
don't regurgitate the tales of the Tostitos and you fighting 30 foot waves
on the Sea of Cortez on your beat up old 24 foot Bayliner with 55 gallon
drums of gasoline strapped to the deck.


Jeeeesh!

--
John H.

"Divide each difficulty into as many parts as is feasible and necessary to resolve it."
Rene Descartes

JohnH January 8th 06 04:39 PM

Boating Jeopardy
 
On Sun, 08 Jan 2006 11:25:30 -0500, Reggie Smithers
wrote:


Skipper,
This is definitely inflammatory and has potential to start a new round of
flames.


This will happen only if people are foolish enough to take the bait. Otherwise it's
just another troll to be ignored!

--
John H.

"Divide each difficulty into as many parts as is feasible and necessary to resolve it."
Rene Descartes

JimH January 8th 06 04:45 PM

Boating Jeopardy
 

"JohnH" wrote in message
...
On Sun, 8 Jan 2006 11:33:53 -0500, " JimH" jimh_osudadATyahooDOT com
wrote:


Tell us about your boat Skippy and the recent boating adventures on it.
And
don't regurgitate the tales of the Tostitos and you fighting 30 foot waves
on the Sea of Cortez on your beat up old 24 foot Bayliner with 55 gallon
drums of gasoline strapped to the deck.


Jeeeesh!

--
John H.

"Divide each difficulty into as many parts as is feasible and necessary to
resolve it."
Rene Descartes



Jeeesh nothing. The guy has done nothing but cause trouble since he came
back and managed to flame just about everyone in the group. The stroke must
have done permanent damage to whatever brain cells he had left.





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