Jim Walsh wrote:Skeep wrote:Jim, that cover and Vette are both examples of fine workmanship indeed! You may have started a particular eye-candy approach to photographs by doing this however! Dories and Ragtops!
That's a cool idea. Cape Dory's and automobile "eye candy". They wouldn't have to be all collector cars, perhaps cars we just love. Our friend Roberto aka Sea Hunt Video has a Chevy pickup of which he's very proud.
Jim:
It is very kind of you to mention my Chevy truck. She is 21 years "young" this month with a little more than 300,000 miles on her frame. I knew exactly what I wanted when I purchased her at the dealer in November 1994 with only 5-6 miles on her. I have zero desire to part with her. There is nothing I have seen on the show room floor that even begins to compare to my Chevy truck. Every week or so someone honks at a stop light and asks if I am interested in selling. It's nice to be wanted but she is not going anywhere.
It is very similar to S/V Bali Ha'i, my Cape Dory 25D. After looking at many different sailboats from a lot of mfg. I decided a Cape Dory 25D was exactly what I wanted. As some on this board may recall, it took a while (including a 3 year affair with my lovely Typhoon Weekender), but I finally found my "Sophia Loren". It has been a love affair ever since.
I am in the middle of having her deck prepped and Awlgripped (Oyster White) with Griptex nonskid (Moon Dust). When done she will then have almost new sails (UK) and sheets, almost new Lewmar self-tailing bronze winches, a new deck, recently re-done teak (Cetol), almost new topsides (Awlgrip), and one year old bottom job (2 coats Sea Hawk Tropikote). In my unbiased and objective opinion, she will once again be the prettiest girl in the sailing club's mooring field.
Now, if I could just learn to sail solo.

Fair winds,
Roberto
a/k/a Sea Hunt "The Tadpole Sailor"
CDSOA #1097
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"
I wish to have no Connection with any Ship that does not Sail fast for I intend to go in harm's way." Captain John Paul Jones, 16 November 1778, as quoted in Naval History and Heritage Command,
http://www.history.navy.mil