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Boat Forum / Sailing / October 2005



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mR cRANTZ...

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Capt.Mooron - 28 Oct 2005 03:29 GMT
An interesting site...... courtesy of a Druid relative of mine.

http://www.pantheism.net/

I wonder how many here have stood at the crest of an Iceberg...... surveyed
the compass points, decided which bearing to take, all the while looking
across an icepack and understanding that it's over a thousand miles to
civilization...... nobody knows you are there, no communication until you
made the base station and radio. You finally understand you are on your own
here.

CM
Scotty - 28 Oct 2005 13:25 GMT
I wonder how many here have hiked the Appalachian Trail?

Scotty

> An interesting site...... courtesy of a Druid relative of mine.
>
[quoted text clipped - 8 lines]
>
> CM
Capt.Mooron - 28 Oct 2005 14:02 GMT
>I wonder how many here have hiked the Appalachian Trail?

I've hiked the Canol Trail.....

CM
Captain Joe Redcloud© - 28 Oct 2005 14:18 GMT
>I wonder if you  or sweety boy Crantz would enjoy visiting my hershey highway?
>
[quoted text clipped - 17 lines]
>>
>> CM

Captain Joe Redcloud©
Scotty - 28 Oct 2005 14:36 GMT
> >I wonder if you  or sweety boy Crantz would enjoy visiting my hershey highway?

rte # 322 ?
Seahag - 28 Oct 2005 13:37 GMT
> An interesting site...... courtesy of a Druid relative of
> mine.
[quoted text clipped - 8 lines]
> communication until you made the base station and radio.
> You finally understand you are on your own here.

Sounds like sailing in the ocean!

Seahag
Capt.Mooron - 28 Oct 2005 14:04 GMT
"Seahag" <Seahag@toadymail.net> wrote in message

> Sounds like sailing in the ocean!

I see you've been there and felt that!

Awesome at how small it makes one fell in the grand scheme of things.....
and how great one's potential can be.

CM
Scotty - 28 Oct 2005 14:33 GMT
I know it's on a very, very much smaller scale, but , sometimes
that's how I feel when I have a couple days for a cruise and no
where in particular to go. To pull anchor in the morning, head
out , see which way the wind is blowing and set sail accordingly.
Just me and my boat.

Scotty

> > An interesting site...... courtesy of a Druid relative of
> > mine.
[quoted text clipped - 12 lines]
>
> Seahag
Capt.Mooron - 28 Oct 2005 14:41 GMT
>I know it's on a very, very much smaller scale, but , sometimes
> that's how I feel when I have a couple days for a cruise and no
> where in particular to go. To pull anchor in the morning, head
> out , see which way the wind is blowing and set sail accordingly.
> Just me and my boat.

Well put Scotty......  it's something neither PJ nor Bob will ever
understand. The pair of them are clock-watchers...

CM
Scotty - 28 Oct 2005 14:58 GMT
> Well put Scotty......  it's something neither PJ nor Bob will ever
> understand. The pair of them are cock-watchers...

yes, it's obvious by all their gay posts.
:)
Donal - 29 Oct 2005 01:06 GMT
> I know it's on a very, very much smaller scale, but , sometimes
> that's how I feel when I have a couple days for a cruise and no
> where in particular to go. To pull anchor in the morning, head
> out , see which way the wind is blowing and set sail accordingly.
> Just me and my boat.

Nice post, Scotty!

It reminds me of my first cross channel crossing...

I'll never forget seeing the land dissappear into the murk.

Regards

Donal
--
Bob Crantz - 28 Oct 2005 13:52 GMT
Mooron:

It's a very interesting site. Personally I agree with many of their premises
and conclusions.

The one caveat though is how they arrive at "conservation" or "protection"
of the environment. Do they view man as merely part of the environment
(universe), or do they view that the environment (universe) is to be used by
man ? That is a big distinction, as one view leads to totalarianism, the
other to liberty.

But they are all going to burn in hell!

Lava filled hot tubs for all!

Amen!

> An interesting site...... courtesy of a Druid relative of mine.
>
[quoted text clipped - 8 lines]
>
> CM
Capt.Mooron - 28 Oct 2005 14:12 GMT
"Bob Crantz" <bcrantz3476@qwest.net> wrote in message

> The one caveat though is how they arrive at "conservation" or "protection"
> of the environment. Do they view man as merely part of the environment
> (universe), or do they view that the environment (universe) is to be used
> by
> man ? That is a big distinction, as one view leads to totalarianism, the
> other to liberty.

We have a right to be here as part of nature's grand scheme.....  but rights
should be tempered by responsibility.  I think that's what lacking
throughout mankind's development..... we seem to be blessed with 20/20
Hindsight.

> But they are all going to burn in hell!

Keep in mind that a frost burn is much more painful than a heat burn... as
you well know.

> Lava filled hot tubs for all!

Liquid Ice Tubs for the oil executives.

> Amen!

Hallelujah!!

CM
Bob Crantz - 28 Oct 2005 15:27 GMT
> "Bob Crantz" <bcrantz3476@qwest.net> wrote in message
>
[quoted text clipped - 9 lines]
> throughout mankind's development..... we seem to be blessed with 20/20
> Hindsight.

The concept of rights are a man made. The proper definition, application and
protection of rights leads to civilizations. Good civilizations (those
congruent with the nature of man) lead to more population and greater
diversity within the gene pool (it would seem the natural purpose of any
life is to procreate and thrive). Natural law is what keeps it all in check.
Man has done a pretty good job for his short time on this planet.

Cockroaches and crocodiles have been around for millions of years. They're
still the same. Man has evolved and has the ability to affect the entire
earth, all in a very short time span. Today's problems will be overcome with
suitable lessons learned from the Bible!

Amen!

> > But they are all going to burn in hell!
>
> Keep in mind that a frost burn is much more painful than a heat burn... as
> you well know.

It depends on the depth of the burn.

> > Lava filled hot tubs for all!
>
[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
>
> CM
 
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