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On Sun, 09 Nov 2008 12:10:29 -0600, Vic Smith
wrote: Agree about having GPS, but I thought you had some "night vision" binocs. Something akin to what the military uses. If I did night sailing inshore I'd probably foot the bill for a pair. Have you tried out that type? Offshore you want a radar that will pick up awash shipping containers, and in the NW, monster logs. I think that means all of them. Either way you want to run at night you need be in practice with the fast Hail Mary. In the last fifty years, Iowa has had two collision deaths, both at night. One by arrogant[are there any others?] cops who ran at high speed through a designated anchorage and killed a guy in his bunk, one by a drunk who overtook a boat and killed its driver with the prop, and kept on going. They caught his ass and gave him a few years. You can get a radar for about 800 bucks, and I may put one on my 22 foot cuddy. I gave two days income for the boat, I can afford an upgrade or two. You can use it for watching for storms, while at anchor drowning worms. For the benefit of salt water guys, any thing that swims loves nightcrawlers[pencil sized earthworms]and they are free on your own lawn.. If it gets ugly, shore is never more than about 3 1/2 minutes away, Driveways are always full of boats for peanuts, and the worse the unemployment, the better for a buyer. On the lake where I have been boating the season is mostly about three months, although you can go out much longer give or tqke ice. Much of the year, you fall overboard you die, unless you get rescued, especially with a boat like mine, with to much freeboard to climb back in. All things considered, Inland lakes sailing has lots of fun and not that much risk, and for sailors, the fastest monohulls, the A scows. 30 MPH for more than the last century. For the tiller lovers, they have two. My sister has a 16 foot scow, and you can ski behind it in enough wind. Me, I used to like a Sunfish in a gale. Fifty MPH winds only generated four foot waves. You get capsized fifty times in two hours, lower the sail, and reach for the shore, at ten or so. Only a teenage athlete can do that mindless ****. Those wood daggerboards stick to the slot like glue and never even move. Thing about lakes is, you get all the wind, but not the waves. Only thing wrong with Spirit Lake is that the fishing has pretty much sucked since the forties. I am going to put VHF, radar, GPS on my boat and trailer it to salt water and catch me a decent fish, after a fifty year wait. One ****ing fish in a lifetime, and I will call it good. I may buy a longliner and lose maybe a hundred grand chasing the fish that are gone. Excuse to get out on the water. Casady Casady |
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