Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#9
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sep 28, 6:58 pm, Wayne.B wrote:
On Sun, 28 Sep 2008 15:26:15 -0700 (PDT), wrote: Around here, you either tough out the heat or you stay home. Staying home isnt fun and when I am too old to get out, I will not look back and say "I wish I'd stayed home". That's one advantage to living on the water. When I'm working on the boat in the heat it is never far to jump in the pool and cool down or go back inside the house for a little while. If need to work in the engine room I'll turn on all 4 zones of boat A/C plus the engine room exhaust vent and it actualy gets half way bearable down there. Working outside there is no escape however. Thinking about all of this makes me thankful. My parents had 9 kids so had little money. Instead of going somewhere fancy, they'd take us all to some lake or body of water to camp in the summer. With no AC at home, having access to water to swim in was heaven. We'd go to Silver Lake close to Tallahassee if we were lucky or to extremely isolated Camel pond or to White Oak Landing on the River Styx in Tates Hell Swamp and we had a blast. The best thing they ever did was to buy an 18' Grumman canoe in 1964 when I was 8. That canoe gave us independence and confidence and us kids could take it anywhere. We'd be gone all day and my parents knew could make it back. One time, we were camped at White Oak Landing sliding down the muddy bank into the water for fun but we had to throw sticks in the water to scare away the water moccasins first and I complained to my mom about that. She replied "Just think of all those poor kids who have to spend their vacations going to hotels and swim in boring pools", and I knew she was right, we were lucky and never complained again. MY parents had us brainwashed into thinking we were better off than people who had to go on expensive vacations. |