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capt jake

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Posts posted by capt jake

  1. For Sale

    17' Cedar strip sea kayak, Water tight hatches fore and aft, Custom wooden paddle

    Weighs 47#. Design by onceoceankayaks.com Expedition Sport. Used 2 times and presently hangs inside the home in the entry....dying for use!

    Sacrifice at $2500 OBO

    61386_430363144341_602124341_5094430_2618352_n.jpg

    Please use e-mail in my profile, not the one on my website.

  2. Excellent stuff!  Ken had me cracking up!  All too true at times.  To become proficient with knots, you need to tie them at least monthly, preferably weekly.  We use almost all of those and a few more here at work.  It really shows when we haven't trained on them for a while.

    I know a really fast way to tie the bowlin, one hand, but I wold never be able to put it in writing......I could show ya. LOL :)

    Now go practice! :D :D

  3. Barry's friend now has my old WE.  I made a furler that worked AWESOME!  The sail was sewn to the wire.  I made the spool out of round stock nylon (about 1 1/4" dia) with flanges of UHMW.  Set screws to the wire (inserted through the drum).  Swivels on both ends.  You must also use a forestay, the swivels will not take the added load and hold the mast up.

    Total cost was about $50 if I recall.    I am pretty sure there are still pictures of it on here somewhere.  There were several past threads dedicated to this topic as well.

  4. It finally broke 32 degree today and my frozen pipes thawed out.  Colder than......well you know.  we had the high winds earlier in the week when the front first came across the border.  Snow in California has begun taking a toll on the Mandirin Orange crop already.  Mom has snow outside of Sacramento.

    Konrad, you pictures remind me of my childhood in Colorado!  Weather here is reminding me also!

  5. Ever so briefly, I have had my WE out in 2 small craft advisories.  Those are the advisories that tell you NOT to go out. :) One of the outings was with a rather large fellow that served well as rail meat.  He had a grin plastered on his face that you couldn't remove!  I had a cramped hand and finger indentations in the rub rail from trying top keep the boat upright (at least my hands thought that).  Never went over, but I carefully placed said rai8l meat. ;)

    One other time was a little hair raising.  With Joel from Gig Harbor; again we never went over, but had the rails in the water a few times.  Just point to he wind! :)  You can only let out so much sail until it hits the shrouds anyway.

    I thoroughly enjoyed sailing my WE, but honestly, I want something a bit larger and with more space if I am going to continue sailing. Sailing in the Puget Sound can have the challenges of very rapid changing conditions and there were a few times where I simply doused the sails and motored in.  I felt much safer that way.

    I am contemplating a sailing dinghy though.  One that is easily righted.  By a wetsuit and then just plain let r rip! :)

  6. Nah, no allergies.

    If there are two things I've been blessed with in life, it's no allergies and no need for corrected vision.

    (I'm a mess beyond that, though)

    Just wait young man, just wait!  I was the same, once upon a time..... ;) ;)

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