Re: Anybody sail the flood?

From: Ed Scott (edscott@best.com-DeleteThis)
Date: Fri May 07 1999 - 13:56:23 PDT


Received: from opus.hpl.hp.com by jr.hpl.hp.com with ESMTP (1.37.109.24/15.5+ECS 3.3+HPL1.1) id AA131790568; Fri, 7 May 1999 13:56:09 -0700
Return-Path: <edscott@shell9.ba.best.com-DeleteThis>
Received: from hplms26.hpl.hp.com by opus.hpl.hp.com with ESMTP (1.37.109.24/15.5+ECS 3.3+HPL1.1) id AA014350567; Fri, 7 May 1999 13:56:07 -0700
Received: from mail-out2.apple.com (mail-out2.apple.com [17.254.0.51]) by hplms26.hpl.hp.com (8.9.1a/HPL-PA Relay) with ESMTP id NAA00462 for <wind_talk@opus.hpl.hp.com-DeleteThis>; Fri, 7 May 1999 13:56:06 -0700 (PDT)
Received: from mailgate1.apple.com (A17-128-100-225.apple.com [17.128.100.225]) by mail-out2.apple.com (8.8.5/8.8.5) with ESMTP id NAA38886 for <wind_talk@opus.hpl.hp.com-DeleteThis>; Fri, 7 May 1999 13:53:02 -0700
Received: from scv2.apple.com (scv2.apple.com) by mailgate1.apple.com (mailgate1.apple.com- SMTPRS 2.0.15) with ESMTP id <B0006335288@mailgate1.apple.com-DeleteThis> for <wind_talk@opus.hpl.hp.com-DeleteThis>; Fri, 07 May 1999 13:52:58 -0700
Received: from [17.197.20.103] (scoted2.apple.com [17.197.20.103]) by scv2.apple.com (8.9.3/8.9.3) with SMTP id NAA39632 for <wind_talk@opus.hpl.hp.com-DeleteThis>; Fri, 7 May 1999 13:52:50 -0700
Message-Id: <199905072052.NAA39632@scv2.apple.com-DeleteThis>
Subject: Re: Anybody sail the flood?
Date: Fri, 7 May 1999 13:56:23 -0700
X-Sender: edscott@shell9.ba.best.com-DeleteThis
X-Mailer: Claris Emailer 2.0v3, January 22, 1998
From: Ed Scott <edscott@best.com-DeleteThis>
To: "Wind Talk" <wind_talk@opus.hpl.hp.com-DeleteThis>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"


>Did anybody sail the flood yesterday? (3rd or Coyote) If the wind comes
>up and the safety level is reached is it doable? Fun? or just one long
>pinch-fest?

Due to the southwest direction, on port tack, you go *WAY* upwind, and on
starboard you go even farther *WAY* downwind with the help of the flood.
The trick was to pinch on both and hope you could hold your ground, which
finally started happening when the wind came up.

-Ed



This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Mon Dec 10 2001 - 02:35:24 PST