Yearly Archives: 2009

The Mint Juleps

When I was living in Antibes, France, I was surprised how many people I met there were from, or had lived in, New Orleans. One who became a close friend was a girl named Jane who worked as a barmaid at Chez Charlie’s Pub. In the summer of 1991 it was announced that the first family of New Orleans music, the Neville Brothers, were going to be featured one night at the annual week-long Juan les Pins jazz festival. Naturally all of us with a Big Easy connection immediately bought tickets and got our friends to buy, too, so they could be introduced to the Nevilles.

With a high level of excitement and anticipation we arrived at the stage venue early so we could get up right close to the stage to see our favorites. Then along came the opening act, The Mint Juleps. A group of British lasses no one had ever heard of. They opened the show with the following song and blew the Neville Brothers off the stage.

2 Comments

Filed under Music

Katie Webster

Anyone whose been following this blog knows how much I love that good old whorehouse style piano playing…When I lived in New Orleans I was lucky enough to have seen Katie Webster several times. Katie comes from Lake Charles, Louisiana, but moved to California and fortunately for us music lovers she would show up in the Big Easy from time to time.

One of the greatest radio stations I’ve ever been around was Radio Baie des Anges out of Nice, France. The station played a lot of good honky-tonk piano numbers, the only problem was they didn’t have what we think of as dee jays except for someone called Jacquesno (spelling?) who had a show at eight in the evenings. He was great. Mondays were, of course, called Blue Monday and Fridays were country and western nights. This man really knew his music. Lots of evenings he would devote his hour to one special musician and often it would be some unknown studio musician and Jacques would play cuts that musician had played behind other featured players.

Except for Jacques you never knew the names of the songs or the musicians who were playing them. All you got on Baie des Anges was music, news, more music, advertising, and even more music. I would put a 90 minute cassette in my boom box, hit record and then go about the business of the day. Later in the evening I would edit the tape picking out the songs I liked and eventually accumulated around 80 hours of music I enjoyed most of which was hard-pounding piano.

We moved the boat over to Marbella, Spain, for several months prior to making the big leap across the pond. One day my French girlfriend, Florence, and I took a trip up through the mountians to town of Ronda. As we were wandering through the ancient streets we were passing by a music store and out of the corner of my eye I saw a cassette in the window featuring Katie Webster. Now, she’s not a big name around the world and it’s even hard to find any of her recorded music in New Orleans so I immediately went in and bought the album. When we returned to the boat late that evening I popped the tape into the player and the big surprise was that all but two of the songs on it I’d already pirated off of Radio Baie des Anges!

Comments Off on Katie Webster

Filed under Music

Home Made Sea Swing Stove

One of the pieces of gear that I really loved on my Nancy Dawson was the gimbaled Sea Swing stove.

Force+10+SeaCook+Stove

It was great for cooking while bouncing around underway. I always cooked things in my small pressure cooker without the weight. With the cover locked on even if dinner got flung across the cabin you weren’t cleaning up the food all over the bunks and cabin sole. I also used it at anchor and in port when I needed a third burner to supplement my usual stove top.

They go for about a hundred bucks a pop at West Marine.

I recently subscribed to a Yahoo Group called LowCostVoyaging and someone calling themselves Ken V came up with this home made version which is really clever. His post read, “I have a non-gimballed stove in my galley, and needed a stove that would work on passage. I put together a low cost gimballed stove out
of a propane camping stove and a galvanized steel pail. To make the stove, take apart the camp stove and find a way to fit it through a hole in the bottom of the pail, then hang the pail where it can swing. I had no spillage even close hauled into 6 ft breakers.”

img20
img14

img18

img19

There are few people as resourceful as cruisers on a budget.

1 Comment

Filed under boats, Microcruising, Minimalist Cruising, sailboats, sailing, Small boat cruising, Uncategorized

Cruising Chart Tip

Though extremely disappointed by the fact that I haven’t had a single inquiry about the Boston Whaler I have for sale in the last two weeks despite reducing the asking price way below its true value it hasn’t kept me from dreaming about my original premis of this blog One More Good Adventure. That adventure is to sail down to Panama and live in Bocas del Toro until they find my black and bloated corpse on board.

As my expected profit from selling the Whaler shrinks, so does the size of the boats I’m looking at to do the feat shrinks as well. But long voyages in small boats are done all the time. After all, Robert Manry crossed the Atlantic in his 13-1/2 foot Tinkerbelle and really crazy have done it in even smaller craft. And there’s only one long-distance open water passage to do (Great Inagua, Bahamas to Bocas) and I only have to do it once. So, in all this day dreaming I reflect on the trip I made with Nancy Dawson from Fort Lauderdale all the way down to the Rio Dulce in Guatemala and back.

To go anywhere on the water charts are essential. These days, of course there are all kinds of electronic charts and viewers available and while they are great in their own way, what happens if your electric system craps the bed? No matter how good your electronic charts are only a very stupid boater will depend on them alone. You need to have paper charts. Period.

When I was planning my Guatemala adventure I needed to have a set of charts. A set of NOAA charts were going to set me back well over $100 OR I could buy a Xeroxed set for a fraction of the cost. The problem with Xerox charts are that they are just black and white and aren’t colored like the NOAA charts.

440px-NOAA_chart_25664_1976

As you can see, land masses are one color and the varying shades of blue represent different water depths. This makes it easy it much easier to read them

Xeroxed charts, on the other hand don’t have this feature. What I did was buy the B&W charts and a set of multi-colored highlighters. I then spent hours going over the charts and highlighting them. I used yellow for the land areas, blue to mark shallow areas and things like coral heads and reefs and pink to show where anchorages were indicated…

Chart 2

The chart above is from Freya Rauscher’s Cruising Guide to Belize and Mexico’s Caribbean Coast (Including Guatemala’s Rio Dulce). You can see how it worked. Not NOAA quality, but good enough. In fact, one advantage of doing this was that I had to spend quite a lot of time pouring over the charts to find all of the things that needed to be located and therefore I got a good feel for how things really were. Probably better than just reading through the more expensive charts.

Another way in which NOAA charts are superior to the Xerox variety is the quality of the paper. The are built for hard use and, in general, will last for years. The Xerox charts are on heavy bond paper but don’t have nearly the endurance potential of the more expensive charts, especially when you consider that all charts are going to get soaked somewhere along the line.

Here’s what I did and what I will do in the future whether using NOAA or Xerox charts…I took them outside and saturated the charts with Thompson’s Water Seal. That’s right, the stuff people use on their wood decks outside their homes. Worked like a charm. When they dry out you can still mark your position with pencil and even erase what you have written on them. During the cruise the charts did get splashed with sea water more than once and it simply beaded up and was easily blotted up with a paper towel.

2 Comments

Filed under boats, cruising, sailboats, sailing

#37 – Something To Be Proud About?

Until now I have avoided injecting politics into this blog, but I just can’t help it anymore.

Let me be absolutely clear. I DETEST conservatives! The first three letters of the word says it all…CON=AGAINST! And conservatives are AGAINST anything that is helpful and useful to the common good.

My family didn’t come over on the Mayflower but they literally knew people who did! The paternal side of my family were among the first settlers of Watertown, Massachusetts back in 1630 and the maternal side joined them shortly after in the same rough village. (How’s that for coincidence?)

It has been legend in my family that one of my paternal grandmother’s ancestors actually took an active part in the original Boston Tea Party, and both sides of my family fought on the winning side in the Revolution. Conservative Republicans who love to wrap themselves in the mantle of patriotism need to be reminded, nearly on a daily basis, that the conservatives of those days were known as TORIES and if they’d had their way we’d still be singing God Save The Queen.

I grew up in a staunch Republican family and, in fact, cast my first Presidential vote for Barry Goldwater. (I knew back then that all Texas politicians were lying sacks of shit which proved to be true both time Texans became Presidents.) To my great shame I have to admit that I even voted for Richard Nixon against Hubert Humphrey.

But as I grew up I began to develop a social conscience and stopped voting for Republicans. I didn’t always vote for Democrats, either. For a long time I voted for the Libertarian candidates. Not so much because I believed all the crap they spewed out, either, except that it isn’t any of the government’s business what mind-altering substance adults decide to ingest. I voted for the Libertarians as a way of saying to BOTH the parties that have a death-grip on the wind pipe of the American electorate, I don’t like the clown either one of you are trying to shove down our throats….I’d rather have THIS clown over here. I never voted for him but there’s one thing I completely agree with George Wallace about and that’s when he said “between the Republicans and the Democrats there isn’t a dime’s worth of difference.”

When I would tell people I was going to vote for the Libertarian candidate they’d always say, “you’re just wasting your vote.” WRONG?! The only wasted vote is the one not cast. I vote in every election, especially local elections which most people don’t bother to d0. That’s when your vote can really make a difference.

All that being said, what is happening now with the “debate” about health care I find absolutely disgusting. The lies and distortions put out by the conservatives makes me want to vomit and fills me with a sense of both rage and despair. That’s why I’m glad I ran across the following video.

1 Comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Be careful who you talk to about your sailing plans. Those who have abandoned their dreams will try to destroy yours.

1 Comment

Filed under Uncategorized

For Music Lovers Everywhere

2 Comments

Filed under Music

A William Fife Wonder

William Fife (1857-1944) was the third generation of a Scottish family of yacht designers and builders. In his career he built two America’s Cup challengers for Sir Thomas Lipton (yes, that Lipton). Fife’s designs were not only fast racers they were works of functional sculpture. The following video shows how beautiful a Fife boat is from the hands of modern builders. The narration is in French (a people who honestly believe they invented wind and water about a decade before the birth of God) but the visuals are wonderful.

http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x8mx8i_essais-seabird-chantier-naval-stagn_sport

Thanks to Alan Richards http://thingofbeauty10.wordpress.com/ that featured the video which came from http://www.sailingnews.tv/

Both sites are well worth visiting.

Comments Off on A William Fife Wonder

Filed under boats, Classic Boats, sailboats, sailing

Where Do Malls Go When They Die?

Here’s an interesting blog about dead malls…all kinds of information to browse through…

Lists of malls in every state that have withered and died. Moved away from your old homestead and wondered whatever happened to that place you loved to go hang out at when you were a kid? Is it still there? You can find out here.

1 Comment

Filed under Uncategorized

A married man should forget his mistakes. There’s no use in two people remembering the same thing!

1 Comment

Filed under Uncategorized