Jimmy Cornell - World Cruising Routes World Cruising Routes by Jimmy Cornell

      

Other books by Jimmy Cornell
| Home | Mailing Lists | Bookstore | Weather | Tide Predictions | Bowditch |

Re: [world-cruising] Re: Circumnavigating in a Power Boat - impressive passages

From: Peter Ogilvie (no email)
Date: Mon May 08 2006 - 01:57:51 EDT

  • Next message: Peter Ogilvie: "Re: [world-cruising] Re: Circumnavigating in a Power Boat - impressive passages"

    They do go fast. Saw a streaming video of Pirate, I think, planing on a close reach. You could water ski behind one of those boats on almost any point of sail. Still think they are ugly and way too complicated, though, as well taking too many to sail at those speeds.
       
      
    Aloha
      Peter O.

    cirejay <> wrote:
      --- In , Peter Ogilvie <roverhi at dot dot dot >
    wrote:

    > You had me agreeing with you until that last statement. There
    is no way I'd be stupid enough to even to try a short cruise on one
    of those behemoths. A daysail or daylight round the buoys race is
    one thing, an around the Capes trip is another whole heap of soggy
    foul wx gear. Can you imagine how much fun going to wx in force 8
    wind and waves for days on end on one of those flat bottomed bashers
    would be. Especially when you are crammed into a stinking cabin
    with minimal amenities and 20 other unwashed sailors. No thankyou,
    I'll take my >traditional cruiser, with my wife as crew, any day.

    Peter, we're in agreement about that too but it's fun to fantasize.

    You should have seen them loading the sail bags this morning. Not
    sure that bag is the right word. Two or three crew carrying each
    snake as it disappeared below, through the main companionway. They
    carry one main and a choice of, I believe, 11 other sails, on each
    leg, out of a total of 24. One could live quite well just on what
    those 24 sails cost.

    I don't know if anyone has seen any of the series (carried here on
    PBS) but it is well worth the time. Each boat has a number of
    cameras running all the time and constantly recording. It tapes
    over itself but if something big happens the media specialist
    onboard (in addition to his other job) can stop the camera and save
    what has happened, permanently. Some of the footage was, at a
    minimum, fantastic and the speed unbelievable. But, you're right
    Peter; not exactly cruising:-)

    eric S/V Nebaras

      SPONSORED LINKS
            Sailing schools Sailing instruction Sailing lesson Sailing course Sailing adventure Sailing
        
    ---------------------------------
      YAHOO! GROUPS LINKS

        
        Visit your group "world-cruising" on the web.
        
        To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
     
        
        Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service.

        
    ---------------------------------
      

                            
    ---------------------------------
    Yahoo! Mail goes everywhere you do. Get it on your phone.

    [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

    ------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor --------------------~-->
    Get to your groups with one click. Know instantly when new email arrives
    http://us.click.yahoo.com/.7bhrC/MGxNAA/yQLSAA/A1TolB/TM
    --------------------------------------------------------------------~->

     
    Yahoo! Groups Links

    <*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
        http://groups.yahoo.com/group/world-cruising/

    <*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
        

    <*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
        http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
     


  • Next message: Peter Ogilvie: "Re: [world-cruising] Re: Circumnavigating in a Power Boat - impressive passages"

    | Home | Mailing Lists | Bookstore | Weather | Tide Predictions | Bowditch | Trawlerworld |