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#11
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Wayne.B wrote:
On Wed, 28 Mar 2007 14:04:28 -0400, Harry Krause wrote: I really don't get the point of boating in a cabin. 2 rms w/bth, wtr vu Ahh. Well, one can buy a nice condo down in Hilton Head with that, and make a good, reliable income off ot, too. |
#12
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Harry Krause wrote:
JimH wrote: "Harry Krause" wrote in message ... Chuck Gould wrote: On Mar 28, 9:07?am, Harry Krause wrote: Chuck Gould wrote: Here's how to enjoy a boat in Buffalo during the winter: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yC45QJOn8Go I think I'll stick to 45 degrees and drizzling. :-) (Talk about boats that would be affected by climate change!) That's your year-around water temp, right? It's a bit warmer than that in Puget Sound, varying from about 48-52 degrees during the year. Some of the inland lakes can be warm enough for comfortable swimming. 45 degrees is a typical air temperature in November. Just like Puget Sound, the air warms up to about 52 in the summer. :-) 52F water temp? In the summer? Hehehehe. Jesus. I'd sooner go bowling. Bundled up boating isn't my cup of tea. The women wear their bikinis under parkas. Northwestern boaters must take their lives in their hands every time they go out.......even in mid July. 1-3 hour expected survival time in those sort of water temperatures. http://www.boatsafe.com/nauticalknowhow/hypothermia.htm No thanks. I really don't get the point of boating in a cabin. From the guy with a "sport cabin" on his boat. What next? http://www.parkerboats.net/pages/boa....jsp?boatid=19 |
#13
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posted to rec.boats
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Dan wrote:
Harry Krause wrote: JimH wrote: "Harry Krause" wrote in message ... Chuck Gould wrote: On Mar 28, 9:07?am, Harry Krause wrote: Chuck Gould wrote: Here's how to enjoy a boat in Buffalo during the winter: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yC45QJOn8Go I think I'll stick to 45 degrees and drizzling. :-) (Talk about boats that would be affected by climate change!) That's your year-around water temp, right? It's a bit warmer than that in Puget Sound, varying from about 48-52 degrees during the year. Some of the inland lakes can be warm enough for comfortable swimming. 45 degrees is a typical air temperature in November. Just like Puget Sound, the air warms up to about 52 in the summer. :-) 52F water temp? In the summer? Hehehehe. Jesus. I'd sooner go bowling. Bundled up boating isn't my cup of tea. The women wear their bikinis under parkas. Northwestern boaters must take their lives in their hands every time they go out.......even in mid July. 1-3 hour expected survival time in those sort of water temperatures. http://www.boatsafe.com/nauticalknowhow/hypothermia.htm No thanks. I really don't get the point of boating in a cabin. From the guy with a "sport cabin" on his boat. What next? http://www.parkerboats.net/pages/boa....jsp?boatid=19 The cabin feature was one of the reason he purchased the boat, it probably is the reason it never used it. If you want to buy a previously owned, rarely used Parker, it is a great deal. |
#14
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posted to rec.boats
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On Mar 28, 10:57�am, "JimH" wrote:
"Harry Krause" wrote in message ... Chuck Gould wrote: On Mar 28, 9:07?am, Harry Krause wrote: Chuck Gould wrote: Here's how to enjoy a boat in Buffalo during the winter: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yC45QJOn8Go I think I'll stick to 45 degrees and drizzling. :-) (Talk about boats that would be affected by climate change!) That's your year-around water temp, right? It's a bit warmer than that in Puget Sound, varying from about 48-52 degrees during the year. Some of the inland lakes can be warm enough for comfortable swimming. 45 degrees is a typical air temperature in November. Just like Puget Sound, the air warms up to about 52 in the summer. :-) 52F water temp? In the summer? Hehehehe. Jesus. I'd sooner go bowling. Bundled up boating isn't my cup of tea. The women wear their bikinis under parkas. Northwestern boaters must take their lives in their hands every time they go out.......even in mid July. *1-3 hour expected survival time in those sort of water temperatures. http://www.boatsafe.com/nauticalknowhow/hypothermia.htm No thanks.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You can be in trouble in a matter of minutes, even if you do float around a while in your pfd before you cool off so much that your central nervous systm shuts down. My wife has fallen overboard twice, and while I have been able to get to her virtually immediately, the shock of the cold water was so severe that she could barely assist in helping to pull herself out. If I fall in, I could be screwed- she doesn't have the strength to haul me out. She'd have to try to get me out with the mast and boom. Sounds funny, but it's not. A friend of mine fell into an empty slip across the finger float from his boat. He fell in near the head of the slip, and it was a 50-foot float. He made the mistake of assuming he could swim the 50-feet to the end of the float, the six feet across the float, and another couple of feet to the end of his swim step. He was in his early 50's at the time, and jogs 2-3 miles every day. He was so weak from the cold water that his wife had to enlist some help to get him up onto the swimstep so he could get out of the water. Fall in a lot of places and your main concern is getting dry. Fall in around here, and you need to be concerned with staying alive. Just another day in the life of us rough, tough, iron-ass Pacific NW boaters. Takes a special breed......(of idiots, maybe) :-) |
#15
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "Chuck Gould" wrote in message oups.com... snip... Fall in a lot of places and your main concern is getting dry. Fall in around here, and you need to be concerned with staying alive. Just another day in the life of us rough, tough, iron-ass Pacific NW boaters. Takes a special breed......(of idiots, maybe) :-) They used to call this area 'the land of wooden boats and iron men'. |
#16
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "Chuck Gould" wrote in message oups.com... On Mar 28, 10:57?am, "JimH" wrote: "Harry Krause" wrote in message ... Chuck Gould wrote: On Mar 28, 9:07?am, Harry Krause wrote: Chuck Gould wrote: Here's how to enjoy a boat in Buffalo during the winter: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yC45QJOn8Go I think I'll stick to 45 degrees and drizzling. :-) (Talk about boats that would be affected by climate change!) That's your year-around water temp, right? It's a bit warmer than that in Puget Sound, varying from about 48-52 degrees during the year. Some of the inland lakes can be warm enough for comfortable swimming. 45 degrees is a typical air temperature in November. Just like Puget Sound, the air warms up to about 52 in the summer. :-) 52F water temp? In the summer? Hehehehe. Jesus. I'd sooner go bowling. Bundled up boating isn't my cup of tea. The women wear their bikinis under parkas. Northwestern boaters must take their lives in their hands every time they go out.......even in mid July. 1-3 hour expected survival time in those sort of water temperatures. http://www.boatsafe.com/nauticalknowhow/hypothermia.htm No thanks.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You can be in trouble in a matter of minutes, even if you do float around a while in your pfd before you cool off so much that your central nervous systm shuts down. My wife has fallen overboard twice, and while I have been able to get to her virtually immediately, the shock of the cold water was so severe that she could barely assist in helping to pull herself out. If I fall in, I could be screwed- she doesn't have the strength to haul me out. She'd have to try to get me out with the mast and boom. Sounds funny, but it's not. A friend of mine fell into an empty slip across the finger float from his boat. He fell in near the head of the slip, and it was a 50-foot float. He made the mistake of assuming he could swim the 50-feet to the end of the float, the six feet across the float, and another couple of feet to the end of his swim step. He was in his early 50's at the time, and jogs 2-3 miles every day. He was so weak from the cold water that his wife had to enlist some help to get him up onto the swimstep so he could get out of the water. Fall in a lot of places and your main concern is getting dry. Fall in around here, and you need to be concerned with staying alive. Just another day in the life of us rough, tough, iron-ass Pacific NW boaters. Takes a special breed......(of idiots, maybe) :-) Family friend a lot of years ago, jumped into SF bay to rescue his son, who fell off the boat. Son was OK, but the cold water shock, caused heart failure on the dad. Why I wear a Float Coat while salmon and rockcod fishing on the big pond. |
#17
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posted to rec.boats
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Calif Bill wrote:
"Chuck Gould" wrote in message oups.com... On Mar 28, 10:57?am, "JimH" wrote: "Harry Krause" wrote in message ... Chuck Gould wrote: On Mar 28, 9:07?am, Harry Krause wrote: Chuck Gould wrote: Here's how to enjoy a boat in Buffalo during the winter: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yC45QJOn8Go I think I'll stick to 45 degrees and drizzling. :-) (Talk about boats that would be affected by climate change!) That's your year-around water temp, right? It's a bit warmer than that in Puget Sound, varying from about 48-52 degrees during the year. Some of the inland lakes can be warm enough for comfortable swimming. 45 degrees is a typical air temperature in November. Just like Puget Sound, the air warms up to about 52 in the summer. :-) 52F water temp? In the summer? Hehehehe. Jesus. I'd sooner go bowling. Bundled up boating isn't my cup of tea. The women wear their bikinis under parkas. Northwestern boaters must take their lives in their hands every time they go out.......even in mid July. 1-3 hour expected survival time in those sort of water temperatures. http://www.boatsafe.com/nauticalknowhow/hypothermia.htm No thanks.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You can be in trouble in a matter of minutes, even if you do float around a while in your pfd before you cool off so much that your central nervous systm shuts down. My wife has fallen overboard twice, and while I have been able to get to her virtually immediately, the shock of the cold water was so severe that she could barely assist in helping to pull herself out. If I fall in, I could be screwed- she doesn't have the strength to haul me out. She'd have to try to get me out with the mast and boom. Sounds funny, but it's not. A friend of mine fell into an empty slip across the finger float from his boat. He fell in near the head of the slip, and it was a 50-foot float. He made the mistake of assuming he could swim the 50-feet to the end of the float, the six feet across the float, and another couple of feet to the end of his swim step. He was in his early 50's at the time, and jogs 2-3 miles every day. He was so weak from the cold water that his wife had to enlist some help to get him up onto the swimstep so he could get out of the water. Fall in a lot of places and your main concern is getting dry. Fall in around here, and you need to be concerned with staying alive. Just another day in the life of us rough, tough, iron-ass Pacific NW boaters. Takes a special breed......(of idiots, maybe) :-) Family friend a lot of years ago, jumped into SF bay to rescue his son, who fell off the boat. Son was OK, but the cold water shock, caused heart failure on the dad. Why I wear a Float Coat while salmon and rockcod fishing on the big pond. This is proper boating atti http://i21.photobucket.com/albums/b2...awaiibabes.jpg |
#18
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "Harry Krause" wrote in message ... Calif Bill wrote: "Chuck Gould" wrote in message oups.com... On Mar 28, 10:57?am, "JimH" wrote: "Harry Krause" wrote in message ... Chuck Gould wrote: On Mar 28, 9:07?am, Harry Krause wrote: Chuck Gould wrote: Here's how to enjoy a boat in Buffalo during the winter: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yC45QJOn8Go I think I'll stick to 45 degrees and drizzling. :-) (Talk about boats that would be affected by climate change!) That's your year-around water temp, right? It's a bit warmer than that in Puget Sound, varying from about 48-52 degrees during the year. Some of the inland lakes can be warm enough for comfortable swimming. 45 degrees is a typical air temperature in November. Just like Puget Sound, the air warms up to about 52 in the summer. :-) 52F water temp? In the summer? Hehehehe. Jesus. I'd sooner go bowling. Bundled up boating isn't my cup of tea. The women wear their bikinis under parkas. Northwestern boaters must take their lives in their hands every time they go out.......even in mid July. 1-3 hour expected survival time in those sort of water temperatures. http://www.boatsafe.com/nauticalknowhow/hypothermia.htm No thanks.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You can be in trouble in a matter of minutes, even if you do float around a while in your pfd before you cool off so much that your central nervous systm shuts down. My wife has fallen overboard twice, and while I have been able to get to her virtually immediately, the shock of the cold water was so severe that she could barely assist in helping to pull herself out. If I fall in, I could be screwed- she doesn't have the strength to haul me out. She'd have to try to get me out with the mast and boom. Sounds funny, but it's not. A friend of mine fell into an empty slip across the finger float from his boat. He fell in near the head of the slip, and it was a 50-foot float. He made the mistake of assuming he could swim the 50-feet to the end of the float, the six feet across the float, and another couple of feet to the end of his swim step. He was in his early 50's at the time, and jogs 2-3 miles every day. He was so weak from the cold water that his wife had to enlist some help to get him up onto the swimstep so he could get out of the water. Fall in a lot of places and your main concern is getting dry. Fall in around here, and you need to be concerned with staying alive. Just another day in the life of us rough, tough, iron-ass Pacific NW boaters. Takes a special breed......(of idiots, maybe) :-) Family friend a lot of years ago, jumped into SF bay to rescue his son, who fell off the boat. Son was OK, but the cold water shock, caused heart failure on the dad. Why I wear a Float Coat while salmon and rockcod fishing on the big pond. This is proper boating atti http://i21.photobucket.com/albums/b2...awaiibabes.jpg I'm not sure they go in the water in those outfits. |
#19
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On Thu, 29 Mar 2007 18:23:36 GMT, "Calif Bill"
wrote: http://i21.photobucket.com/albums/b2...awaiibabes.jpg I'm not sure they go in the water in those outfits. They've certainly got that tentative chilly water look about them. Nice PFDs. |
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