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Everything posted by trippwj
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That is one impressive looking model - thanks for posting the picture! I see thousands of tiny knots in your future...
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OK, Sjors...I'll give you a break. Take your time fitting those masts - getting them right will make all the difference! Want me to give your boss a call and see if he can install a building table in your bus for you????
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Congratulations, St. George! L. Snow & Co., Rockland, Me., launched the three-masted schooner Wawenock in 1907, built for themselves to ply in the coal, stone and lumber trades. Her dimensions are as follows: Length 135.9 ft., breadth 34.3 ft., depth 9.8 ft. She has a gross tonnage of 325, her net tonnage being 258. The story of the wreck is well told in Bertram G. Snow’s The Main Beam, published in 2005 by the Rockland Historical Society with massive contributions of research and photographs by Doug and Linda Lee. The 325-ton Wawenock was loaded with granite curbing stone and was sailing from Sullivan, Maine, towards New York in December of 1928. After temporarily snagging on a ledge in Jericho Bay on the 30th, Capt. Anders Anderson stayed in the area, waiting for better weather. The morning of January 10, 1929, anchored east of Isle au Haut, the crew woke to a southeast snow storm, blowing hard. Capt. Anderson decided to raise the anchor and sailed up the Bay in extremely poor visibility. The schooner struck the ledges on the west side of Fog Island and the men could hear water pouring into the vessel. Not waiting for the captain’s orders, the crew lowered the yawl boat and left the schooner. Soon after, the vessel (still under full sail) freed herself from the ledge and continued on her way, with the yawl boat following. Eventually the crew could see that the schooner had run on the rocks on McGlathery Island, and they continued on to Stonington to report.
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Jan - Correct on the sub, and close on the ship.
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LOL!!! Certainly narrows it down, Kevin! I promise, my next one will be a sub. Do you know which one this is?
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Good evening, Anja (hope I got it right this time!) It is not the Sunset Glow either. Right part of the world, though! This one was built for the Coal, Stone and Lumber trades and met a most disagreeable end.
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No, sorry, not the Victory Chimes.
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Good morning, Anja - sorry, not the James Postlewaithe.
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Took a danged lot of searching to find this one! The Warspite, Anguilla's most famous ship. 75 feet long, built in 1902.
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I found it on the Model expo website via a search - shows as none in inventory so not sure if they can supply them any longer. http://www.modelexpo-online.com/product.asp?ITEMNO=MS107 It is also on the Modelshipyard website at http://www.modelshipyard.com.au/product.asp?id=2048&pid=129
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Popeye, you are a true Renaissance man! Artistic, creative, poetic, and you can cook! Dang - what a package!!! Looks like a great cake, boss, and glad you all enjoyed! please wish Phyl a belated Happy (number not disclosed) Birthday from me & mine!
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- maine lobster boat
- Midwest Products
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Bingo. Your turn, David!
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This one seems to be presenting a challenge...the vessel in question is also in this photograph.
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Would have to agree - selling the original a second time doesn't infringe on copyright, else libraries, thrift stores and used book dealers would all be in court all the time! Distributing copies of the copyrighted work is where you cross a line. The royalty issue applies to first (initial) sale only, not subsequent sales down the food chain. The next area of interest will be how they handle the resale of e-books such as those on the Kindle...right now, very difficult to do, but who knows down the road.
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Thanks, Danny - I have to say that for most quick conversions, I use the quick reference tables as well - it takes me longer to dig out my calculator, think through what I want to do, and then plug it in than it does to look at the chart. I work in both sets of measurement, depending upon what I am working on. When my plans and instructions are in Imperial I tend to stick with that. It is also much more intuitive for me to think in terms of inches and feet than in terms of mm and m. I grew up with the imperial system, and can visualize the dimensions much better than i can metric. I do, however, use the metric system extensively in my work life (but that is another story).
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Need someone to carry your suitcase for you :D
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At first I was thinking it might be the Mystic Whaler, but the aft deck house and rigging don't look right. By any chance is it the Carthaginian II - now a reef off Lahiana Harbor in Hawaii?
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Sjors - thanks for stopping by! Keith - Nautical book collection fills that book case plus another. We are still entering and cataloging our collections, but at about 120 Nautical themed books (excluding downloaded files), over 400 cookbooks, 150 terrorism and other emergency management related...and too many boxes yet to sort (philosophy, history, economics, international relations...). Now, then, the big announcement is that the keel did, indeed, get assembled last night. No photos but will get some up as soon as I get a chance. Looks like this build is officially underway!
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