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Fate

Started by rwdsr, October 22, 2012, 08:20:46 PM

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rwdsr

Hi All,
I haven't posted on here for some time now, because a couple of years ago I sold my little 16 and move up(?) to a Catalina 22 so I could transport the whole family.  Several time since I have regretted that, and missed my little boat and the adventures we had in the short time that she owned me.  Well, fate played out her hand this past week, and she came back to me.  I'm not going to let her go again.  I might still have a bigger boat to get more folks aboard, (maybe a Compac 23) but this little boat will be mine alone to sail by myself and enjoy in a way that not too many people have the privilege of knowing. I finally named her the "Sprite" and will be putting her name on her real soon.  I have stayed abreast of what has been going on in this site over the past couple of years because as far as I'm concerned it's the best site on the internet.  Anyway I'll be posting again from time to time and sending out some pics.  Consider me back.

BobD (the other Bob)
1978 AMF Sunfish, Sold, 1978 CP16 #592, "Sprite" - Catalina 22 "Joyce Marie"http://picasaweb.google.com/rwdsr53/Sailboats#

Salty19

Welcome back Bob!  When I saw the title "fate" and saw your name, the idea of your old restoration sailing back into your life popped in my head as a possible theme to this post.  Well, indeed it is!

Yep, bet you never let her go again.

If my old 16 ever comes up for sale, I might just have to do the same.
"Island Time" 1998 Com-pac 19XL # 603

JParody

#2
I love happy endings! :) Congratulations.
Jill

+ good karma is yours to be sure!

skip1930

Fate? "Is but a plank between a sailor and eternity."

I always liked that quip.

skip.

Greene

Glad to have you back.   After all the work you did to that 16 you must think of her as family.

Mike and Brenda
'84 CP-16 (sold) - '88 CP-19II (sold) - '88 Com-Pac 23/3 (sold)
http://s613.photobucket.com/albums/tt211/greene2108/


"I'm just one bad decision away from a really good time."

http://wrinklesinoursails.blogspot.com

Bob23

Bob:
   Nice that your are back. The other day, I was remembering some of the names from the past that no longer hang out here...one wonders where they are? Quite a treat that your "lost" 16 found her way back to you. Funny how boats do that, eh?
   "Sprite". Is this your personal water sports car like the Austin Healy Sprite? I'm sure the Compac 16's are just a tad more dependable but just as fun! So, maybe you'll move up to a 23
for the family, and the 16 for you...nice to have 2 Compacs!
Bob23 (the other other Bob)
(I forget just now...where are your home waters?)

Tim Gardner

Whoa there,  >:( Big Boy Bob!,

My '67 AH Sprite MK-IV is very reliable & simple, too, for an automobile in this day and age.  Why, it even has heat, roll up windows, and gets 40MPG!  Gets to 60 in three afternoons, and takes 90^ corners at 30MPH :o.  Goes fast slowly!  I'm sure it's as exciting to drive as a 16 is to sail.

I've owned it for 37 years.  I've only had to restore it twice, but the engine and transmission are the original, albeit rebuilt a couple of times.  I drove it daily for many years, and have rolled the 100K odometer three times.

Cast not insults on this fine specimen of British Engineering.  How many Fiats that age do you see?  Almost none! Because they rust away in two or three afternoons.

Spritely espoused,

TG
Never Be Afraid to Try Something New, Remember Amateurs Built the Ark.  Professionals Built the Titanic (update) and the Titan Submersible.

brackish

Bob, glad you and your boat were reunited.  Had to happen, you had too much sweat equity in that vessel.  You still in Tenn?  We need to see about a Mid-South ron-day-voo.

Tim, I had one of those fiats about the size of a pregnant roller skate.  Bought it worn out, decided to overhaul the engine, had to go to the local lawn and garden service store to borrow a ridge reamer and cylinder hone, the cylinders were so small.  After the overhaul, compression improved and it no longer burned a quart of oil an hour, but never could get the end rockerarm stud to stay in that aluminum head.  Finally ran out of space for the successively larger threaded inserts.  Sold it to a guy who was going to make a dirt track class racer out of it.  Said they are great, roll over and get on their feet better than a VW bug, and if they end up turtle, one guy can turn it back over. :)

Bob23

   It's true that the old cars were simple. I really loved my old VW's...owned 14 aircooled ones over the years....spent lots of time cursing back then. My Toyotas allow me to live a more righteous life!
   Point well taken about the Fiats. But the old 124 Sports Spiders were a great car. So what if it rusted out...everything back then did.
Brack:
    Must've been an old Fiat 850..with a whopping 817CC displacement....pistons the size of bathroom dixie cups! But fun and Hades to drive!
Bob23 (2001 Tundra SR5)

rwdsr

#9
Thanks for the well wishes everyone, there were a few times that I looked at the pics of my little 16 and sincerely regretted turning loose of her.  I think the new owner realized that, and when it came time to give her up, made sure I got her back.  I'll be forever grateful to him for that.  At one time just a few weeks ago, I had 4 sailboats and a bass boat out in the back yard, then the Admiral said that if I brought another one home before I got rid of some of them, I was going to wind up living on one of them.  Soooooo, I got rid of two of them so far and looking to unload 2 more then go looking for a 23.  I do have a replica of the dragon class racing sloops of Olympic racing fame, that I want to see go to a good home for restoration.  My brother in law and his brother built it by hand and it's a real beauty, but is going to take more money, time and talent than I currently possess.  If in our little circle of sailors you know of someone who might be interested in that, let me know.  Bob23 , I don't know how I hit on the name "Sprite", but it ran through my head the day I was driving her back down here, and seemed so right.  My home waters here is Kentucky Lake, and I sail out of Paris Landing Marina in Tennessee.  It is a wonderful state run marina with a campground attached, and the nice part is that if you get a campsite for the night, they give you the slip at half price.  It's a real good deal, and the people who run it are real people and service oriented.  I would like to host a rendezvous here, and have been tossing several ideas around in my head to maybe make that happen, but have just recently changed employments and am going to be tied up for several months now.  As soon as I can maybe put something together I'll send out a post.  One that I haven't seen on here lately is Different Drummer.  He hailed from Douglas Lake over east of Knoxville.  I wonder if he's still sailing his 16.  As far as having a little speedster, that little 16 foot MFG Sidewinder was the screamer, but it was hard on an old man's butt and back.  And you couldn't take it out in the cooler weather without getting wet, or get below when a storm popped up.  Mike, I have you and Brenda's blog posted in my favorites and go there regularly to follow your adventures and see what you've done with Wrinkles.
1978 AMF Sunfish, Sold, 1978 CP16 #592, "Sprite" - Catalina 22 "Joyce Marie"http://picasaweb.google.com/rwdsr53/Sailboats#

sailen69

Bob,

One more welcome back to owning a Com-Pac.  I know it was fate that brought me to my CP-16.  I also have more boats than a sane person should own.  I know that my CP-16 will be the last to go for me when it is time.  I sail on KY Lake several times a year.  I usually put in around Little Bear Ck. And sail from the Dam down to Aurora.  I have seen Paris landing and State Park on the map.  I will try to make a trip down there when things worm back up.

Rich

Bob23

   Let me dispell this myth about "too many boats". I recently have discovered that it is completely normal for men to own what women call "too many boats." As I explained it to my Commanding Officer, "One wife- many boats". She didn't argue with that one.
   Bob: My go fast boat is a AMF Force 5...lots of strings, way over canvassed for the winds we get around here but a lot of fun.
  Again, welcome back.
Bob23
 

JParody

Hi Bob!  I know you have a lot on your mind today, but...

             I am a woman.... can one ever have too many boats?  I think not!

Be safe.   Jill

rwdsr

Where do you sail out of Jill?
1978 AMF Sunfish, Sold, 1978 CP16 #592, "Sprite" - Catalina 22 "Joyce Marie"http://picasaweb.google.com/rwdsr53/Sailboats#

Bob23

Jill:
   Glad we see eye to eye on the boat count. Maybe one can have too many boats if one stops playing with them. Kinda like when we were kids...our moms gave away the toys that we stopped playing with...although I still have Legos and some really cool wooden blocks that I fiddle with while talking on the phone.  Quite possibly 200 year old Jersey White Cedar.
Bob:
   That boat wanted you back and was going to go to any extremes to get her way. That's just how it works. I'm convinced that my 23 planned the whole thing and even set up the "blind date". It was love at first sight!
Bob23