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  #11 (permalink)  
Old 12-05-2008
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camaraderie camaraderie is offline
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Holy Cannolli...yeah I know Brian! Small world.
Oh gawd...no more sticky buns!!!
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  #12 (permalink)  
Old 12-05-2008
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Leither Leither is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MisterBilge View Post
Ahh…Mr. C
You present me with my first opportunity to spin a yarn.
.
Welcome to SailNet, Mr B. If your yarns are all going to be as good as your first one, then keep 'em coming!

Stuart

PS I have never been to Vermont, or Maria's.....
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I must go down to the sea again, to the lonely sea and the sky - I left my shoes and socks there, I wonder if they're dry?
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  #13 (permalink)  
Old 12-05-2008
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Quote:
Originally Posted by camaraderie View Post
Holy Cannolli...yeah I know Brian! Small world.
Oh gawd...no more sticky buns!!!
I got together with Brian's brother Russ out in Colorado Springs, '77. We went for a soooooothing libation at a place where he bartended part time called "Jose Muldoon's"..... gotta love a place with a name like that, and 3 guess as to what the beverage of choice was (hint: it saves time, amigo.)
As he was an employee, the good news was we didn't have to leave at closing time. The bad news was...we didn't have to leave at closing time. We had SUCH a good time, I ended up with 32 stitches in my head.
Medically required to do my best impersonation of a Sikh, I could no longer don my helmet and fly back the trusty, thrusty F-106 in which I had arrived. That took some e's'planin' to do, Lucy...none of which was acceptable. Some generals can get really anal about things like that.
But I digress. Last I knew, Brian was living in NYC, but that's 25 yr old data.
His ex (forgot her name, but I think she was a Midd gal) decided she wanted to be an actress, schlepped out to Hollywood and actually got some gigs on Soaps!
Winooski has gone through another "renaissance" and is now a big traffic rotary. Driving in circles....around Winooski.... the mind reels. But it is money better spent than the dome they were considering way back when. A cartoon at work showed "Winooski's Dome" as a garbage can lid. Tough crowd, n'est ce pas?
But enough Tom Foolery. Today's task is to empty out the boat and get ready to start tearing apart the engine, as the 27 year old impeller finally gave up the ghost. Doesn't owe me a dime.

Cheers,


Mr B
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  #14 (permalink)  
Old 12-05-2008
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The only time I was in Vermont was when I was passing through while driving truck. I had this homely weightmaster (female) at the scale booth tickle my palm while smiling sweetly. My ex wife sitting shotgun didn't appreciate it much.
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  #15 (permalink)  
Old 12-06-2008
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The only time I was in Vermont was when I was passing through while driving truck. I had this homely weightmaster (female) at the scale booth tickle my palm while smiling sweetly. My ex wife sitting shotgun didn't appreciate it much.

Yes, indeed. Our Vermont women share a trait or 3 without Vermont boats, mostly old, beamy, and with just the right touch or dry rot. The state is basically a theme park done in wood and bad dental work. Take the Admiral, for example. She used to play goalie on the dart team....never let a shot get by.
So, anybody else take a hose to their boat yesterday.....to get the 3 inches of ice out of the cockpit?
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  #16 (permalink)  
Old 12-07-2008
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  #17 (permalink)  
Old 12-08-2008
labatt labatt is offline
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Welcome MrB! We've been on Champlain for a few years - over in Willsboro Bay. We spent more time on the VT side, however, as Burlington is one of the cooler destinations. We recently decided to go cruising and are currently holed up in Annapolis waiting for some work to be completed and a weather window to pass. Welcome aboard and perhaps we'll see you at some point, here or on Champlain!
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  #18 (permalink)  
Old 12-08-2008
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Welcome MrB! We've been on Champlain for a few years - over in Willsboro Bay. We spent more time on the VT side, however, as Burlington is one of the cooler destinations. We recently decided to go cruising and are currently holed up in Annapolis waiting for some work to be completed and a weather window to pass. Welcome aboard and perhaps we'll see you at some point, here or on Champlain!

Warning Gentle Readers: This is MisterBilge long.
Hey ‘Batts
We “met’ over on another forum. I think you PM’ed me re: hauling the standing rigging down below the Champlain Canal as being prohibitively expensive. I was thinking of hauling it myself with an open trailer and my p.u. truck, rigged on jack stands. Probably highly illegal if not also stooooooooopid, but I’ve found that when I get pulled over for whatever moving violation, whining and sobbing uncontrollably and threatening suicide usually gets me off the hook.
I swapped emails with our mutual friend Gene. Hoping to meet him in, where is it, Catskill? for a libation on my trip down the canal. Which conveniently leads me into another yarn concerning the movement of vessels (or vehicles) through a fluid environment, qualifying (albeit oh so slightly) for review by this August body.
As back drop, Gene was an A-10 pilot in the USAF. I, on the other hand, flew much more manly airplanes, F-16s, F-4s, and F-106s. REAL men have afterburners and the ability to fly past Mach 1, and, for that matter, Mach 2. There’s a highschool-ish rivalry between fighter pilots and their noble steeds, so grant me a minute to trash his.
The A-10 was designed around it’s gun, a 30 mm monster that, when they’re test firing them up here in the Green Mountains, sounds like a cross between Godzilla and the world’s largest bear being rudely awakened from hibernation. It’s straight wings and high bypass fanjets give it great maneuverability whence scurrying around a battlefield in a “bogey rich environment” of Ivan’s currently rusting 50,000 tanks.
As it would be getting up close and personal with ZSU 23 mm anti-aircraft-artillery, the Air Force was nice enough to give the pilots a titanium “bath tub” to sit in for protection from the aforementioned problem.
So, the good news is, it can take a lot of hits. The bad news is, it’s gonna. In order to prepare (“Train like you’re going to fight!”) these sheep for the slaughter, they’d set them in a Dempsey Dumpster and throw bricks at it. Effectiveness still under review.
Formally the “A-10 Thunderbolt II” it is such an ugly piece of hardware it carries the more appropriate moniker of “Warthog” and it’s knights bear shoulder patches inscribed with “Go Ugly Early.” More manly aircraft have limitations measured in Mach (speed of sound) number or skin temperature, hence when entering into battle we would first attempt to acquire the “speed of heat.” The ‘Hogs were more famous for being able to get them up to the “speed of snow.”
One of the more fun things in life, besides sailing, of course, is “Hog Poppin,’” truly, the Sport of Kings, and about as fair a fight as fox hunting. In order to keep it interesting, we’d usually set it up so that it was simply a gunfight. Their lacking radar, missiles, and the ability to fly away from a well-thrown softball it seemed like the honorable thing to do.
Here’s where it starts to get fun. For the sake of safety, a pilot has to know the greatest number of how many airplanes are going to be in the “fur ball” in order to minimize the chances of running into each other. While setting up the fight over the phone, I’d always let them think there was going to be 2 in my flight, even if I was going to be alone. We’d brief up altitude blocks (they’d always get the bottom 2000 ft) kill criteria, etc, and inter-flight radio on UHF, intra-flight on VHF. Entering the airspace, we’d “check in” with each other on UHF. I’d disguise my voice/change accents to indeed appear to be a flight of 2 F-16s.
At “Fight’s on…cameras on.” They would start marching up the track, trying to gain speed, one eye on their radar warning equipment, one eye on a swivel looking for the “dreaded Hun.” The trick is to fly pretty much over the top of them by 20,000 feet or so, not locking them up with the radar to give away position, and just doing some mental math as to where they are going to be after they “gimbal” the radar at the bottom of the case, then roll over on your back into a “split-S” maneuver to swoop down on them. Like sailors, pilots tend to spend more time looking around the horizon rather than vertically. Sometimes as a courtesy, we’d call a “Fox 2” heat seeking missile shot, just to let them know “We’rrrrrrre Herrrrrrre” and watch them go into “The Hog Dance” which was a counter-rotating circle just about impossible to get inside of because of their straight wing, small radius turning circle.
So the thing is to press in, take at least a “snap shot” (as opposed to a near impossible tracking shot) with our 20 mm gun, then pull up in the vertical trying to escape their long range 30 mm. At this point, with a voice feigning a sense of urgency, one would “screw up” and call “Off to the (direction)” on the inter-flight frequency. Thence, with the disguised voice, the “other guy” (still me) would call “Two’s in from the (other direction)” and watch the ‘hogs break off the counter attack and start looking for the “other” coming in from…… wherever.
Hey, it’s kinda like throwing the screw and washer into the other guy’s mainsail when racing….if y’aint cheating……
So, dear moderators, there’s a bunch of bandwidth you’ll never have back. And Gentle Readers a good 5 minutes. But I did qualify it by vessels moving through a fluid environment.
Lemme know if my yarns are too far out there, and I’ll cease and desist.

Cheers,

MrB
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  #19 (permalink)  
Old 12-08-2008
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WouldaShoulda WouldaShoulda is offline
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Nothing quite like the sound of the gun on an A-10!!

Afterburners.

Claymore mine detonation.

120mm on the M-1

.50 cal M-2

I get a hard-on just thinking about it!!
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  #20 (permalink)  
Old 12-08-2008
bubb2 bubb2 is offline
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With all due respect to fast mover drivers, I always felt better with a Spectre overhead.
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