This one is still in the oven.Allow me to present exhibitA[B]from this very morning:
Hunter Hull laid up
Tick Tok...
Jim...
This one is still in the oven.Allow me to present exhibitA[B]from this very morning:
I ask clueless question because I am clueless..... Seriously my sailing skills are lacking way behind my sailor and mechanical skills.I do find it numerous when owners ask some seemingly clueless questions…
Greg
The ones that make me laugh are the “where is my…?”I ask clueless question because I am clueless..... Seriously my sailing skills are lacking way behind my sailor and mechanical skills.
What is do I think that I do well when ask a question is posting pictures and illustrations. I try my best to answer questions that are asked. I am also willing to take advise.
What I feeling as frustrating I folks that do not do the same.
I wish everyone did that GregThe ones that make me laugh are the “where is my…?”
I spent many weekends crawling all over my new-to-boat so I could find key systems and understand how my boat was set up.
Greg
Nothing better than tinkering with a boat!I wish everyone did that Greg
From my old Coast Guard small boat days, that omission seemed to be the primary cause of most of the rescue calls, not all of which ended happily. Somebody buys a boat, loads up the family, counts the life vests and hits the water. No clue where or how to secure an open thruhull, deploy an anchor, rig a reef or where the battery shutoff or fuses are. Add the occasional “ why doesn’t my bilge pump work?” and it’s Darwin’s Law time for the family.
That some seem so cavalier about basic functions and operation is evident in the questions they ask which prompted me to post about this since it’s obvious they “don’t know what they don’t know” about seamanship and if I or we tell them, they either never read it or never bothered responding or following up.
Exactly! If I wanted to see only direct questions and answers, I would go to Siri or Alexa.I like to think of a thread more as a conversation between people sitting around chatting, rather than as a closed logical system where a question has been posed, and the only proper response is a direct answer from those who are 100% sure they know the answer. I'm pretty sure others don't see it that way, based on the number of times the phrases "off topic" or "hijack" come up, but to each his own?
I'll suggest that none of your encounters with poor seamanship had any contact with SBO. So, whenever somebody posts something that may seemingly not raise to your standard of conduct, I think the responses at least provide a beam of light toward seamanship. Whether it is acknowledged or not is immaterial to me.From my old Coast Guard small boat days, that omission seemed to be the primary cause of most of the rescue calls, not all of which ended happily. Somebody buys a boat, loads up the family, counts the life vests and hits the water. No clue where or how to secure an open thruhull, deploy an anchor, rig a reef or where the battery shutoff or fuses are. Add the occasional “ why doesn’t my bilge pump work?” and it’s Darwin’s Law time for the family.
Love the analogy! And sometimes, when the sails are flapping and annoying, do we love sailing any less? It's a valid question, no? To each their own response!Like a sail, sometimes you need to trim the forum to get the results you desire.