Wednesday, April 16, 2025

 


12 comments:

  1. Too far gone. That ship has lost helm control, starboard buried. and now its a race to see if it gets knocked down before it can round up.

    And that's an odd configuration. Catboat rigged, with no visible boom. Where's the boom, where's the mainsail?

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    1. Don't see a mainsheet traveler either. My first thought was a windgust and a spinnaker knockdown, but the water looks too calm. Beats me.

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  2. The boom is not shown. Neither is the main sheet and tackle. It's a mystery.

    The vessel is one of the NY J boats. Not cat rigged, it's the bow is completely under. To the far right is shown some portion of the boat. Besides, too much standing right for a cat boat.

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  3. Gaff rigged? Spar is not in frame but the sheets seem to indicate a spar.

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  4. Chap with the not-nautical hat seems rather unconcerned.

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  5. Just a guess: Hard aground (no wake) and waiting for the incoming tide?

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  6. It looks like a dhow with a lateen sail rig, some of which are stayed aft. But the stern and transom look like no dhow I've seen.

    As an aside: this autospell has no nautical bent whatsoever, as it automatically re-spelled every other word.

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    1. It's a J boat. Class race boat for New England millionaires one hundred years ago. The aft deck and transom is enough to identify.

      I have same problem with asinine spel korreck. I am getting close to not bothering to proof read every sentence thrice over.

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  7. It’s aground. They’re humiliated and waiting. Wave is breaking over the ledge and the aft deck. Keel should be visible at that angle so it’s in pieces. Tried for a short cut. They’re buying drinks. Who’s taking the picture and where’s he standing? Those J boats are works of art.
    MF

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  8. Ok, I see it now. A J Class racer, aground, the entire deck forward of the mainmast is under water. Still, what happened to their boom and mainsail? Those older J-Boats were gaff rigged. Can they pull the boom up towards the gaff and keep the mainsail out of the water? Anyway, when the situation is hopeless, there's nothing to worry about.

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