Ants may be right - but I was thinking it's an International Canoe, sailed by Uffa Fox, hiking on a sliding seat
Tom K
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Ants may be right - but I was thinking it's an International Canoe, sailed by Uffa Fox, hiking on a sliding seat
Tom K
1) Bodega head, east side, looking North East.
2)"Hole in the Head"
3)It's there because PIG&E (somehow I always ((mis))spell it this way) dug a hole for the foundation for a nuclear power plant...
That would have to be the Tiger Beetle, certainly an unusual boat name and a very fast beetle. Accomplished skipper too.
I'd love a health and welfare report on Grace Sime if anyone knows. I...
I'm guessing it would be the Hawaiian, with what's often referred to as a crab claw sail.
Tom K.
That makes me feel better and I'm not even having a bad day!
Tom K
So I'll try again...
Perhaps the marbles were intended to roll around - or perhaps move more vigorously - inside the hull to break up or loosen accumulated crud and maybe also some rough...
Marbles...
I had Laser #1172 IIRC, so only slightly less old than Bob's. The Laser's flotation tank was the entire hull. It had a few - not very many - large chunks of foam wrapped in plastic that...
Ages ago now, the late great Jocelyn Nash, with whom I worked for many years, described the 110 as "a prehistoric Wabbit". We'd been talking about 110s, which I'd always admired, and I owned a Wabbit...
I'd have to guess it's the folding propeller.
Tom K.
Aha! I cheated (looked it up), the Star sailing couple are Skip and Mary Etchells.
Always good to learn something from Sleddog's quizzes.
Tom K
First is a Herreschoff 12-1/2, aka Doughdish, designed by Nathaniel Herreschoff.
Second is a Penguin, designed by Philip Rhodes. My dad built a penguin in around 1960 but only attempted to sail it...
I think I'll just let this one lei...
My favorite Martec prop story...
It must have been in the very early ‘80s when I went along on a sail check in Santa Cruz with my boss Jim Dewitt, as we had just completed and delivered the sails...
“One of the reasons for this particular trivia was a friendly question asked this morning at Coffee Club: why is a moon that looks to be half a pizza pie called a "quarter moon," and there is no...
I look forward to visiting CBC. But it will have to wait until I can sit in the car longer, my hip replacement isn’t there yet. :(
1, Cal 2-27 aircraft (guessing from published I dimension)
5, Richardson Bay bridge clearance per chart 18649, 39’
6, Olson 30 aircraft (guessing from published I dimension)
7, 13’ depth seems...
Ooh, what fun!
Tom K
If I recall correctly, the sailor was Joshua Slocum on Spray, and his singlehanded instrument was an alarm(?) clock missing its minute hand. Not much of a chronometer but he couldn’t afford one.
...
That video looks like it was taken from the Bay trail in San Rafael, just north of the NE corner of the Target store on Shoreline Parkway. Nice that Mount Diablo is visible in the video, helps with...
I’m going to say it’s a bungee cord with hooks on the ends (but I’m having trouble imagining it as a mast step!)
Tom K
Thanks for the update on Admiral. I’ve often wondered what became of him in the last couple of decades since he worked for Rich at Richmond Yacht Service.
Tom
Sweet! Love schooners.
I wish I was a better woodworker.
And I like your trike in the background.(I ride a Gekko.)
Tom
Yours truly on the cabin top, Dad steering.
I don’t remember what year Magic passed us in the night but this was the last bit of the race getting closer to Ensenada. I was astonished that my Dad...
Aha!
The second question gave me the answer to the first. Both boats were named Magic.
I’ll always remember when the later Magic passed us in the middle of the night on an Ensenada Race (I was...
Now, that makes me think of my days(years) at DeWitt Sails and later Sobstad. The old design files were a similar who’s who of sailmaking and yacht design There were designs by Jim DeWitt of course,...