| Re: Nacra 5.2 lost at sea last night in Va Beach
[Re: Kevin Rose]
#26122 11/19/03 10:47 PM 11/19/03 10:47 PM |
Joined: Oct 2003 Posts: 248 Colorado SteveT
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Posts: 248 Colorado | Thank you, Fritz, finally someone who makes sense. To criticize the Coast Guard for flying because they’re not on a rescue mission just shows ignorance and arrogance. To commend these guys in any way shows the same ignorance and arrogance. They say they are experienced, but doesn’t that mean knowing when weather conditions are such that disaster is likely and knowing how to self-rescue when things go wrong? Going out in heavy weather to test your abilities is fine – so long as you go prepared to deal with the worst scenario without risking other lives. Maybe that means waiting until there is a fully supported race like the Tybee or other distance event where there are chase boats and other competitors nearby. Yes, the Coast Guard trains for things like this, and I know that like soldiers, firefighters and mountain SAR professionals, they love going out in tough conditions, but to use them as part of your bag of rescue tricks is irresponsible beyond belief and shows a complete disregard for the well being of others. I think these guys should get out their checkbooks and pay the Coast Guard for saving them. To beg for help finding their busted little boat is akin to tatooing a big 'L' on thier foreheads.
H-20 #896
| | | Re: Coast Guard Cost of the Rescue
[Re: Disc20]
#26127 11/20/03 09:08 AM 11/20/03 09:08 AM |
Joined: Nov 2002 Posts: 5,558 Key Largo, FL & Put-in-Bay, OH... Mary
Carpal Tunnel
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Posts: 5,558 Key Largo, FL & Put-in-Bay, OH... | The question that keeps nagging at me is: WHY would anyone want to voluntarily go out in winds that strong? What is the point? Maugan seems to be looking for the thrill of speed. However, as experts have said on this forum before, beach cats have a maximum hull speed and they cannot go faster, no matter how much more wind you have. And when the wind is too strong to hold the boat down, you probably are actually going slower than the maximum speed of which the boat is capable. And if you load more people (weight) on the boat to hold it down, the stress will probably break your rig.
So what's the point of the whole thing? It does not so much test the limits of the sailors' abilities as it tests the limits of the boat and teaches you how far you can push it before it breaks. And that is an expensive, potentially dangerous test. | | | Re: Coast Guard Cost of the Rescue
[Re: Disc20]
#26129 11/20/03 10:13 AM 11/20/03 10:13 AM |
Joined: Nov 2002 Posts: 5,558 Key Largo, FL & Put-in-Bay, OH... Mary
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Posts: 5,558 Key Largo, FL & Put-in-Bay, OH... | Thanks for the clarification. I can relate. When I was a teenager, friends and I had access to a Dragon, which is designed for REALLY heavy-air sailing on the North Sea, and when we got a rare day on Lake Erie with a lot of wind, we would take the Dragon out and see how far we could bury the lee rail. VERY exciting! But we knew the boat could not possibly capsize, so I guess that doesn't count. | | | Re: Coast Guard Cost of the Rescue
[Re: Mary]
#26132 11/20/03 10:59 AM 11/20/03 10:59 AM |
Joined: May 2002 Posts: 3,114 BANNED MauganN20
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Posts: 3,114 BANNED | Maugan seems to be looking for the thrill of speed. More like the thrill of survival. I'd want to do it just to know that I could. If I failed, then at least I know that I gave it my best shot, and couldn't do it. I'm sorry if that challenge doesn't appeal to you people, and being called "disgraceful" for having an adventurous spirit is somewhat laughable. "I've sailed for 20 years blah blah blah blah..." I hear this crap from everyone. I've sailed for ... let see... 23 minus 13... 10 years, so roughly half of what you've been experienced to. Who cares. We could go into long digressions about whose sailing dick is bigger, but when it comes down to the decision as to whether or not to sail that day, its up to me, not all you people. I'll leave it at that. As for the comment that said mentioned that I was criticising the CG for flying around. Thats ludicrous. I was merely pointing out the error in logic when people say that, to go rescue these guys it cost $18,000... when I'd wager to say that it costs that to operate the chopper any other day of the week. I swear, trying to get my point across to some of you is like yelling at a mango tree. Why don't we just agree that we have differring opinions and move on, because its quite apparent that the two sides of this arguement are entrenched. | | | Re: Coast Guard Cost of the Rescue
[Re: MauganN20]
#26134 11/20/03 11:59 AM 11/20/03 11:59 AM |
Joined: Oct 2003 Posts: 248 Colorado SteveT
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Posts: 248 Colorado | Thats F'ing ridiculous. Those helicopters fly around doing jack sh*t every summer day guzzling down copious amounts of jet fuel doing nothing other than getting an aerial view of the thong-clad beauties That is a truly ingnorant remark. One of the few positive things to come of this event is the CG got to practice a real rescue close to home and thank God they had guzzled down copious amounts of fuel training on many summer days before they had to go out in marginal conditions. The sailors' choice to go out in big wind is theirs alone, this is true. But by going out alone with only a cell phone and flairs as their safety net implies they were ready to put others lives at risk and that's where I take issue. The thrill of speed and ultra-challenging conditions appeals to many of us. It certainly appeals to me. Memories of taking on those challenges are my most vivid and I'm looking forward to my next opportunity to sail in big wind or ski deep snow in the back country. However, going into any situation like that alone with the expectation of someone else risking their life to save you is the ultimate act of selfishness. It sounds like these sailors used the term "experienced" a little too loosely. Had they been experienced they would not have gone out in that weather so unprepared.
H-20 #896
| | | Re: Coast Guard Cost of the Rescue
[Re: MauganN20]
#26138 11/20/03 02:52 PM 11/20/03 02:52 PM |
Joined: Apr 2002 Posts: 695 Ft. Pierce, Fl. USA Seeker
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Posts: 695 Ft. Pierce, Fl. USA | I addmitt it…I too have done participated in some rather “less than brilliant decision making”…and have so far…live to tell the tale…thanks to the grace of God…If anyone on this forum denies they have fit into this category at one time or another, they are lying to themselves.
Some observations…read into them as you wish…
1) Twenty years experience might mean: A) Twenty years sailing all types of conditions from small lakes to open ocean, wind strengths from dead calm to hurricane force, in dinghies to Trans-Atlantic racers. B) Twenty years sailing in a local 20-acre lake on an aqua cat.
One can have 20 years experience, or have one years experience 20 times.
2) How does one gain experience? By doing things…if you have not done something…you are not experienced at it. If one wishes to survive the experience it would be prudent to take small steps in the direction one wants to go rather than jumping in over ones head. 3) Just because you personally are not comfortable or equipped for a certain set of conditions, doesn’t mean the guy next to you is equally ill equipped. (They are several windsurfers that sail “JAWS” on Maui at 80 foot up the face, I can’t/won’t do it, you probably can’t/won’t do it either…but does that mean the local crew out there that have been doing it for years need to stop because of our limitations? 4) Choose the proper equipment for the job…If no production catamaran is designed to endure sustained winds of above a certain force, you are going to have to find something that was designed for that kind of wind like a very small sailboard/sail (less than 3sq/mt{32 sq/ft.}sail for 35 + sustained winds...how much sail does their cat have?), and be a very experienced rider. Or you will have to design your own cat, and hope that you will have conditions a couple times a year that justify the expense of building such a creature. 5) If you are going out in offshore winds make sure the “other side” is considerably less than a couple of thousand miles away,. At least you can blow to the other side before you die of exposure/drown /starve to death. 6) If we were really honest, one would have to admit the kind of personality that would gravitate to search and rescue duty in the Coast Guard has a little more in common with the adrenaline junkies they rescue than most would care to admit. Yes it is an important, serious job…but how many 19 year olds enlist because it is an “important and serious job”…I lived next door to a Coast Guard barracks for several years…they were really good guys…but they are human…I could tell some interesting true stories about their off duty exploits…just as foolish as sailing a outmatched beach cat in overpowering/offshore/open ocean conditions.
For what it’s worth…
Bob
Last edited by Seeker; 11/20/03 03:02 PM.
| | | Re: Coast Guard Cost of the Rescue
[Re: Seeker]
#26139 11/20/03 03:47 PM 11/20/03 03:47 PM |
Joined: May 2003 Posts: 139 Daytona Beach FL TheoA
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Posts: 139 Daytona Beach FL | can someone just please please please LOCK this thread. It's ridiculous. M17 has a point, so does every one else. Guys are OK, CG got some good real world experiance, and everyone still is sipping tea. There are SO many other things to talk about....
94 N5.5SL
| | | Re: Coast Guard Cost of the Rescue
[Re: MauganN20]
#26141 11/21/03 01:09 AM 11/21/03 01:09 AM |
Joined: May 2003 Posts: 139 Daytona Beach FL TheoA
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Posts: 139 Daytona Beach FL | People actually take the time to hate mail you?
Dear God, arn't there more important things to do? Like SAILING?
94 N5.5SL
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