Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
John Gaquin
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Wayne.B" wrote in message

Jax says that is very dangerous, something about catenaries.


Catenaries are only a problem around puddy-tats.


  #2   Report Post  
JimH
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Eisboch" wrote in message
...
I was just reading some information on my son's (Eisboch Jr.) new boat.
Some of the impressive statistics:


Propellers: 4, bronze, 21 feet across

Rudders: 2, each 29 feet by 22 feet

Anchors: 2, each weighing 30 tons

Anchor chains: 2, each 1,041 feet, 684 links, individual link weighs 365
pounds

Distillation plants: Provide 400,000 gallons of fresh water daily from the
sea water, enough to supply 2,000 homes

Toilet paper: 100,000 rolls

Power plant: 2 nuclear reactors that can go 20 years without refueling

Name: USS Harry S. Truman (currently heading for duty in the Persian Gulf)

Eisboch


Impressive. Best of luck to your son.

How long is his tour? What are his duties on the ship?


  #3   Report Post  
Short Wave Sportfishing
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Fri, 12 Nov 2004 07:33:11 -0500, "JimH" wrote:


"Eisboch" wrote in message
...
I was just reading some information on my son's (Eisboch Jr.) new boat.
Some of the impressive statistics:


Propellers: 4, bronze, 21 feet across

Rudders: 2, each 29 feet by 22 feet

Anchors: 2, each weighing 30 tons

Anchor chains: 2, each 1,041 feet, 684 links, individual link weighs 365
pounds

Distillation plants: Provide 400,000 gallons of fresh water daily from the
sea water, enough to supply 2,000 homes

Toilet paper: 100,000 rolls

Power plant: 2 nuclear reactors that can go 20 years without refueling

Name: USS Harry S. Truman (currently heading for duty in the Persian Gulf)

Eisboch


Impressive. Best of luck to your son.

How long is his tour? What are his duties on the ship?


What I want to know is can you troll for pelagic species off the stern
of that thing? You know, really big marlin? :)

I actually did that once - Army transport to Panama for a joint
training exercise. Ever the fisherman, I had a big Mitchell spinning
reel and some heavy dacron line. One of the Army Quartermasters found
a piece of wood on the ship that looked like an old railing - rigged
up some guides out of nails and went fishing.

Didn't catch anything, but the Army types thought it was pretty funny.
Even the Captain came down to take a turn on the reel. :)

I think I have a picture of that around here in the old timey files -
I'll see if I can't find it.

Later,

Tom
  #4   Report Post  
Eisboch
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:


What I want to know is can you troll for pelagic species off the stern
of that thing? You know, really big marlin? :)

I actually did that once - Army transport to Panama for a joint
training exercise. Ever the fisherman, I had a big Mitchell spinning
reel and some heavy dacron line. One of the Army Quartermasters found
a piece of wood on the ship that looked like an old railing - rigged
up some guides out of nails and went fishing.

Didn't catch anything, but the Army types thought it was pretty funny.
Even the Captain came down to take a turn on the reel. :)

I think I have a picture of that around here in the old timey files -
I'll see if I can't find it.

Later,

Tom


Sometime I'll tell the tale of my close encounter with a Courts-Martial.

Eisboch
  #5   Report Post  
Short Wave Sportfishing
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Fri, 12 Nov 2004 08:10:43 -0500, Eisboch
wrote:

Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:


What I want to know is can you troll for pelagic species off the stern
of that thing? You know, really big marlin? :)

I actually did that once - Army transport to Panama for a joint
training exercise. Ever the fisherman, I had a big Mitchell spinning
reel and some heavy dacron line. One of the Army Quartermasters found
a piece of wood on the ship that looked like an old railing - rigged
up some guides out of nails and went fishing.

Didn't catch anything, but the Army types thought it was pretty funny.
Even the Captain came down to take a turn on the reel. :)

I think I have a picture of that around here in the old timey files -
I'll see if I can't find it.


Sometime I'll tell the tale of my close encounter with a Courts-Martial.


Heh - maybe if we ever get together some time over dinner.

I served on a Courts Martial once. Idiot defendant went with a trial
of his peers rather than having a Court made up of officers.

Dumbass.

Later,

Tom


  #6   Report Post  
DSK
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:
What I want to know is can you troll for pelagic species off the stern
of that thing? You know, really big marlin? :)

I actually did that once - Army transport to Panama for a joint
training exercise. Ever the fisherman, I had a big Mitchell spinning
reel and some heavy dacron line. One of the Army Quartermasters found
a piece of wood on the ship that looked like an old railing - rigged
up some guides out of nails and went fishing.

Didn't catch anything, but the Army types thought it was pretty funny.
Even the Captain came down to take a turn on the reel. :)

I think I have a picture of that around here in the old timey files -
I'll see if I can't find it.


Yep. Can't do it in transit because those things MOVE... generally 20+
knots. But when the ship is on station and just hanging around, it would
be possible to troll off the fantail. Not sure the carriers ever hang
around going slow, they are too valuable & vulnerable a target... makes
the Navy nervous. However if they did, you could. It would a problem
standing so high above the water... you'd probably be at least 50' up!

The tin can I was on spent a lot of time making slow circles waiting for
something to happen. Fishing off the fantail was quite popular. I don't
recall any marlins being dragged aboard, but did see a few dolphin and a
lot of sharks. Delicious.

DSK

  #7   Report Post  
Short Wave Sportfishing
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Fri, 12 Nov 2004 14:23:29 -0500, DSK wrote:

Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:
What I want to know is can you troll for pelagic species off the stern
of that thing? You know, really big marlin? :)

I actually did that once - Army transport to Panama for a joint
training exercise. Ever the fisherman, I had a big Mitchell spinning
reel and some heavy dacron line. One of the Army Quartermasters found
a piece of wood on the ship that looked like an old railing - rigged
up some guides out of nails and went fishing.

Didn't catch anything, but the Army types thought it was pretty funny.
Even the Captain came down to take a turn on the reel. :)

I think I have a picture of that around here in the old timey files -
I'll see if I can't find it.


Yep. Can't do it in transit because those things MOVE... generally 20+
knots. But when the ship is on station and just hanging around, it would
be possible to troll off the fantail. Not sure the carriers ever hang
around going slow, they are too valuable & vulnerable a target... makes
the Navy nervous. However if they did, you could. It would a problem
standing so high above the water... you'd probably be at least 50' up!

The tin can I was on spent a lot of time making slow circles waiting for
something to happen. Fishing off the fantail was quite popular. I don't
recall any marlins being dragged aboard, but did see a few dolphin and a
lot of sharks. Delicious.


My Dad commanded a DE during WWII and used to fish off the stern all
the time - I saw some pictures his Exec took of them cod fishing
before picking up a convoy.

When he was transferred to the Pacific on a Tin Can, he told me he
never really had time.

Later,

Tom
  #8   Report Post  
Eisboch
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:



My Dad commanded a DE during WWII and used to fish off the stern all
the time - I saw some pictures his Exec took of them cod fishing
before picking up a convoy.

When he was transferred to the Pacific on a Tin Can, he told me he
never really had time.

Later,

Tom


Which brings me to my story ....

I was also stationed on a DE for part of my Navy "experience". It was
of mid-50's vintage and had been retrofitted with a new passive sonar
system that was towed behind the ship, listening for subs. This duty was
about the most boring time you can imagine because the ship spent weeks
at a time trolling the sonar at 7 knots, day in and day out.

So, one Sunday afternoon during "holiday routine" a couple of friends
and I decided to fly kites off the fantail. We had decided on a previous
cruise that this would be a great idea, and it was .. the kites flew
perfectly. Being the young smart-asses that we were at the time we
decided to attach a small flasher light to each kite, stolen from some
life vests. The kites carried them aloft with no problem, but you
couldn't see the lights in the daylight.

Bored with this after a while, we tied the lines to the rail on the
fantail and forgot about them.

Later that evening I had a watch to stand. I happened to step into the
Radio Shack to find all kinds of excitement. An Operational Immediate
message was about to be transmitted that contained items like:

"Negative signature of object on radar despite re-calibration and test"
and
"Object follows all course changes"

I knew then I was in deep ****.

Eisboch
  #9   Report Post  
Eisboch
 
Posts: n/a
Default

JimH wrote:


Impressive. Best of luck to your son.

How long is his tour? What are his duties on the ship?



This is scheduled to be a 6 month deployment. They departed Norfolk in
early October. He has been in the Navy for about a year and a half and
has 2 and a half more years of active duty to go. He went to a state
college for a year, then transfered to Mass Maritime Academy for 3
years, then got the itch for adventure and duty.

He is assigned to an air squadron on the Truman. (VAW 126)

Eisboch
  #10   Report Post  
JimH
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Eisboch" wrote in message
...
JimH wrote:


Impressive. Best of luck to your son.

How long is his tour? What are his duties on the ship?


This is scheduled to be a 6 month deployment. They departed Norfolk in
early October. He has been in the Navy for about a year and a half and
has 2 and a half more years of active duty to go. He went to a state
college for a year, then transfered to Mass Maritime Academy for 3 years,
then got the itch for adventure and duty.

He is assigned to an air squadron on the Truman. (VAW 126)

Eisboch


Could be a career for him....who knows. My thanks to your son for serving.




Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is Off
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
What's a good sail boat to buy to live on? Wilfred Johnson Cruising 8 July 7th 04 02:57 AM
rec.boats.paddle sea kayaking FAQ [email protected] General 0 April 17th 04 01:28 PM
rec.boats.paddle sea kayaking FAQ [email protected] General 0 March 18th 04 10:15 AM
Dealing with a boat fire, checking for a common cause Gould 0738 General 14 November 5th 03 02:13 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 07:21 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2025 BoatBanter.com.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about Boats"

 

Copyright © 2017