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Date:         Sat, 27 Feb 2010 09:24:22 -0800
Reply-To:     Don Hanson <dhanson928@GMAIL.COM>
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From:         Don Hanson <dhanson928@GMAIL.COM>
Subject:      Re: So who sails? I keep forgetting a bunch of the vanagon people
              also have boats....
Comments: To: craig cowan <phishman068@gmail.com>
In-Reply-To:  <d1ea9acf1002261834td7a1debp1e2901fa9c2d719b@mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1

I lived sailing for many years, still have a great love for the whole sailing life. Just yesterday I was surfing around for tri designs on the net, toying with maybe buiding one for myself now that I am getting a bit older. I grew up sailing dingys and crewing on racing sailboats around Southern Cal. My first wife was a sailor from back east, spent a few seasons working the Carribean charter trade on the famous Hereshoff ketch Ticonderoga. One fall I got a gig delivering a little 36' sloop (fiberglass) from Cambden, Maine to Buzzard's Bay and Big Ti (as Ticonderoga was called by the eastcoast yachties) happened to be in the harbor in Cambden...Beth, my former wife, wanted to hide below so McKenzie (Ti's owner) would not see her aboard a "Ping pong ball".....I made here take us aboard to get a look at that spectacular yacht... When she decided to get her degree we moved to Puget Sound and while she went to school I got my dream job working as a boatbuilder. I found a yard where the owner just happened to be a great sailor and quite well off (Albertson's Markets) He was just starting a 46' Doug Peterson design IOR race boat, so I got to build that and then became one of the (paid) crew when I wasn't building boats in the yard. We became one of the scratch boats in the fleet, often sailing for first to finish in the races around the NW. Weekends when we weren't racing the Big Boat, me and a few others were often "Rock-Jocks" on other big boats who's owners needed expert (semi) professional crew to win races..SC 50s, 40s, custom IOR boats, etc. I also learned traditional wooden boat construction from a master Norwegian builder who'd apprenticed in Norway and was willing to apprentice me at the shop in exchange for me teaching him cold moulding and Epoxy/wood construction techniques. Working for 5 years in that full service boatyard gave me a great understanding of all aspects of sailing and powerboating..I certainly know that it is not as romantic as it sounds when you read all the sailing magazines. And boats are similar to live creatures....Unlike a vanagon that you can't just run it into a garage somewhere and let it sit. And you don't get to just pull over to the curb and figure out some problem or get on the Vanagon list and ask for help....many sailing crisis are life endangering or at least risking the loss of the whole boat if you mess up some seemingly minor way.. pretty fun struff though, ramming along under the spinniker in the middle of the night in an ULDB at 20knots, surfing a 60' Sled full of people down huge invisible waves...Yahoo! Don Hanson

On Fri, Feb 26, 2010 at 6:34 PM, craig cowan <phishman068@gmail.com> wrote:

> As the title says, > Who on here is an avid boater (in any discipline)? > > Its friday. > Why not? > > -Craig >


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