Not on mine - even if all the standing rigging is goneAs soon as the rig on any boat is forced out of column the likelihood of the stick crumbling on deck is great.
Not on mine - even if all the standing rigging is goneAs soon as the rig on any boat is forced out of column the likelihood of the stick crumbling on deck is great.
Is that the 50 or the 46?Sometimes when it was blowing 30 we did put the kites up and waited a bit for God to take them down, so we could repeat it again.....
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Sometimes when it was blowing 30 we did put the kites up and waited a bit for God to take them down, so we could repeat it again.....
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Damage is to port side, where the mast fell down, to leeward? Consistent with theory of being on starboard tack when peak of storm passed and wind shifted ninety degrees, from SW (broad reach) to NW (aft?).in the other thread, SA member Loop posted links to pictures taken from the freighter - scroll down for link to higher res pictures
good find Loop!
He should get some swag!
http://www.crowley.com/News-and-Media/Press-Releases/Crowley-Managed-Ocean-Crescent-Provides-At-Sea-Assistance-to-Ill-Fated-Catamaran
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I'd bloody well hope so given the `enclosure' to the indoors are clears on a bolt rope track.the other thing is i was reading about the boat somewhere, and it seems the GB 55 does have doors that close off the hulls from the salon, and could stop down flooding into the hulls
If I had but one minor critique, I'd change bad boundaries to no boundaries; but that's trivial. It's so apparent that he's going down on the GB skipper during this "innerview" that it almost makes me gag.Yo, Blockhead ...
You finally wrote something with which I nearly agree. But as usual, you ran on a bit much at the mouth. I decided to edit it for accuracy:
I don't have a calling or a mission or a profession or some other bullshit self-aggrandizing label, all I want to do is show off the interesting and compelling parts of a sport that I love.
Let's evaluate that on the Hotchkiss scale - the seven deadly sins of Narcissism:
Man, you're a winner! Who'd have thought ...
- Magical thinking - Check
- Shamelessness - Check
- Arrogance - Check, Check, Check
- Envy - Check
- Entitlement - Check
- Exploitation - maybe
- Bad boundaries - check mate
See, the problem is that, in life, without some raison d'etre you're just another nobody. In this case, a narcissistic nobody.
back when you were still chasing ambulances.Cue RKoch: "There's no way those are 6m waves, just look at the photo! We had the kite up in that shit in the IOR days!"that's the longeron
the account from the ship on that link says waves up to 6m
I've got to agree that Moonduster gave us a blow by blow critique of his boat loss and from it we can learn lessons. I've fucked up but I'm always loathe to tell those stories so kudos to him.If I had but one minor critique, I'd change bad boundaries to no boundaries; but that's trivial. It's so apparent that he's going down on the GB skipper during this "innerview" that it almost makes me gag.Yo, Blockhead ...
You finally wrote something with which I nearly agree. But as usual, you ran on a bit much at the mouth. I decided to edit it for accuracy:
I don't have a calling or a mission or a profession or some other bullshit self-aggrandizing label, all I want to do is show off the interesting and compelling parts of a sport that I love.
Let's evaluate that on the Hotchkiss scale - the seven deadly sins of Narcissism:
Man, you're a winner! Who'd have thought ...
- Magical thinking - Check
- Shamelessness - Check
- Arrogance - Check, Check, Check
- Envy - Check
- Entitlement - Check
- Exploitation - maybe
- Bad boundaries - check mate
See, the problem is that, in life, without some raison d'etre you're just another nobody. In this case, a narcissistic nobody.
No one did a fucking thing wrong, not a bad decision was made. Yet a boat was lost and crew rescued. No lessons learned about boat prep (the fucking rig fell down for chrissakes) or wx routing ( when things went south, you had NO FUCKING OPTION BUT A 9-1-1 call because conditions were deteriorating, which ANY SANE MOTHERFUCKER knew was going to happen.) And CB states that he'd make the same wx call again.
I wouldn't let these pro sailors walk my fucking dog, let alone sail my boat.
Wayne, at least you owned your decisions. You got screwed.
Yeah, but you owned it. It wasn't Fijii's fault, nor S&S, nor some wx forecaster. You took your shot, rolled snake eyes, and then told everyone about it. You didn't try to make yourself look like a victim.I didn't get screwed. I took a calculated risk and lost. That happens sometimes ...
Because it isn't. =) But that illustrates the point that such a transfer is not easy.Nothing about that looks easy...
I think lessons learned so far are[...]
The Rainmaker `expose' doesn't teach us much.
Maybe the hydraulic oil thing and maybe something about rigs coming down to flex cabin tops and smash glass, but it ain't a candid story of mistakes made and lessons learned.
I don't think that's just unlucky. It's a consequence of a design choice.it's interesting that the cabin top seems undamaged - i kind of thought the whole thing would be crunched
the mast must have just landed on the window - kind of unlucky in a way
Yes, but as explained in part 2 of the interview: "The boom and rig impacted and compressed the pilothouse port mullion above the companionway. This bent the port companionway sliding hatch frame so we cant shut it all of the way".the other thing is i was reading about the boat somewhere, and it seems the GB 55 does have doors that close off the hulls from the salon, and could stop down flooding into the hulls
Indeed. (Tho your boat never had any standing rigging in the first place!Not on mine - even if all the standing rigging is goneAs soon as the rig on any boat is forced out of column the likelihood of the stick crumbling on deck is great..
Yes, but as explained in part 2 of the interview: "The boom and rig impacted and compressed the pilothouse port mullion above the companionway. This bent the port companionway sliding hatch frame so we cant shut it all of the way".the other thing is i was reading about the boat somewhere, and it seems the GB 55 does have doors that close off the hulls from the salon, and could stop down flooding into the hulls
I think he was stil in Grammar School knickers back then, RKoch! LOL..back when you were still chasing ambulances.Cue RKoch: "There's no way those are 6m waves, just look at the photo! We had the kite up in that shit in the IOR days!"that's the longeron
the account from the ship on that link says waves up to 6m