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Two meter troll wrote: On Aug 15, 7:21 am, ComandanteBanana wrote: On Aug 15, 3:20 am, Two meter troll wrote: Hey, where's the real place with humans, Alaska, Scandinavia? any place where you get actual sailors. I worked the gulf for a while and was on the whole unimpressed. what i observed was a total lack of licensing, no familiarity with either inland or international rules of the road, skill levels in boat handling and navigations somewhere around those of a brain damaged squid, drunkenness at the helm, no enforcement at all, trash all over the place, a disregard for every one else on or in the water, and an over whelming attitude that folks don't actually have to follow any rules. In short; Bubbas (I cant actually think of anything that acts as slovenly and boorish as the majority of southern boaters). In Scandinavia the greater Oslo Fjord area is like this. Sheltered waters, lots of yuppies with daddys gofast-boat; as you call them ; "bubbas" with cabin cruisers, and rich drunkards with cigar boats. The first day of main holiday you can barely get through on the VHF ch 16 because of all the disaster messages. Fortunatly, the vast majority of damage is self-inflicted. [1] This territory is sharply defined as the coastal waters from Mandal (just west of Kristiansand) to just south of Smogen. These are a sheltered morass of crisscrossing small fjords, and except for finding the shallows and rocks (with the boaters are very good at), there is no real challenge in navigating. West and north of this area there is a whole different culture. Same for Denmark. There is far between ports, you need to handle the weather. The larger fjords make excellent wind and wave tunnels; you can have a storm at the center, and total calm on land. You have to handle stretches where navigation can be an issue; e.g. finding the little ports in between all the rocks. I put the good seamanship in most of Sweden up to the fact that it is the most well organised place on the planet. Take your pick go north or south east or west from the cancer coast and you soon get a higher proportion of humans to Bubbas. -- mrr [1] But the story of the motor torpedo boat that ran aground and killed a cow is true. It actually happened twice, in 1954 and again in the 1970s. The first cow was almost cut in half, the second one died of a heart attack. The Navy has "improved the charts" a lot by finding shallows and rocks noone has know about. They are very good at finding them at 40 knots as well. |
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