Is this a yacht that your team have lost?
Richard
Hi Richard,
No, this one has fallen off a ship...
Pete
Hi,
I know this isn’t the right place to ask but you all seemed to be answering so here goes.
I have joined ybw today to post a problem but I have no idea how to post it ? I can reply to your thread but can’t find how to place one.
Help pls.
Thanks
So I understand. You will see a post new thread button at the top of the forum page when you are admitted to the fraternity.Not sure but I think you have to wait and or make a number of replies.
So I understand. You will see a post new thread button at the top of the forum page when you are admitted to the fraternity.
Ah thanks. So I have to make mild conversation first and occupy everyone else’s time before ‘they’ will let me loose with my own GPS related question.
This is strange - in the article they say "her condition was said to be so poor that the owner didn’t dare transatlantic voyage, and decided to transport her by freighter".
Yet a bit further in the article they say that this "yacht has been recently declared Boat of the Year at the Italian Sailing Federation’s Sailor of the Year awards."
Which explains any number of Italian cars...Hello Martin
that's Italy: any prize must go to something beautiful (and beautiful she was, for a big day sailer), who cares if the object is fit for purpose or not. :d
...is a mistranslation from an article written in another language."her condition was said to be so poor that the owner didn’t dare transatlantic voyage, and decided to transport her by freighter".
Which explains any number of Italian cars...
If I lost a shoebox from my roof rack, Plod would be down on me like a ton of bricks. Seems to me that there should be similar legislation at sea.
"her condition was said to be so poor that the owner didn’t dare transatlantic voyage, and decided to transport her by freighter"
That could mean she's essentially a day sailor and too lightweight for transats, or [conspiracy theory] she's knackered inside and a cheap freighter losing her overboard makes better economic sense than scrapping her, even with the bungs to the ship's crew [/conspiracy theory]
...
"her condition was said to be so poor that the owner didn’t dare transatlantic voyage, and decided to transport her by freighter"
That could mean she's essentially a day sailor and too lightweight for transats, or [conspiracy theory] she's knackered inside and a cheap freighter losing her overboard makes better economic sense than scrapping her, even with the bungs to the ship's crew [/conspiracy theory]