Bouba
Well-Known Member
And don’t forget....to leave just a few inches of sail out...so you don’t have to give wayBloomin thing is just getting going. In anything less than a moderate breeze your only recourse is to motor.
And don’t forget....to leave just a few inches of sail out...so you don’t have to give wayBloomin thing is just getting going. In anything less than a moderate breeze your only recourse is to motor.
We particularly enjoy the landsman’s version, where it says ‘umbrellas used with difficulty’. Many years ago, after a hospital fete on a breezy day, we modified this phrase to read ‘wrap skirts worn with difficulty’. Just as true today, and Mrs C will always check the weather forecast before wearing such a garment.Sorry chaps. The Beaufort scale has been used by sailors internationally since 1853. Perhaps you lot are not sailors.
If you want some different interpretations, some are at Historical and Contemporary Versions of the Beaufort Scale - Franks-Weather - The Weather Window
All I’m suggesting js that it takes a decent amount of wind to start having fun in a centuar. A little more wind than that is required to have fun at a hospital fete.Whoosh.
It's both the difference in sound between a gentle and a moderate breeze... and the sound of the difference between this thread and the Beaufort Scale (with which it appears we are all familiar) going over someone's head. The difference between Wansworth and Chiara's perception of the same breeze in the same boat, even allowing that both are exaggerating for comic effect, is closer to the point.
The faint feeling one gets from Chiara's Slave that people who enjoy their Centaurs are somehow having the wrong kind of fun is already familiar, but Wansworth's Centaur to Smack comparison is new to me. I struggle to imagine a Centaur becoming smack-like. Or do you just mean that they are out of place outside the East Coast?
I had imagined a Centaur would probably suit Wansworth...
Probably something likeI quite like the French version I saw, that said
F9 - Dogs blown off their chains
F10- Owners blown after their dogs.
Unfortunately, I can't remember the rest of it.
But probably not in Kansas, you mean.Probably something like
F11 Owner and dog reunited somewhere in the atmosphere
Probably just a town that isn’t the one you started in…But probably not in Kansas, you mean.
I think that is very generally true. The fame acquired is not generally the fault of the innovators (I will except Edison) but they almost always build on the work of some predecessor, such as Newton on Galileo, Darwin on his grandfather and Einstein on Lorentz and others. I can't remember his name but in your field there was that young man who classified clouds. I have a book about him somewhere and it was very interesting, though I think that his insights were actually original.I know that philosophical musing is not a strong point in these threads. However, it interests me how ideas develop and people build on work of others. Beaufort did not invent the scale of winds. Effectively, he took a scale used by the East India company and put formal, recognisable definitions (at the time) to the numbers.
Buys-Ballot did not discover his eponymous rule. He put into words a result of work by two Americans, William Ferrell and Jack Coffin who applied the Coriolis effect to the atmosphere.
Hadley is immortalised because of his description of the Trade Winds. His reasoning of the causes was incorrect, back to Ferrell and Coffin.
Perhaps like most science, there is rarely a Eureka moment.
Luke Howard.I think that is very generally true. The fame acquired is not generally the fault of the innovators (I will except Edison) but they almost always build on the work of some predecessor, such as Newton on Galileo, Darwin on his grandfather and Einstein on Lorentz and others. I can't remember his name but in your field there was that young man who classified clouds. I have a book about him somewhere and it was very interesting, though I think that his insights were actually original.
Who knows what a Smackis unless there from the East coast,A Centaur is the modern equivalent !
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Moody owners have sails stowed and run engines.What's the difference between a gentle and moderate breeze?