Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
posted to rec.boats
HK HK is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by BoatBanter: May 2007
Posts: 13,347
Default Umbrella Rigs and Suchlike

BAR wrote:
HK wrote:
Reginald P. Smithers III wrote:
HK wrote:
Reginald P. Smithers III wrote:
HK wrote:
.

While out west, we ate two dinners at a nice restaurant where the
speciality was "monkfish." I'd never had West Coast monkfish and I
thought it was delicious. Very light taste.

I don't much like "heavy" or oily tasting fish, though I do like
kingfish mackeral steaks broiled with lemon and some sauce.

About 15 yrs ago, I attended a convention at the "del" and everyone
insisted I try the Abalone. It is a shellfish, where I think they
sliced it thin, pounded it like veal, lighted breaded it and then
pan fried it. It was the most expensive item on the menu, and was
a must have for those of us form the east coast. If they sell it
here, I have never seen it in a restaurant or fish market. I
wasn't impressed, it was so delicate, it almost had no flavor. I
would prefer scallops.

Did you notice that the Navy Seals train on the beach right outside
the "del"? They are running the beach every morning at about 5 am.





No military types were training on the beach in front of or on
either side of the Del when I was outside, and I sure as hell was
not outside wandering about in the 5 AM darkness. The only real
military presence I noticed consisted of naval aviation flyovers and
boys playing with their helicopters.

When I said training, I meant they would swim and run up and down the
beach. Their training base is just a little south of the "del". A
DI was pushing them the whole time. I enjoy the early morning and
loved drinking a cup of coffee and walking on the beach. It was a
trip to see a group of 20 Navy Seals coming out of the water and
running down the beach. 30 minutes later, they were running and/or
swimming back to the training base.



I did see some naval guys in dress uniforms a couple of evenings on
the premises, officers and ratings.

In San Diego harbor, the coasties were busy looking like they were
protecting the homeland.



There was no one swimming. The surf was huge, crashing, and dangerous.
The few times I saw anyone wander more than knee deep in the water,
the lifeguards chased them out.

This was the calmest I saw:

http://tinyurl.com/2xclgk


Looks like normal surf for the San Diego area.


I said it was the calmest I saw. For two days, the surf not far off the
beach was 12 feet high, according to the lifeguard with whom I spoke.
  #2   Report Post  
posted to rec.boats
BAR BAR is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Jun 2007
Posts: 1,728
Default Umbrella Rigs and Suchlike

HK wrote:
BAR wrote:
HK wrote:
Reginald P. Smithers III wrote:
HK wrote:
Reginald P. Smithers III wrote:
HK wrote:
.

While out west, we ate two dinners at a nice restaurant where the
speciality was "monkfish." I'd never had West Coast monkfish and
I thought it was delicious. Very light taste.

I don't much like "heavy" or oily tasting fish, though I do like
kingfish mackeral steaks broiled with lemon and some sauce.

About 15 yrs ago, I attended a convention at the "del" and
everyone insisted I try the Abalone. It is a shellfish, where I
think they sliced it thin, pounded it like veal, lighted breaded
it and then pan fried it. It was the most expensive item on the
menu, and was a must have for those of us form the east coast. If
they sell it here, I have never seen it in a restaurant or fish
market. I wasn't impressed, it was so delicate, it almost had no
flavor. I would prefer scallops.

Did you notice that the Navy Seals train on the beach right
outside the "del"? They are running the beach every morning at
about 5 am.





No military types were training on the beach in front of or on
either side of the Del when I was outside, and I sure as hell was
not outside wandering about in the 5 AM darkness. The only real
military presence I noticed consisted of naval aviation flyovers
and boys playing with their helicopters.

When I said training, I meant they would swim and run up and down
the beach. Their training base is just a little south of the
"del". A DI was pushing them the whole time. I enjoy the early
morning and loved drinking a cup of coffee and walking on the beach.
It was a trip to see a group of 20 Navy Seals coming out of the
water and running down the beach. 30 minutes later, they were
running and/or swimming back to the training base.



I did see some naval guys in dress uniforms a couple of evenings on
the premises, officers and ratings.

In San Diego harbor, the coasties were busy looking like they were
protecting the homeland.


There was no one swimming. The surf was huge, crashing, and
dangerous. The few times I saw anyone wander more than knee deep in
the water, the lifeguards chased them out.

This was the calmest I saw:

http://tinyurl.com/2xclgk


Looks like normal surf for the San Diego area.


I said it was the calmest I saw. For two days, the surf not far off the
beach was 12 feet high, according to the lifeguard with whom I spoke.


We used to body surf 8 and 12 foot waves at Barbers Point in Hawaii.
  #3   Report Post  
posted to rec.boats
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Dec 2007
Posts: 2,115
Default Umbrella Rigs and Suchlike

On Fri, 29 Feb 2008 18:47:59 -0500, BAR wrote:

HK wrote:
BAR wrote:
HK wrote:
Reginald P. Smithers III wrote:
HK wrote:
Reginald P. Smithers III wrote:
HK wrote:
.

While out west, we ate two dinners at a nice restaurant where the
speciality was "monkfish." I'd never had West Coast monkfish and
I thought it was delicious. Very light taste.

I don't much like "heavy" or oily tasting fish, though I do like
kingfish mackeral steaks broiled with lemon and some sauce.

About 15 yrs ago, I attended a convention at the "del" and
everyone insisted I try the Abalone. It is a shellfish, where I
think they sliced it thin, pounded it like veal, lighted breaded
it and then pan fried it. It was the most expensive item on the
menu, and was a must have for those of us form the east coast. If
they sell it here, I have never seen it in a restaurant or fish
market. I wasn't impressed, it was so delicate, it almost had no
flavor. I would prefer scallops.

Did you notice that the Navy Seals train on the beach right
outside the "del"? They are running the beach every morning at
about 5 am.





No military types were training on the beach in front of or on
either side of the Del when I was outside, and I sure as hell was
not outside wandering about in the 5 AM darkness. The only real
military presence I noticed consisted of naval aviation flyovers
and boys playing with their helicopters.

When I said training, I meant they would swim and run up and down
the beach. Their training base is just a little south of the
"del". A DI was pushing them the whole time. I enjoy the early
morning and loved drinking a cup of coffee and walking on the beach.
It was a trip to see a group of 20 Navy Seals coming out of the
water and running down the beach. 30 minutes later, they were
running and/or swimming back to the training base.



I did see some naval guys in dress uniforms a couple of evenings on
the premises, officers and ratings.

In San Diego harbor, the coasties were busy looking like they were
protecting the homeland.


There was no one swimming. The surf was huge, crashing, and
dangerous. The few times I saw anyone wander more than knee deep in
the water, the lifeguards chased them out.

This was the calmest I saw:

http://tinyurl.com/2xclgk

Looks like normal surf for the San Diego area.


I said it was the calmest I saw. For two days, the surf not far off the
beach was 12 feet high, according to the lifeguard with whom I spoke.


We used to body surf 8 and 12 foot waves at Barbers Point in Hawaii.


Yeah, but you were a Marine, not a wimp SEAL.
--
John H

"All decisions are the result of binary thinking."
Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is Off
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Umbrella policies being gutted by State Farm Hamish General 58 July 20th 07 12:58 AM
Happy Holidays & Suchlike Franko General 0 December 25th 04 10:00 PM
cat rigs jds General 0 November 14th 04 08:27 PM
hatch umbrella Parallax Cruising 1 October 27th 04 07:32 PM
Info on Rigs Mark Hindley Boat Building 8 September 13th 03 03:14 AM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 08:50 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2025 BoatBanter.com.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about Boats"

 

Copyright © 2017