rosewood
Well-Known Member
I didn't mean to suggest anyone was overstepping their rights, by doing whatever they see fit on their own boat.
But, putting an electric labour-saver on a boat which is inherently all about learning & exercising laborious processes of maintenance & use, makes no sense to me.
What kind of person embraces all the care which wooden boat-ownership necessitates - the inevitable scraping, searching, analysis of damage or ingress of water, and the slow sourcing and securing of replacement timbers or whatever long-learned traditional cure can be incorporated - and accepts that each year will always mean more of the same...
...but, when it comes to actually going sailing and shifting the boat from her berth, he suddenly becomes impatient with the awkward requirements of this old lady, as if he's the type who wouldn't put up with such inconvenience? Wouldn't bow-thruster-man also have chosen a boat which didn't need any traditional time and effort expended on her?
Easy to visualise the thinking of a man who embraces all the ease which modernity allows; and equally, of the man who refuses to adopt any such plastic-age convenience. But who would pick and choose to do all those tiring winter jobs, then forego learning basic close-quarters handling?![]()
I feel ashamed but I do use an electric sander