Who would have thunk Lands End made "Pussy Hats?" True. Here's H. Spruit in his at Coffee Club yesterday morning:
Yesterday, I biked downtown. The assembling crowd was massive, enthusiastic, and with many wearing knit pink Pussy Hats. Most of downtown Santa Cruz was closed to vehicular traffic. Taiko drummers provided the beat with synchronous thunder.
After some barely audible speeches at City Hall, the "March" began. With such a crowd, shoulder to shoulder, it took about 30 minutes to get moving..the vanguard reaching the end of the March, 11 city blocks on, before the main body got moving. I would guess 8-10,000 marchers, not counting the crowds on the sidewalks, balconies, and roofs. Not a cop in sight.
I felt sorry for the young kids and dogs down around knee level. But spirits were high. A loud cheer erupted in front of Planned Parenthood on Pacific Ave. when a doctor, with stethoscope, appeared with a sign saying "Resist!."
Somehow I ended up accompanying a Native American Dance Troup, who's members were frocked in colorful costume with dozens of silver bells . I had a firm grip on my sign, as the pre-frontal breeze was gusty.
About an hour later the end of the March was reached at Louden Nelson Park. My bike, locked to a guard rail, was surrounded by a sea of humanity. It took a while to extricate,the escape being behind the stage where the post March concert was in full swing.
In the Bay Area, a reported 60,000 marched in Oakland, 20,000 in San Jose. Sweethearts Annie, daughter Naima, and granddaughter Olina marched last evening in soggy conditions of wind and rain in downtown SF, the parade, in support of Women's Rights, led by Joan Baez singing "We Shall Not Be Moved" in Spanish. (No Nos Moveran) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kKopB66ujuQ
I don't know how big the SF crowd was, but reportedly the largest ever to march in San Francisco. After, Annie, Naima, and Olina took the trans-Bay ferry to Larkspur, and made their way home to Sausalito. I talked with Olina, not yet 2, on the phone last night, and she was wildly enthusiastic, the energy was that contagious.
Lot's of fun signs. One of the best: IKEA has a better cabinet!
Last edited by sleddog; 01-22-2017 at 12:11 PM.
Massive swells yesterday tore the stern off the SS PALO ALTO, the legendary "Cement Ship" at Sea Cliff State Beach, just down the road from Capitola-In-The-Sea.
Local weathermen at the National Weather Service in Monterey said recorded 34 foot swells, 15 miles offshore, were the largest in their memory. The Coast Guard closed the San Francisco Bar and Entrance Channel to all shipping yesterday, last night, and this morning. Too dangerous, even for big ships.
Hard to imagine the Cement Ship was once a casino, restaurant, dance hall, with a swimming pool. After she initially cracked in half, the hull was stripped and became a fishing pier...Now the PALO ALTO. with gulls as observers, is returning into sand, from which she was built as a tanker in 1920.
Last edited by sleddog; 01-22-2017 at 05:14 PM.
OK, I'll stick my neck out.
are you speaking of "pumpkin seed" sloops? my understanding is these were distant cousins to the Sandbaggers of Long Island Sound.
from pictures I've seen, these were mostly gaffers... botttom up reefs so that the gaff stays in place?
me thinks the chicken awaits someone else...
"Hay scows" aka scow schooners would reef up their sails so the booms would clear the bales of hay stacked on deck. There were lots of them and often they were sailed shorthanded (the scows, not the hay bales - although it's said that in a good year you can get to Hawaii on a bale of hay).
Speaking of sails - For a leg o' mutton, are the battens in Rags' current #3 jib vertical or horizontal?
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Last edited by BobJ; 01-23-2017 at 01:04 AM.
Well spoke, BobJ! San Francisco Bay history is centered around scow schooners that delivered vital materials from Sacramento to San Francisco to Alviso, and many points in between. They were flat bottomed, shoal draft, with a centerboard and steering system to the rudder that allowed the wheel to be raised up, sometimes 15 feet or more, so the skipper could see over his cargo.
Scow schooners were first developed as 40 foot sloops in the 1850's. In later years, as cargo grew, larger scows were built, and the handier schooner rig became popular. Between the 1860s-1870's scow schooners served the San Francisco Bay region before there were bridges, roads, and trucks. Their cargo was mostly lumber, brick, shell, coal, hay, grain bags, and produce. So numerous were these scow schooners that as many as 30 could be seen on any given day unloading brick in San Francisco.
Although scow schooners carried many different types of cargo, it was the improbable sight of a hay stack sailing smartly across San Francisco Bay that caught the public fancy and earned the name of "hay scow" regardless of the cargo.
Here's COVINA beating down Suisun Bay. Check out the main topsail and "twist" in the sails.
Matthew Turner, San Francisco's most notable builder of wooden boats, launched many scows from his yard in Benicia. Notable is the fact all these scow schooners were originally engineless, and plied the Bay under sail alone, while poling and kedging up shallow creeks. No small feat of seamanship and hard labor.
And here's ANNIE L, 67 feet long, (same length as CHUBASCO), delivering more than 350 bales of hay for San Francisco's horse population. Sometimes as many as 700 hay bales were loaded. No wonder the working sails had to be "reefed up." That's a lot of horse poop. hihi
By 1943, all the scow schooners, doomed by the advancement of gas engines, were gone, rotting derelicts on the mudflats. All except ALMA, which was rescued from the mudflats of Alviso on a dark night in 1959, when the tide was especially high.
ALMA, after much restoration, graces San Francisco Bay to this day as a National Historic Landmark. Long live ALMA!
Last edited by sleddog; 01-23-2017 at 08:23 AM.
Back in the dark ages, in the age of white sails, when I used to crew on RAGTIME, the #3 had vertical battens
(However, knowing BobJ's quest for leading edge technology, the trick answer is probably something like "inflatable and 45 degrees to vertical.") But I will stick with "vertical," and mint sauce with the mutton please.
Last edited by sleddog; 01-23-2017 at 09:06 AM.
In October my 3 Grandsons joined me for an "ALMA" sail on the Petaluma River. Elljay, the oldest and a 3rd grader, wrote a report for his class on the "History of the Petaluma River" and scow schooners were an important part of that history. If you've "sailed" up the Petaluma River (which is really a slough renamed in order to get the Army Corps of Engineers to dredge it), you can appreciate how difficult that was in a blunt bowed box. Add in fog. Along with hay, produce, & eggs, they hauled most of the cobblestones used in San Francisco and Oakland. The stones were quarried in what's now Spring Lake Park and Annadel Park in Santa Rosa, hauled by rail to either Petaluma or Lakeville, and "scowed" to their destination. Here's Elljay, Preston, and Tyler helping hoist the main and Elljay "riding the rail."
Sled, Will you be having that mint sauce on canvas as you carve up the LOM sail? Good idea to remove the snotter before you dive in with your knife and fork. ;-)
Fine looking crew there Pat. BTW, you were actually witness to part of the problem with the unmodified sail.
For Sled, yes, it was a bit of a trick question. Here's my current #3 jib, before modification:
Photo credits: That fine "white sails" photo at the start of the 2008 SHTP was taken by Christine and Jonathan @NorCalSailing
The photo under the Gate was at the start of our ill-advised 2014 Pacific Cup and was taken by Leslie Richter @Rockskipper
Last edited by BobJ; 01-23-2017 at 09:56 AM.