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New tugboat line launched in the Pacific NW
On Thu, 17 Aug 2006 13:20:07 -0400, thunder
wrote: On Thu, 17 Aug 2006 12:51:20 -0400, Harry Krause wrote: When I was a kid and we visited the grandparents in Revere, I used to swim in the ocean at Revere Beach and also at Nantasket Beach. Doubt I would do it now. I do recall that about 10 years ago, I went for a swim up at Bar Harbor, and the water temp was only about 60. Brrrrrrr. Yup, something about kids, they are different. How many times have you seen a kid, blue lipped, shivering uncontrollably, obviously hypothermic, telling their parents they aren't cold, and want to go back in the water? When I was way younger, 60 degrees was refreshing. Now, I find it literally bone chilling. When I was a kid my parents took the family for a vacation. Dad's idea of a vacation was to hook up the travel trailer and drive 14 hours a day for the entire 4 weeks he had off. So we started in WV and drove (almost all backroads) through the Dakotas and over to Oregon. We kids were just as excited as hell to get to the Pacific Ocean and even though the wind was a bit chilly my brother and me were adament that we were going swimming in the ocean. We couldn't quite grasp why no one was in the water and everyone was wearing fairly heavy jackets and long pants. We rushed down the beach and ran full tilt into the water. Once we caught our breathe, we got the hell out of there and tried to get our blood flowing again ;-) It was a great dissapointment to us that even though we traveled down the coast all the way to San Francisco it never got warm enough to go in the ocean. At SF dad turned left and drove back to WV through Nevada and Utah. Entire 4 weeks we only stayed at two places for more than one night and never more than 2 nights. I am now much more a "get somewhere quick and stay" kinda vacation man. Oh yeah, on that road trip dad had put an 8 track player in the car to supplement the AM radio. We had two (count 'em - 2) tapes.... and you know there weren't any AM stations in most of the midwest in 1968.... Dave Hall |
New tugboat line launched in the Pacific NW
Dave Hall wrote:
When I was a kid my parents took the family for a vacation. Dad's idea of a vacation was to hook up the travel trailer and drive 14 hours a day for the entire 4 weeks he had off. So we started in WV and drove (almost all backroads) through the Dakotas and over to Oregon. We kids were just as excited as hell to get to the Pacific Ocean and even though the wind was a bit chilly my brother and me were adament that we were going swimming in the ocean. We couldn't quite grasp why no one was in the water and everyone was wearing fairly heavy jackets and long pants. We rushed down the beach and ran full tilt into the water. Once we caught our breathe, we got the hell out of there and tried to get our blood flowing again ;-) It was a great dissapointment to us that even though we traveled down the coast all the way to San Francisco it never got warm enough to go in the ocean. At SF dad turned left and drove back to WV through Nevada and Utah. Entire 4 weeks we only stayed at two places for more than one night and never more than 2 nights. I am now much more a "get somewhere quick and stay" kinda vacation man. Oh yeah, on that road trip dad had put an 8 track player in the car to supplement the AM radio. We had two (count 'em - 2) tapes.... and you know there weren't any AM stations in most of the midwest in 1968.... Dave Hall Mom and dad never did own an automobile...so once a year my uncle would show up on a Friday night to bundle mom and us (6 kids) for our annual vacation in Cape Breton. Back then (mid to late '50s & early '60s the main highways here were back roads. My uncle could always be counted on to produce a stinky cigar and it was just a matter of time before one of us got car sick. Once one of us upchucked over the seat & floor, the rest of us would usually follow. Sometimes he had an old pickup truck with a homemade bed cap of plywood and old car seats inside to sit on. Those trips were only about 5 hours but seemed to take forever. He got the biggest kick when someone suggested he take along an old puke bucket wetted with turpentine. For years he loved to tell how he cured us of road sickness by putting that bucket under our noses whenever we got queasy. For some reason, we didn't puke into the bucket. |
New tugboat line launched in the Pacific NW
"Don White" wrote in message ... He got the biggest kick when someone suggested he take along an old puke bucket wetted with turpentine. For years he loved to tell how he cured us of road sickness by putting that bucket under our noses whenever we got queasy. For some reason, we didn't puke into the bucket. Think that would work on a boat? Eisboch |
New tugboat line launched in the Pacific NW
Eisboch wrote:
"Don White" wrote in message ... He got the biggest kick when someone suggested he take along an old puke bucket wetted with turpentine. For years he loved to tell how he cured us of road sickness by putting that bucket under our noses whenever we got queasy. For some reason, we didn't puke into the bucket. Think that would work on a boat? Eisboch I should try it next time I get out into the rough stuff. |
New tugboat line launched in the Pacific NW
On Thu, 17 Aug 2006 12:51:20 -0400, Harry Krause
wrote: I went for a swim up at Bar Harbor, and the water temp was only about 60. And that was on a *warm* day. We were in Bar Harbor all of last August and never went in the water once. By the end of the month the night time temperatures were down into the 40s, way too cold to be living on a boat in my opinion. |
New tugboat line launched in the Pacific NW
On Thu, 17 Aug 2006 11:42:42 -0400, Harry Krause
wrote: I agree your "regional market" is unusual. I still don't understand why people want to go pleasure boating in water that is too cold to swim in, year-around. We have our cold weather boating months here - April to mid-May, mid-October through early December, but even then our air temps are reasonable, and while I wouldn't swim in water temps below 70F, there are some around here who do. Right now, in the middle of August, the ocean water temp around the Seattle area is 55F. Hypothermia. Here, the water temp is a nice 80F. Swimming weather. How much is the heater on that alum boat? :} I sure hope you're not doing a lot of your swimming up by Sandy Point! Of all the days I've spent on the bay, I can't think of more than a half dozen where I've gotten my feet in the water. Lots of folks go boating, fishing, whatever, without swimming at all. If I wanted to swim, I'd find a nice clean swimming pool, with most of the fecal matter removed! -- ****************************************** ***** Have a Spectacular Day! ***** ****************************************** John |
New tugboat line launched in the Pacific NW
"Harry Krause" wrote in message . .. JohnH wrote: On Thu, 17 Aug 2006 11:42:42 -0400, Harry Krause wrote: I agree your "regional market" is unusual. I still don't understand why people want to go pleasure boating in water that is too cold to swim in, year-around. We have our cold weather boating months here - April to mid-May, mid-October through early December, but even then our air temps are reasonable, and while I wouldn't swim in water temps below 70F, there are some around here who do. Right now, in the middle of August, the ocean water temp around the Seattle area is 55F. Hypothermia. Here, the water temp is a nice 80F. Swimming weather. How much is the heater on that alum boat? :} I sure hope you're not doing a lot of your swimming up by Sandy Point! Of all the days I've spent on the bay, I can't think of more than a half dozen where I've gotten my feet in the water. Lots of folks go boating, fishing, whatever, without swimming at all. If I wanted to swim, I'd find a nice clean swimming pool, with most of the fecal matter removed! -- ****************************************** ***** Have a Spectacular Day! ***** ****************************************** John You hang out in the wrong places. Indeed! Let's see....... Taking a dip in a heavily chlorinated and urine filled swimming pool and looking at tall fences or neighbors houses vs. taking the boat out, finding a nice sandy beach, having a picnic lunch and afternoon in/on the water with the family and leisurely returning to the dock while watching a great sunset on the water. Hmmmmm............ |
New tugboat line launched in the Pacific NW
-- ****************************************** ***** Have a Gay Day, Jim! ***** ****************************************** John |
New tugboat line launched in the Pacific NW
JohnH wrote: Of all the days I've spent on the bay, I can't think of more than a half dozen where I've gotten my feet in the water. Lots of folks go boating, fishing, whatever, without swimming at all. If I wanted to swim, I'd find a nice clean swimming pool, with most of the fecal matter removed! -- ****************************************** ***** Have a Spectacular Day! ***** ****************************************** John Almost nobody willingly goes into the sal****er around here. It's cold enough to kill you, and surprisingly fast. A few exceptions exist in places where several hours of low tide exposure allow the underlying mud to soak up enough solar heat to warm up the water just a bit when the tide comes back in. Among the best reasons to live in the Pacific NW one should *not* include extended periods of dry weather or ideal sal****er swimming conditions. :-) |
New tugboat line launched in the Pacific NW
On 17 Aug 2006 16:45:20 -0700, "Chuck Gould"
wrote: JohnH wrote: Of all the days I've spent on the bay, I can't think of more than a half dozen where I've gotten my feet in the water. Lots of folks go boating, fishing, whatever, without swimming at all. If I wanted to swim, I'd find a nice clean swimming pool, with most of the fecal matter removed! -- ****************************************** ***** Have a Spectacular Day! ***** ****************************************** John Almost nobody willingly goes into the sal****er around here. It's cold enough to kill you, and surprisingly fast. A few exceptions exist in places where several hours of low tide exposure allow the underlying mud to soak up enough solar heat to warm up the water just a bit when the tide comes back in. Among the best reasons to live in the Pacific NW one should *not* include extended periods of dry weather or ideal sal****er swimming conditions. :-) One of my brothers bought a beach house just north of Ilwaco. I spent a few days there. The beach was nice, the area was nice, but the water was frigid. Not like being at the Outer Banks of North Carolina. The Chesapeake Bay has no beaches like those along the Atlantic Coast, which are mostly beautiful and warm. The bay is very polluted, and the one big park (Sandy Point) where sand beaches have been made, was closed to swimming a couple weeks ago for a high fecal count. Boating, fishing, picnicking, and just cruising are great on the Bay. But...it's not a great place to swim. -- ****************************************** ***** Have a Gay Day, Jim! ***** ****************************************** John |
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