Twister_Ken
Well-Known Member
Nice use of rolled and backed jib to bring the bow around.
so when the weather is bad I put the boat aground or drop the hook and go below to read a good book
Right up to the last moment, I didn't expect there to be a marina there.
The boats on shore look like they have relatively deep keels; can they really hope to get through that channel?
I for one have appreciated the shots of cabin life when you've filmed them though.
excellent.....one of my first sails on the Humber was out of Winteringham ...we got as far as near the end of the channel and the withies had gone and in the rush to get out at the top of the tide we got stuck for 11 hours on a mud bank with what at low water looked like a 12ft drop to the side!.......
What a god-forsaken, wind-blasted, and downright ugly drainage ditch in one of the least appealing and forlorn corners of the planet! Not a tree, or even a reasonable bush, in sight. Why on earth....?
+ 1
Flat uninteresting scenery and as above, why sail up a muddy ditch.
I'll stick to the Scottish west coast.
To each their own
To each their own
What a god-forsaken, wind-blasted, and downright ugly drainage ditch in one of the least appealing and forlorn corners of the planet! Not a tree, or even a reasonable bush, in sight. Why on earth....?
+ 1
Flat uninteresting scenery and as above, why sail up a muddy ditch.
I'll stick to the Scottish west coast.
To each their own
you are, of course correct
and I shall really enjoy the granduer of the Scottish coastline
which is wonderfully crinkly amd I am sure will entertain me for a few summers
I have spent two summers off the west coast of scotland in the eboat and it was brilliant
however, I take my pleasures where I can get them
and to be sitting on the boat on the mud while the wind howls over the reeds, or to feel the boat quietly lift from her perfectly formed berth in the small hours of the morning and hear an owl working across the local fields, or to enjoy the power of those tides, to see a flock of 300 avocects, to watch the local harbour porpoises hiding behind a mud bank while waiting for a sea trout or salmon to come up with the tide is not entirely devoid of pleasure
Great video - though like others have said better route for a Landie than a boat!
And interesting dodgems style approach to pilotage and checking out the banks. Probably one to take down from the website when selling the lightly used boat ("one careful owner ........ and Dylan")![]()
38 people appear to have watched it so far.....
What a god-forsaken, wind-blasted, and downright ugly drainage ditch in one of the least appealing and forlorn corners of the planet! Not a tree, or even a reasonable bush, in sight. Why on earth....?
I've just had my decades-long love of the Truro River reaffirmed.....
Including me.......until the dog woke me up for a walk.
Forget it Dylan... some people will never understand those with a bit of a poet in their heart....you are, of course correct
and I shall really enjoy the granduer of the Scottish coastline
which is wonderfully crinkly amd I am sure will entertain me for a few summers
I have spent two summers off the west coast of scotland in the eboat and it was brilliant
however, I take my pleasures where I can get them
and to be sitting on the boat on the mud while the wind howls over the reeds, or to feel the boat quietly lift from her perfectly formed berth in the small hours of the morning and hear an owl working across the local fields, or to enjoy the power of those tides, to see a flock of 300 avocects, to watch the local harbour porpoises hiding behind a mud bank while waiting for a sea trout or salmon to come up with the tide is not entirely devoid of pleasure
The film reminds me of the twisty little channel to Uphill which was made even more difficult a few years ago when an old mobo being towed out ran aground and later sank.
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