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Anybody "sheets" on my bed....I keeeeel em
"BCITORGB" wrote in message ups.com... Tink: ========= Landlubbers call them ropes, they're called lines! TnT ============= Sorry to disappoint, sailors call them sheets. Wilf |
Tink informs:
============ and horror of horror, I picked up a small 2.5 Mercury Mariner, that I plan on incorporating in my total package. =============== Is that a "motor" you're talking about? Surely that'll get your barred from r.b.p.t. If not, it ought to. I come from a sailing family where it was a matter of pride for my father to *sail* into the berth in the marina (with much fear in the eyes of others already berthed). As crew, I can assure you that my timing had to be impeccable and multi-tasking was the order of the day. I guess what I'm trying to say is: I'm shocked to hear a paddler even mention the word "motor", never mind contemplating afixing one to his craft. Next thing you know, you'll be telling me that you're going to attach some motorized assist gizmo to your mountain bike. Tsk! Tsk! Wilf +++++++++++++ |
BCITORGB wrote: Tink informs: ============ and horror of horror, I picked up a small 2.5 Mercury Mariner, that I plan on incorporating in my total package. =============== Is that a "motor" you're talking about? Surely that'll get your barred from r.b.p.t. If not, it ought to. I come from a sailing family where it was a matter of pride for my father to *sail* into the berth in the marina (with much fear in the eyes of others already berthed). As crew, I can assure you that my timing had to be impeccable and multi-tasking was the order of the day. I guess what I'm trying to say is: I'm shocked to hear a paddler even mention the word "motor", never mind contemplating afixing one to his craft. Next thing you know, you'll be telling me that you're going to attach some motorized assist gizmo to your mountain bike. Tsk! Tsk! Wilf +++++++++++++ A "motor", did I say something about one of those noisy, smelly polluters? No, not me! Absolutely not! well maybe, but just a very little one, really small! And I promise to paddle when ever possible. Or to sail! If I use the motor, it will be only where there are other motors being used. You won't even know I am there! Promise! As far as Mtn biking, they provide lift service to the top of the mountains during the summer on the ski lifts, then just coast down. Actually I rode a Road bike, on longer rides that you would not want to try on a mtn bike. Though a few times on a steep climb I've wished for a gizmo. TnT |
On Sat, 02 Apr 2005 17:02:16 GMT, "No Spam"
wrote: (snipped) Nice to know there are others out there with a Dancer that is a little snug. It takes everything that boat has to keep me afloat. I have removed the plastic bit under the front combing edge and that gets me into the thing. I was somewhat worried that I would not come out in a wet exit but when the time came, it came off like a good pair of pants. I love the looks I get when I show up with it. I'm 6' 1'' and about 275-285 depending on what I had for breakfast ; and most people where I go have huge canoes and are shocked that I am actually going to go out in my "little" boat. I'm short and chubby and old enough to be less than agile. Bad for getting in and out of a Dancer. But they're so* nice to paddle. Even though I don't do whitewater. I once thought I would (about the time I bought it) but then I tried it a bit and, while it's fun to go downriver upside down very fast, I wasn't able to do the roll. Had to pop the skirt every time and swim the little boat down to where I could drain it and force my way back in. It makes a nice recreational boat, especially in backwaters and swamps. One can go over a tree trunk that any other boat would have to beach and pull around. You push that nose up, reach down to the sides and do a hand push (can't do that much more, either. Bummer.) and slide yourself right over. Places anyone else has to get out to pull over the sand bar, you just dig the paddle in the sand and scoot over it, if there's any water flowing across it. One does have to learn how to paddle in a straight line, but that comes along well. Cyli r.bc: vixen. Minnow goddess. Speaker to squirrels. Often taunted by trout. Almost entirely harmless. http://www.visi.com/~cyli email: lid (strip the .invalid to email) |
Cyli wrote: On Sat, 02 Apr 2005 17:02:16 GMT, "No Spam" wrote: (snipped) Nice to know there are others out there with a Dancer that is a little snug. It takes everything that boat has to keep me afloat. I have removed the plastic bit under the front combing edge and that gets me into the thing. I was somewhat worried that I would not come out in a wet exit but when the time came, it came off like a good pair of pants. I love the looks I get when I show up with it. I'm 6' 1'' and about 275-285 depending on what I had for breakfast ; and most people where I go have huge canoes and are shocked that I am actually going to go out in my "little" boat. I'm short and chubby and old enough to be less than agile. Bad for getting in and out of a Dancer. But they're so* nice to paddle. Even though I don't do whitewater. I once thought I would (about the time I bought it) but then I tried it a bit and, while it's fun to go downriver upside down very fast, I wasn't able to do the roll. Had to pop the skirt every time and swim the little boat down to where I could drain it and force my way back in. It makes a nice recreational boat, especially in backwaters and swamps. One can go over a tree trunk that any other boat would have to beach and pull around. You push that nose up, reach down to the sides and do a hand push (can't do that much more, either. Bummer.) and slide yourself right over. Places anyone else has to get out to pull over the sand bar, you just dig the paddle in the sand and scoot over it, if there's any water flowing across it. One does have to learn how to paddle in a straight line, but that comes along well. Cyli r.bc: vixen. Minnow goddess. Speaker to squirrels. Often taunted by trout. Almost entirely harmless. http://www.visi.com/~cyli email: lid (strip the .invalid to email) Cyli, Your the kind of gal I would like to see on the survivor program, any chance you would volunteer? TnT |
On 4 Apr 2005 23:09:30 -0700, "Tinkerntom" wrote:
Cyli r.bc: vixen. Minnow goddess. Speaker to squirrels. Often taunted by trout. Almost entirely harmless. http://www.visi.com/~cyli email: lid (strip the .invalid to email) Cyli, Your the kind of gal I would like to see on the survivor program, any chance you would volunteer? TnT I'd be voted off more quickly than I heard the first guy on the first show was. The guy that was the only one that knew how to start a fire... What little I've seen of it is full of people who want to be movie or TV actors. Young pretty people in good shape. I don't fit any of those qualifications. Oh, yeah, and I can be a tad abrasive if I'm sure I'm right and no one agrees with me. And it's likely no one would. Most of them (again from the very little I've seen) have brains the size of walnuts and have common sense factors in the minus range. I did see one of their contests all the way through once (my husband went downstairs to use the computer, so the channels didn't change). One where the people were shooting at pumpkins or something like that. Duh. This is not survivalism at basic. You walk over, grab the pumpkin, cut it open and take it away to cook it. You don't, if in real need, make a bow and arrow first thing, you make pit traps or deadfalls or nets. Then you make bows and arrows. Or atalals (sp? Spear throwers, whatever they're called). Anyway, I think you can see now why I'd not enter one, even if I were in good shape. After three days with what I've seen of those people I'd possibly use any bow and arrows they gave me to shoot the guide, the other contestants, or, better yet, the producer, if I didn't shortcut it all and use the arrow to slit my wrists (remember, it's down, not across). But thank you for the compliment. Cyli r.bc: vixen. Minnow goddess. Speaker to squirrels. Often taunted by trout. Almost entirely harmless. http://www.visi.com/~cyli email: lid (strip the .invalid to email) |
Cyli wrote: On 4 Apr 2005 23:09:30 -0700, "Tinkerntom" wrote: Cyli r.bc: vixen. Minnow goddess. Speaker to squirrels. Often taunted by trout. Almost entirely harmless. http://www.visi.com/~cyli email: lid (strip the .invalid to email) Cyli, Your the kind of gal I would like to see on the survivor program, any chance you would volunteer? TnT I'd be voted off more quickly than I heard the first guy on the first show was. The guy that was the only one that knew how to start a fire... What little I've seen of it is full of people who want to be movie or TV actors. Young pretty people in good shape. I don't fit any of those qualifications. Oh, yeah, and I can be a tad abrasive if I'm sure I'm right and no one agrees with me. And it's likely no one would. Most of them (again from the very little I've seen) have brains the size of walnuts and have common sense factors in the minus range. I did see one of their contests all the way through once (my husband went downstairs to use the computer, so the channels didn't change). One where the people were shooting at pumpkins or something like that. Duh. This is not survivalism at basic. You walk over, grab the pumpkin, cut it open and take it away to cook it. You don't, if in real need, make a bow and arrow first thing, you make pit traps or deadfalls or nets. Then you make bows and arrows. Or atalals (sp? Spear throwers, whatever they're called). Anyway, I think you can see now why I'd not enter one, even if I were in good shape. After three days with what I've seen of those people I'd possibly use any bow and arrows they gave me to shoot the guide, the other contestants, or, better yet, the producer, if I didn't shortcut it all and use the arrow to slit my wrists (remember, it's down, not across). But thank you for the compliment. Cyli r.bc: vixen. Minnow goddess. Speaker to squirrels. Often taunted by trout. Almost entirely harmless. http://www.visi.com/~cyli email: lid (strip the .invalid to email) Like I said, you more than qualify for a real survival show. There have been some of the more mature women on the show, but I agree that most of it seems to have little to do with real survival, and more to do with social climbing in a semi-primitive setting. I always figured the tribe that wants to survive should raid the other tribe, maybe bash a few knee caps to weaken the competition, and generally cause havoc. Maybe go after the producers camp. Now we can have a real program, with Jeff living on the beach. TnT |
On 5 Apr 2005 06:11:26 -0700, "Tinkerntom" wrote:
(snipped) Like I said, you more than qualify for a real survival show. There have been some of the more mature women on the show, but I agree that most of it seems to have little to do with real survival, and more to do with social climbing in a semi-primitive setting. I always figured the tribe that wants to survive should raid the other tribe, maybe bash a few knee caps to weaken the competition, and generally cause havoc. Maybe go after the producers camp. Now we can have a real program, with Jeff living on the beach. TnT Format has changed or I watched too little of it. I didn't know there were two tribes competing. Geeze. Too much silliness for Cyli. With real tribes you don't raid until there's a need. Usually a need to get rid of some of the too many young over-testosteroned men who are pretty useless if you've already got enough hunters. True primitives tended to wander apart from one another most of the time. As tribes got larger there was warfare and trade, but these start out with 20 people or less for the 'reality' show, don't they? Insane. Cyli r.bc: vixen. Minnow goddess. Speaker to squirrels. Often taunted by trout. Almost entirely harmless. http://www.visi.com/~cyli email: lid (strip the .invalid to email) |
Cyli wrote: On 5 Apr 2005 06:11:26 -0700, "Tinkerntom" wrote: (snipped) Like I said, you more than qualify for a real survival show. There have been some of the more mature women on the show, but I agree that most of it seems to have little to do with real survival, and more to do with social climbing in a semi-primitive setting. I always figured the tribe that wants to survive should raid the other tribe, maybe bash a few knee caps to weaken the competition, and generally cause havoc. Maybe go after the producers camp. Now we can have a real program, with Jeff living on the beach. TnT Format has changed or I watched too little of it. I didn't know there were two tribes competing. Geeze. Too much silliness for Cyli. With real tribes you don't raid until there's a need. Usually a need to get rid of some of the too many young over-testosteroned men who are pretty useless if you've already got enough hunters. True primitives tended to wander apart from one another most of the time. As tribes got larger there was warfare and trade, but these start out with 20 people or less for the 'reality' show, don't they? Insane. Cyli r.bc: vixen. Minnow goddess. Speaker to squirrels. Often taunted by trout. Almost entirely harmless. http://www.visi.com/~cyli email: lid (strip the .invalid to email) Usually they start out with two tribes, but one recent series, I think they had three. I watched the first series with anticipation, but once you get the dynamics of the very small society figured out, subsequent series have been boring. The producers in order to capture our subsequent attention, have to keep coming up with some angle, none of which has anything to do with survival. I read about a couple who purposely stranded themselves on a South Pacific island to see if they could survive in paradise. They just about died, and would have except for some locals from an adjacent island. The Locals wanted to know why anyone would want to live on this particular island that was infested with a particular sand flea, that made you very ill. Plus there was no local sourse of water. They were surprised that anyone could be so dumb. Reminds me of some of these series that have turned out to be pretty dumb, especially when you get sleep and food deprived bimbos and bimbobs, trying to make a decision about who to vote off, when they can hardly stay in the game themselves. In one series they made their camp right down on the beach which worked until high tide. In another, they camped in a riverbed, that ended with a flashflood. Another they caught their camp on fire. Obviously things you would want to avoid, but you would think that there would be some good boy scouts and girl scouts somewhere to be in the games. How CBS chooses such loosers is amazing, unless they are going for the "OH no, Groan Factor"! TnT |
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