I can no longer make changes to the main site, www.inthepresentsea.com, which is now frozen in time, as I will be myself soon enough. Anything more will be added here. The contact at the main site has become unreliable, so I have created a new email address and can be reached at webbchiles@yahoo.com. The Yellowbrick tracking page for GANNET when I am at sea is: https://my.yb.tl/gannet
Friday, July 31, 2020
San Diego: better
Thursday, July 30, 2020
San Diego: from the Great Cabin
Sunday, July 26, 2020
Evanston: Yankee stay home; hurricane tracking; deadly quotes; Storm Bay; a correction
Friday, July 24, 2020
Evanston: GANNET 2s; momentous
Tuesday, July 21, 2020
Evanston: 100,000 miles; progress; risk; Conrad
You bring up the topic of risk, which shows up from time to time in your writings. I believe you have written about it more when you are considering or discussing sailing, than when you are actually sailing. When sailing, you deal with what is. You could lecture on the topic.
At 72, I have chosen to continue to go to work, part time, at an Air Force base and teach in simulators and classroom. The environment is disciplined on base, with sanitary conditions, distancing and masks specified. But it would be less “Risky” to stay home.
As you have stated, there is a calculation. In fighter pilot terms, the probability of survival is partially the probability of engagement with a threat, and, if that happens, the lethality of that threat. And the number of those engagements. One should try to limit the threat exposures, and engage less-lethal threats. Mitigate the existing threat.
In a Covid world, as you have considered, each part of any trip outside has its own risk. You recently provided a chart with a risk (threat) hierarchy.
Our sailboat is currently in the Florida Keys. (Tavernier) To get to the boat is a fairly safe, but incredibly taxing four day drive, with four hotel rooms. Or 4.5 hours, plus airport time, with about 100 of our closest new friends. Impossible to calculate which would be less lethal, given the variables.
Eddie Raven sings a cute song, “Joe Knows How to Live” that includes the line, roughly, “Life is something you will never live again.” Hate to waste a sailing opportunity. But then, there is a probability there will be an available treatment, and maybe a vaccine, soonish.
Our good health is mitigation. Jack Nicklaus and his wife tested positive in March, at about 80, I noticed.
Another way to view this is, at our age, the addition of Covid may not change the overall calculation very much. Other things may be creeping up on us. As someone said, “Something is going to kill you.” Just not today…
Sunday, July 19, 2020
Evanston: the eye of the gannet; Dr. No and me; a decision
Tuesday, July 14, 2020
Evanston: back to boats
https://www.tvnz.co.nz/one-news/new-zealand/pacific-travel-bubble-possibly-just-weeks-away-says-winston-peters?fbclid=IwAR0Cse4N4A1u1aXRLqqQXEbAO5EOu6z1U3KxwsXT2VHApevtJJK4ULmNQYs
https://www.denaraumarina.com/arriving-departing-fiji/
Somewhere in the fine print is listed a requirement for insurance. I do not recall how many times I have sailed to Fiji since I first did in CHIDIOCK TICHBORNE in 1979. Five or possibly six. I have never had insurance. Perhaps this is limited to inside the marina. Perhaps the frontier is closed. Sometimes I feel like a mountain man in the old west when the settlers came. I am on the record as believing it desirable that no marine insurance exists. If sailors had to go to sea totally responsible for their own lives and property, a good many who shouldn’t wouldn’t.
I discovered online that Skull Creek Marina has been sold since I sailed for Panama in late January of last year. I subsequently learned that Marc, the office manager, and Fred, the dock master are still there. Carol and I did not make it to the marina during our curtailed visit to Hilton Head. We started to walk down one day but found the pier out to the marina blocked by a group of twenty or so people and on our last day it rained. I emailed Marc and told him I plan to truck GANNET back east sometime this year and hope they will find a space for her. I received a quick response back that indeed they would. Very nice people at that marina. One less problem to solve.
Sunday, July 12, 2020
Evanston: five kisses
Friday, July 10, 2020
Evanston: books read; correction; inconclusive; living to 110
January 2020
THE FALCON AND THE SNOWMAN. Robert Lindsey
RED CAVALRY. Isaac Babel
OVERTHROW Stephen Kinzer
BEOWULF. translated by Frederick Rebsamen
THE SEA WOLVES. Lars Brownworth
ORIENT EXPRESS Graham Greene
THE CHARTERHOUSE OF PARMA Stendhal
MUNICH Robert Harris
ROAD OF BONES Fergal Keane
THE SECRET OF SANTA VITTORIA. Robert Crichton
THE FALCON THIEF. Joshua Hammer
UNBROKEN. Laura Hillenbrand
TWENTY-ONE STORIES. Graham Greene
TIME AND TIDE Thomas Fleming
SAILING TO FREEDOM. Voldemar Veedam
SWORD OF HONOR TRILOGY Evelyn Waugh
A LONG PETAL OF THE SEA. Isabel Allende
THEY WERE EXPENDABLE. W.L. White
THE MAYOR OF CASTERBRIDGE. Thomas Hardy
GERMINAL. Emile Zola
THE RESCUE. Joseph Conrad
INDIANS OF THE PLAINS. Eugene Rachlis
` THE SPLENDID AND THE VILE. Erik Larson
PALE HORSE, PALE RIDER. Katherine Anne Porter
COVENTRY Helen Humphreys
SPAIN IN THEIR HEARTS. Adam Hochschild
THE FROZEN THAMES. Helen Humphreys
AN IMAGINARY LIFE David Malouf
ISACC’S STORM Erik Larson
THE MAP AND THE TERRITORY Michel Houellebecq
NORWEGIAN BY NIGHT Derek Miller
GLORIOUS MISADVENTURES. Owen Matthews
Jay has gently corrected my description of the photo taken by his son Jimmy that I posted on Tuesday. It is of the moon rising, not the sun setting, with color provided by Sahara dust, which had left Hilton Head before we arrived there.
You may have noticed that Shawn suggested in a post comment a few weeks ago that shaving cream might help prevent eyeglasses fogging when wearing a face mask. I remembered to try this before we left on our flight to Savannah. The results were inconclusive. It may have helped for the first half hour or so, but not beyond that. I can read without my glasses and removed them once we were seated on the plane.
Google Arts and Culture ran a feature on the Japanese woodcut master Hokusai, perhaps best known for The Great Wave off Kanazawa shown above. I was amused to learn that he planned to live to be 110 when he was convinced he would do his best work.
From Google:
He fully embraced old age and had big plans for each milestone. “When I am 80 you will see real progress,” he said. “At 90 I will have cut my way deeply into the mystery of life itself. At 100 I shall be a marvelous artist. At 110, everything I create: a dot, a line, will jump to life as never before. To all of you who are going to live as long as I do, I promise to keep my word. I am writing this in my old age.”
Unfortunately he didn’t see 110 and passed away aged 88. On his deathbed, he apparently said, “If only Heaven will give me just another ten years...Just another five more years, then I could become a real painter.”