| Title: | SAILING |
| Notice: | Please read Note 2.* before participating in this conference |
| Moderator: | UNIFIX::BERENS |
| Created: | Wed Jul 01 1992 |
| Last Modified: | Mon Jun 02 1997 |
| Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
| Number of topics: | 2299 |
| Total number of notes: | 20724 |
ON BOATING AND MAN-EATING SQUID
Dave Barry / Off Center
Like most Americans, I was thrilled to death last February when our
wealthy yachting snots won the coveted America's Cup back from
Australia's wealthy yachting snots.
It was not an easy victory. Our boys spent years experimenting with
different designs for their boat before they came up with the
innovative idea of having a submerged nuclear submarine tow it. "That
was the real break- through," explained Captain Dennis Conner. "We
could hit nearly 50 miles per hour without even putting up our sails.
Plus we had the torpedoes." It was American ingenuity at its best, and
I think that, as a nation, we should be inspired to take up sailing as
a popular mania, similar to the way, in previous years, we have taken
up Bruce Springsteen and being Republicans.
I have done some sailing myself, and let me tell you: There's nothing
quite like getting out on the open sea, where you can forget about the
hassles and worries of life on land, and concentrate on the hassles and
worries of life on the sea, such as death by squid. My son, Robert,
has this book entitled "Giants of Land ,Sea and Air Past and Present,"
which I like to read to him at bedtime to ensure that he won't fall
asleep until just after dawn. Here's what this book says regarding
squid: "The giant squid may reach a length of 55 feet, including its
35-foot tentacles."
My point is that while you should of course enjoy sailing experience,
you should take the routine marine precaution of being constantly aware
that a creature the size of Yonkers,N.Y., cold be oozing and sliming
along just beneath the surface, watching you with humongous eyes.
Another one of Robert's books, "The Big Book of Animal Records," states
that the eye of a giant squid can get to be - this is an Amazing True
Nature Fact, coming up here - 16 inches across. Think about that.
Think about the size of the whole eyeball. Think of the pranks you
could play, if you got hold of an eyeball like that.
DELIVERY ROOM DOCTOR: Well, Mr. and Mrs. Foonster, here's your newborn
child!
NEW PARENTS: AIIIIEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!!!!!!!
But his is not a time for lighthearted humor. This is a time to learn
Safe Boating Practices, so that your sailing experience will not be
ruined in the event of a squid attack. Here is the procedure
recommended by boating safety experts:
1. Do not panic. Remember that the squid does not necessarily want to
eat you. Oh, sure, it wants to eat somebody, but this does not have to
be you.
2. Shout: "Here! Eat Ralph!"
Boating safety experts recommend that you always keep a supply of
unpopular guests on hand to push overboard as emergency marine
sacrifices. They do not, however, have to be named "Ralph". You can
just claim they are named Ralph, because you are dealing with a squid.
OK, that takes care of boating safety. Now let's talk about the kind
of boat you should select. There are many different kinds, the main
ones being: yachts, swoops, tankers, frigates, drawls, skeeters,
fuggits, kvetches and pantaloons. These are basically the same. The
only important factor to bear in mind, when selecting a boat, is that
it should be "Seaworthy," meaning that if for some reason you
accidentally drive it into another boat, or a reef, or a Howard
Johnson's Motor Lodge, you will not be held financially responsible.
This means the type of boat you want is what veteran mariners refer to
as a "stolen" boat, or, if it is not practical, a "rented" boat.
I rented a boat once, in the Virgin Islands. My wife and I did this
with another couple, and we agreed that I should be the captain,
because I had the most sailing experience, in the form of sitting on
various people's sailboats, drinking beer and remarking upon the
weather. Fortunately the boat we rented had a motor in it. You will
definitely want this feature on your sailboat, too, because if you put
up the sails and the boat tips way over you could spill your beer.
This was a constant problem for Magellan. I put her motor on whenever
we wanted to actually get somewhere, or if we came within two miles of
something we might run into, such as another boat or a Virgin Island.
On those rare occasions when I did attempt to sail, I was hampered by
the fact that the only nautical commands my crew understood were:
1. "Pull on that thing."
2. "No, the OTHER thing."
3. "No, the other thing over THERE, dammit."
4. "Never mind."
Our navigational policy was always to steer the boat in the direction
of restaurants and hotels that had real bathrooms. Our boat allegedly
had a bath- room (or as we say aboard ship, a "bathroom"), but it was
about the size of those Styrofoam containers you get Egg McMuffins in,
and it was mostly filled with the marine toilet, a complex and punitive
device that at any moment you expected to see a tentacle come snaking
out of. Which is why the No. 1 rule of the sea is: If you absolutely
have to use the marine toilet, you want to send Ralph in there first.
| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 535.1 | ugh | PULSAR::BERENS | Alan Berens | Thu Apr 23 1987 17:51 | 3 |
very unfunny | |||||
| 535.2 | "ugh"? | DSSDEV::JROBINSON | Thu Apr 23 1987 21:52 | 3 | |
re:-.1, I disagree.
| |||||
| 535.3 | what me worry? | GRAMPS::WCLARK | Walt Clark | Fri Apr 24 1987 08:15 | 5 |
I thought it was funny (but I used to love MAD and National Lampoon
so what do I know).
Walt
| |||||
| 535.4 | Isn't this all true? | NCVAX1::BLACK | Fri Apr 24 1987 09:32 | 4 | |
Whats funny? I thought this was a true story ... after all, I for
one have Ralph-ed overboard.
| |||||
| 535.5 | WEAK!! | CASADM::THOMAS | Fri Apr 24 1987 10:01 | 4 | |
This is not up to Barry standards. :-(
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| 535.6 | The designated Ralph! | HIGHFI::CORKUM | CYBORG::/FRSBEE:: CORKUM | Fri Apr 24 1987 12:07 | 8 |
Hmm.
A new crew management technique. Next time my daughter acks up when
we're underway I'll start calling her Ralph!
bc
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| 535.7 | SWSNOD::RPGDOC | Dennis (the Menace) Ahern 223-5882 | Fri Apr 24 1987 13:50 | 15 | |
"Here's looking at you, squid."
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| 535.8 | The whitbread.. | MCS873::KALINOWSKI | Wed Sep 14 1994 13:14 | 114 | |
Note: If you look at the newest issue of Sailing magazine, there is a
picture of Dave and "crew"
<<< HYDRA::DISK_NOTES$LIBRARY:[000000]DAVE_BARRY.NOTE;1 >>>
-< Dave Barry - Noted humorist >-
================================================================================
Note 877.0 Cast adrift in a most tacky sport 1 reply
MTCLAY::DONOVAN "L.J.Donovan, DTN 267-2243" 100 lines 29-JUN-1994 13:07
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
"Cast adrift in a most tacky sport"
(Yacht racing not for just anyone)
by Dave Barry
[Copied from the (Concord, NH) Sunday Monitor, June 26, 1994]
I don't wish to boast, but recently I was on the crew of one of the yachts
in the prestigious Whitbread round-the-world yacht race.
Okay, if you want to get picky, I was not, technically, "on the crew."
A more accurate statement is that I was "constantly in the way of the crew."
But I WAS on the yacht, and it was an experience that will remain with me
for the rest of my life in the form of chronic butt soreness, caused by
"tacking." (More on this later.)
For the benefit of those of you who do not keep up with international
yacht racing, I should explain that the Whitbread is a grueling nine-month
race in which hardy yachtspersons sail around the world, relying only
upon their skill, the wind, and humongous sums of money from corporate
sponsers. One of these sponsors, a major beer manufacturer, arranged for
me to be a passenger on one of the yachts; a public-relations person for
this company expressed the hope that I would mention the beer by name in
this column, but of course that would violate my journalistic ethics.
The Whitbread is the world's toughest sailing race. The 14 yachts
competing this year will travel a total of 32,000 miles, a distance that -
to give you some perspective - is equal to 253,440,000 Heineken bottles
placed end-to-end. The 10-person crews race under brutal conditions: at
sea for weeks at a time, sometimes battling 50-foot waves, constantly cold
and wet, rarely getting more than a few hours' sleep, jammed together
aboard Spartan racing boats that lack even primitive casino facilities.
Please note that I, personally, did not sail around the entire world.
I sailed in an exhibition race off the coast of Fort Lauderdale, where
the competitors had stopped to prepare for the final leg of the Whitbread,
across the Atlantic to England. The yacht I was on is the Yamaha, named
after its Japanese corporate sponsor, Steinway.
No, that was a joke, and I sincerely hope that it does not cause some
public-relations person to commit suicide. The Yamaha is sponsored by
Yamaha, a company that manufactures fine pianos and outboard motors via
what I assume are two completely different processes.
Most of the Yamaha's crew members come from New Zealand; they speak
a language that is similar to English, except that the only time you can
understand them is when they say a very bad word that I will represent
here as "fudge" (not its real name).
The crew members say this word a lot, and I don't blame them, because
sailboat racing is hard. The entire boat is covered with a complex
intertwined mass of nautical items such as winches, pulleys, lines, booms,
halyards, leewards, mizzens, stanchions, forecastles, starboards,
Heinekens, etc. In order to make the sailboat do anything, crew members
have to yank on every single one of these items until their hands bleed.
Getting a racing sailboat to turn right requires about the same amount of
labor as building a three-bedroom house.
And the boat has to turn a LOT. This is because, in sailboat racing,
you never sail directly toward your intended destination; instead, you
zigzag constantly back and forth, with the boat leaning way over to one
side, then way over to the other, like a person who has consumed too much
Heineken. This is called "tacking," and it serves an important nautical
purpose; namely, to fling the guest civilian passengers into the ocean
where they would be eaten by squid.
At least that SEEMED to be the purpose. There were four of us
civilians on the Yamaha - Gerry, Lucy, Bob and I. Oour job was to always
sit on the high side of the boat. Basically we were human ballast. So
when the boat was leaning way over to the left, we'd be clinging for our
lives to the right side, feeling as though we were on the edge of a cliff;
then, suddenly, a voice would shout "Tacking!" and all these New Zealanders
would start pulling on things, and the boat would start leaning sharply
to the right, and we civilians would try to get over to the left side,
scrabbling on our butts like pudgy four-legged crabs, wincing and flinching
and trying desperately to avoid flapping sails and big ropes snaking
wildly around the deck and heavy objects whooshing past our heads and
New Zealanders racing all around us yelling "FUDGE!"
And of course as soon as we got to the other side, the voice would
shout: "Tacking!"
We tacked like maniacs. I estimate that the Yamaha traveled 237
nautical miles without ever leaving a patch of water the size of a squash
court. Back and forth, over and over, scrabbled the pudgy flinching
crabs. After an hour of this, I knew I was going to need a butt transplant.
But I felt good, because I could sense, from the excited way the New
Zealanders were talking ("FUDGEFUDGEFUDGE!") that we were doing well.
"Are we winning?" I asked Bob, between tacks.
"The race hasn't started yet," he replied.
So it was a long afternoon out there. But it was exciting, and we
might - thanks to a strong performance by the ballast - actually have
won the race. There was no way to tell. All I know is, I was very glad
to get back on land and be able to walk erect and try to heal my bruised
and battered body via a time-tested medical remedy. Involving Heineken.
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