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Mobile to Seattle
On Wed, 4 Jan 2006 19:42:03 -0800, "Capt. JG"
wrote: Cap'n Jeff has AIR CONDITIONING noone in their right mind in Seattle would have to go with an open cockpit. Why can't you? ==================== They don't call it the Pacific North Wet for nothing. |
Mobile to Seattle
"R.W. Behan" wrote in message ... Jeff, I live in the San Juan Islands, north of Seattle. Haven't made that trip, but you want to pick your weather--I know that much. From October through March/April there are snorting storms along the west coast, so avoid that time slot. And the hidey-holes are pretty scarce. Consider just the west coast of the US. You have San Diego, LA, San Francisco Bay, then a few coves along the Oregon coast: very few places you can overnight. You'll be offshore for periods of longer than a day quite a few times. The favorite long, coastal cruise hereabouts is north, not south. Last summer we made a 3-montb round trip to Glacier Bay National Park in Alaska, 1200 miles up the coast, and anchored or moored every night. This was the fabled "inland waterway to Alaska," through and among some 20,000 islands along the way. Our boat is not really a wimp--a 37' Lord Nelson Victory Tug--so she's seaworthy enough (we hid some thought-provoking seas off Cape Caution coming south)--but it's nice to ride the anchor every night and not even think about the weather as you turn in. (Not quite that simple, obviously; anchors can drag.) You can probably make Mobile-Seattle in a kayak. (People have made the Alaska trip in kayaks.) But a seaworthy boat is hardly ever a real handicap. I had a friend here who wanted his 32' Westsail in Maine. He sailed to San Diego, trucked the boat to Galveston, Texas, and sailed on from there. You might consider a similar alternative. Fair winds, Dick Behan M/V Annie Dick, Did you keep a log of your trip and/or have links/sources that were helpful in planning this trip. I want to make this trip in about 5 years, hopefully with a Glacier Bay Cat. -Greg |
Mobile to Seattle
"Wayne.B" wrote in message ... On Wed, 4 Jan 2006 19:42:03 -0800, "Capt. JG" wrote: Cap'n Jeff has AIR CONDITIONING noone in their right mind in Seattle would have to go with an open cockpit. Why can't you? ==================== They don't call it the Pacific North Wet for nothing. or....The Great Wet North. -Greg--- Portland, Oregon |
Mobile to Seattle
"Dene" wrote in :
They don't call it the Pacific North Wet for nothing. or....The Great Wet North. -Greg--- Portland, Oregon Hurricane season is over. Mobile was in the 70's today and fair. Seattle is 40, freezing and every station in the NW says RAIN.... Why would anyone in MOBILE wanna go to SEATTLE?!! Is everyone going crazy?! |
Mobile to Seattle
People in Mobile know summer is coming and want out. People in Seattle know
it is coming and can't wait. Today marks our 24th straight day of measurable rain. By the way, freezing is 32 not 40. Freezing is what happens in Chicago - most years. "Larry" wrote in message ... "Dene" wrote in : They don't call it the Pacific North Wet for nothing. or....The Great Wet North. -Greg--- Portland, Oregon Hurricane season is over. Mobile was in the 70's today and fair. Seattle is 40, freezing and every station in the NW says RAIN.... Why would anyone in MOBILE wanna go to SEATTLE?!! Is everyone going crazy?! |
Mobile to Seattle
"johnhh" wrote in news:zLSdnVQkfrWAN1jeRVn-
: By the way, freezing is 32 not 40. Freezing is what happens in Chicago - most years. You stand outside in the pouring rain when it's 40F and tell me that's not "freezing", even though the water doesn't change from liquid to solid state....(c; Last time I got wet at 40F, there was no issue. I WAS FREEZING! |
Mobile to Seattle
"Larry" wrote in message ... "Dene" wrote in : They don't call it the Pacific North Wet for nothing. or....The Great Wet North. -Greg--- Portland, Oregon Hurricane season is over. Mobile was in the 70's today and fair. Seattle is 40, freezing and every station in the NW says RAIN.... Why would anyone in MOBILE wanna go to SEATTLE?!! Is everyone going crazy?! Trust me....I'm wondering the same thing myself. I spend 9 days in Tucson with the highs never below 70 degrees. So nice that my wife stayed an extra three days. But....10 more winters from now, we hope to become a winter live-aboard somewhere south of Savannah. -Greg -Greg |
Mobile to Seattle
"Dene" wrote in :
But....10 more winters from now, we hope to become a winter live-aboard somewhere south of Savannah. -Greg -Greg Anywhere from Charleston to Jacksonville has the same weather all year. The temperature difference is less than 5 degrees across the region. South of Jax, you bet the breeze floating across FL from the Gulf, which changes the weather drastically by the time you're at Daytona Beach. Only thing I don't like about Florida in a boat is there's no place to go boating...ocean or ditch and the ditch is SHALLOW! There's a few places on the west coast that are interesting, but the East Coast is boring as hell. Eastern GA does have some pretty scenery in the many swamplands, just like SC. Florida doesn't. And where you can boat is like taking a motorhome to Times Square...bumper-to-bumper other boaters also thinking "Why did I come here??". That's why I love Charleston. The harbor is large enough to not become too crowded, and if you get bored, there are 2500 miles of navigable waterways within 50 miles, salt and fresh. You can anchor off some island here and never see another soul for days, or you can be with other people, your choice. The 5-6' tides keep the waterways pumped out, unlike Florida's 18" tide where there's not enough flow to clean it, just make some impressive sandbars. Y'all stop by. We'll anchor off a deserted island and take the dink ashore for a little shelling on an Atlantic beachfront with NO FOOTPRINTS..(c;.....and NO CONDOS!! |
Mobile to Seattle
----- Original Message -----
From: "Larry" Newsgroups: rec.boats.cruising Anywhere from Charleston to Jacksonville has the same weather all year. The temperature difference is less than 5 degrees across the region. South of Jax, you bet the breeze floating across FL from the Gulf, which changes the weather drastically by the time you're at Daytona Beach. Only thing I don't like about Florida in a boat is there's no place to go boating...ocean or ditch and the ditch is SHALLOW! There's a few places on the west coast that are interesting, but the East Coast is boring as hell. Eastern GA does have some pretty scenery in the many swamplands, just like SC. Florida doesn't. And where you can boat is like taking a motorhome to Times Square...bumper-to-bumper other boaters also thinking "Why did I come here??". I always ask, "where am I?" Hard for me to get use to flat terrain, void of any natural landmarks. Attributable to being born/raised in Oregon. That's why I love Charleston. The harbor is large enough to not become too crowded, and if you get bored, there are 2500 miles of navigable waterways within 50 miles, salt and fresh. You can anchor off some island here and never see another soul for days, or you can be with other people, your choice. The 5-6' tides keep the waterways pumped out, unlike Florida's 18" tide where there's not enough flow to clean it, just make some impressive sandbars. You forgot that there are about a 100 golf courses nearby too. Paradise!!! Y'all stop by. We'll anchor off a deserted island and take the dink ashore for a little shelling on an Atlantic beachfront with NO FOOTPRINTS..(c;.....and NO CONDOS!! I'll be there. Just stay alive for another 10 winters. 5 if we get an inheiritance. BTW....what kind of boat do you have? -Greg |
Mobile to Seattle
"Dene" wrote in :
BTW....what kind of boat do you have? Hmm...well, let's list: Amel Sharki 41 ketch Endeavour 35 sloop Grand Banks 42 trawler Hatteras 52 for fishing (just started on this one) various other boats at intermittent intervals when their electronics or electrics fail. I don't "own" any of them. I'm sort of the engineer on the first two and chief electronics technician on the others. I can visit West Marine, buy a bunch of stuff for the boat, and my credit card balance remains the same! These boats belong to out-of-towers from Charlotte, Atlanta, all inlanders. I'm the local "custodian" when the radio or air conditioner is broken. Well, I'm off to race on the Endeavour in a really STIFF breeze at noon. http://www.charlestonoceanracing.org/ Dress warm...it's only going up to 50F, today. It was mid 70's until this front passed in the night, but man what sailing weather this morning! http://www.charlestonraceweek.com/ http://www.charleston.net/stories/?n...section=sports Race ya to bouy BP...(c; |
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