There was an end of the season a few years back where the engine would run  
fine, shift into reverse fine, but wouldn't go forward.  We only had a  couple 
more races in the season so I would back out of the slip into the creek  sail 
out to the race course (or get towed if need be) and then sail back into  the 
slip. 
 
I had practiced it before and got a bunch more practice at the end of the  
season.  
 
When the season was over I pulled the outboard off and took it to the  shop.  
$200 later it was lubed up properly and ready for the winter in the  shed...
 
Merry Christmas to all.
 
CD
 
 
In a message dated 12/25/2007 2:23:29 A.M. Eastern Standard Time,  
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

None the  less you did sail her into her berth either out of gas or not it 
does not take  anything away from the accomplishment kudos to you! No need for 
shoe leather  bt it never hurts to be humble>


 
____________________________________
Date: Mon, 24 Dec 2007 14:31:30 -0800
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To:  [email protected]
Subject: Re: catalina27-talk: Race Sails  & Ballast/IB v OB

We  headed out one bright morning for a burial at sea. The outboard purred 
into  life 
and I backed the boat out of the slip with the tiller to starboard.  We 
motored out the
obligatory three miles offshore (more or less) and  idled around the other 
boats as
the ceremony progressed.  

Following the ceremony we followed the family boat back into the  harbor. 
Just as
we rounded the point in front of the yacht club bar, the  engine quit. I knew 
we were
low on fuel, but I didn't realize we had been  running on fumes all morning.

We pulled off the main cover and  hoisted her to catch the four or five knots 
of breeze,
sailed around the  point and into our slip on the lee side of the club. When 
we went
in to  splice one for our departed friend, several people complimented us on  
our
superior seamanship sailing into the slip in light air. Never being  one to 
go for long
without the taste of shoe leather, I foolishly let it  be known that we 
didn't have a
choice because the skipper (me) had let us  run out of gas.

Better to keep your mouth shut and be thought a  superior sailor than open it 
and
be proven a ninny....

Merry  Christmas to all, and may the wind and seas be at your back in  2008.

Dick
Encore
Dana Point



[EMAIL PROTECTED] (mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED])  wrote:  
I probably already told this to the list once or twice, but it's worth

retelling and I can always

further embellish it to make it even whackier and stupid than it actually

was in real life, so here  goes:

-----------

I have NO IDEA what we were thinking, but it was not summer, I think it

was in November, but it was an unusually warm night and my wife's entire

family was in town...we went out to eat in the neighborhood where my boat

was kept in a slip. It was many hours after sunset and we left the

restaurant and it was, by god, UNUSUALLY WARM, and this was in the Inner

Harbor and the all the city lights looked beauty-full, so we decided, what

the heck, let's all go for a quiet motor all the way up into the Innermost

of the Inner Harbor!  What fun!! How exciting!!



Only: there were 9 of us on a Columbia 22. That's a lot...all dressed in

stupid shoes and skirts and dress slacks and coats and ties.



We looked somewhat ridiculous, I'll grant you that....6 adults (one in her

late 70's) and 3 kids under 10 years old. I think, I'm almost positive I

had 9 PFD's on board. Of that I am sure...kinda.



But anyway, it was blowing all of 1 knot and the sea state (harbor state)

was like a mirror...it was very beautiful..all them-there lights. Not

another boat moving anywhere...



Needless to say there was not a whole lot of room in the cockpit...in fact

it almost impossible to move the tiller, but the old Merc fired up right

away (i HATE mercs) and we made our way up into the Harbor, past the toxic

waste site left by Allied Signal (on the EPA's superfund list at that

time) past the Domino Sugar Plant (recent fire has shut down a few floors)

past the Batlimore Museum of Industry (and the Steam Tug "Baltimore,' once

a DuPont pleasure yacht, past the National Aquarium and the Rusty Scupper,

past the diesel sub "Torsk" and up to the seawall at the Rouse

Corporations' Harbrplace.



A few crew disembarked to get hot coffees and assorted desert

drinks...tourists walked by and cluelessly thought we, who actually were

clueless, too, were pretty cool for "sailing" up to the Inner Harnor in

Nvoember.



Of course, you can guess what happened...pretty-much nothing.



Excpet about 15 yards off the seawall the O/B conked out and would not, no

way, no how, start back up again. No way, nuh-UH! My brother-in-law

started to get his cell phone out (pretty much a novelty item back in

those days) and call for a tow, when the sharp-eyed skipper noticed the

wind had piped up to a roaring 2 kn off our stern. So, he hauled up the

flaccid burnt-out gennie, and hanked that puppy on, to the amazement of

the assembled, captive and near-paniced Family-in-Law (while my wife

calmed them, saying, "Dont worry...he knows what he's doing") hoisted that

piece of crud swath of Dacron® and off we sailed back toward the marina at

maybe 1.5 kn, under headsail alone!



We made a perfect, soft landing into the slip, whereupon my

brother-in-laws glasse's (his only pair...they were moving to Kansas the

next morning, facing an 18 hour drive) went ker-splash into Batlimore's

colloidal stew and settled in 18 feet...12 feet of "water" and 4 feet of

suspended hexa-valent chromium and sewage.



In the slip, I was able to diagnose the problem with the engine...no one

had ever

hooked up the gas line.



such is life.



tf











  



 
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