Welcome to Sailing Zone. A place where I will be posting my favorite sailing photos, links, thoughts, books, curiosities...anything and everything about this passion of mine.
Showing posts with label Curiosities. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Curiosities. Show all posts
23.12.12
5.7.12
Largest Sailing Regatta
The largest sailing regatta of a single class was achieved by 1,055
participants during an event organised by Fraglia Vela Riva (Italy), in
Riva Del Garda, Italy, on 6 April 2012.
The sailing boat for the record was the Optimist, a small, single-handed sailing dinghy intended for use by children up to the age of 15.
Youngsters aged from the age of 9 to14 years old, coming from 27 different countries took place in the regatta. Naturally Italy has the largest representation with 332 entrants followed by Germany with 235 and Denmark 69. Others have come from as far away as Australia, Bermuda and The U.S. with 22 participants.
Source: Guiness Book of Records
The sailing boat for the record was the Optimist, a small, single-handed sailing dinghy intended for use by children up to the age of 15.
Youngsters aged from the age of 9 to14 years old, coming from 27 different countries took place in the regatta. Naturally Italy has the largest representation with 332 entrants followed by Germany with 235 and Denmark 69. Others have come from as far away as Australia, Bermuda and The U.S. with 22 participants.
Source: Guiness Book of Records
7.4.12
100 Lessons the Oceans will teach you
Inspired by another blogger, here goes a list of some lessons the Oceans can/will teach you.
Thank you to Emma Mora for her original list. You can follow her "La Mar d Cosas" blog here.
To develop a sailor's sense.
To anticipate events.
To be patient, much more than you think.
To grow up.
To socialize, if not sailing alone.
To relax, enjoy, relativize ...
To keep calm in difficult situations.
To transmit serenity to those who sail with you.
To develop a spirit of collaboration.
To have an humorous approach on some occasions.
To organize.
To solve unexpected problems.
To be a leader, if you are the boss.
To be a team player.
To deeply enjoy small things.
To grow and to excel.
To be prudent.
To overcome fears.
To learn to admire the simple.
To assess what is important and ignore unimportant things.
To speak clearly, calling things by their names.
To be amazed.
To meet "Mr. Murphy", always present in the boat.
To be a little freer.
To observe, think and act.
To be "Mr. Fixit"
To pee sited (ladies are already prepared in advance).
To adapt to the circumstances.
To recycle.
To know you're not in charge.
To fear, to respect, to love, to fight.
To dream of.
To leave the mind blank.
To breath.
To deeply know the friends with whom you share a navigation.
To use multiple senses, not just sight.
To notice that time has another dimension and another measure.
To care for others and that others care for you.
To learn that discipline and order are positive concepts.
To understand that fear can be controlled.
That in the end you happen to like storms.
That you are more strong to face cold, rain, sun.
That to trim sails gives you stronger hands.
That you gain in balance and reflexes.
That hangovers are worst...
That behind any horizon there's always land.
To realize that the sea is big and we are small.
To be more sensitive as human beings.
To enjoy the good and the bad weather.
To look into the distance.
To not worry about the inconsequential.
To talk, to shut up and to listen.
To learn something new in the sea. Everyday!
In which we learn to be happy.
To enjoy.
To take responsibility.
To live with yourself.
To relativize the problems you have inshore.
Not to spit against the wind.
To have a deeper understanding of yourself.
To enjoy peace.
To let flow your imagination.
To realize that we are insignificant compared to nature.
That the sea makes us equal to all.
To reborn.
To enjoy every moment to the fullest.
To realize the constraints that society puts us.
To need little.
To laugh at oneself.
That where there's a Skipper there are no sailors.
To be silent.
That the wind always comes from the nose.
To act calmly when facing adversity.
To learn how to make knots.
To realize that there are always things to learn.
To realize that the sea always surprises you.
To realize that the sea teaches you something new. Everyday!
To respect nature and to be a part of it.
To make friends.
To be patient.
To live the present.
To leave rush aside.
That the sea heals and makes you change.
To live with less.
To overcome fear.
To have grease-filled hands.
To see the limitations.
To trust your boat.
To know how to wait.
To miss.
To be more objective (at least a little).
To live in a small space.
To read calmly.
To taste a landfall in a safe place.
To drop unnecessary burdens.
To gain in balance and reflexes.
To smell the land.
To help others.
To navigate.
And above all...To be humble!
Thank you to Emma Mora for her original list. You can follow her "La Mar d Cosas" blog here.
To develop a sailor's sense.
To anticipate events.
To be patient, much more than you think.
To grow up.
To socialize, if not sailing alone.
To relax, enjoy, relativize ...
To keep calm in difficult situations.
To transmit serenity to those who sail with you.
To develop a spirit of collaboration.
To have an humorous approach on some occasions.
To organize.
To solve unexpected problems.
To be a leader, if you are the boss.
To be a team player.
To deeply enjoy small things.
To grow and to excel.
To be prudent.
To overcome fears.
To learn to admire the simple.
To assess what is important and ignore unimportant things.
To speak clearly, calling things by their names.
To be amazed.
To meet "Mr. Murphy", always present in the boat.
To be a little freer.
To observe, think and act.
To be "Mr. Fixit"
To pee sited (ladies are already prepared in advance).
To adapt to the circumstances.
To recycle.
To know you're not in charge.
To fear, to respect, to love, to fight.
To dream of.
To leave the mind blank.
To breath.
To deeply know the friends with whom you share a navigation.
To use multiple senses, not just sight.
To notice that time has another dimension and another measure.
To care for others and that others care for you.
To learn that discipline and order are positive concepts.
To understand that fear can be controlled.
That in the end you happen to like storms.
That you are more strong to face cold, rain, sun.
That to trim sails gives you stronger hands.
That you gain in balance and reflexes.
That hangovers are worst...
That behind any horizon there's always land.
To realize that the sea is big and we are small.
To be more sensitive as human beings.
To enjoy the good and the bad weather.
To look into the distance.
To not worry about the inconsequential.
To talk, to shut up and to listen.
To learn something new in the sea. Everyday!
In which we learn to be happy.
To enjoy.
To take responsibility.
To live with yourself.
To relativize the problems you have inshore.
Not to spit against the wind.
To have a deeper understanding of yourself.
To enjoy peace.
To let flow your imagination.
To realize that we are insignificant compared to nature.
That the sea makes us equal to all.
To reborn.
To enjoy every moment to the fullest.
To realize the constraints that society puts us.
To need little.
To laugh at oneself.
That where there's a Skipper there are no sailors.
To be silent.
That the wind always comes from the nose.
To act calmly when facing adversity.
To learn how to make knots.
To realize that there are always things to learn.
To realize that the sea always surprises you.
To realize that the sea teaches you something new. Everyday!
To respect nature and to be a part of it.
To make friends.
To be patient.
To live the present.
To leave rush aside.
That the sea heals and makes you change.
To live with less.
To overcome fear.
To have grease-filled hands.
To see the limitations.
To trust your boat.
To know how to wait.
To miss.
To be more objective (at least a little).
To live in a small space.
To read calmly.
To taste a landfall in a safe place.
To drop unnecessary burdens.
To gain in balance and reflexes.
To smell the land.
To help others.
To navigate.
And above all...To be humble!
25.3.12
Sailing Quotes and Thoughts
Some of the best quotes and thoughts about sailing that I've found over the years. They come from different sources, blogs, forums, magazines, websites...so it's kinda dificult for me to name all the authors. Anyway here they are:
1) "Twenty years from now, you will be more disappointed by the things you didn't do than those you did. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from safe harbor. Catch the wind in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover."
Mark Twain
2) "A bad day sailing is 100 times better than a good day at work"
3) "Sailing requires the management of all the systems on the boat, plus all the controls on the boat, while assessing the weather and navigation. It's planning everything to a fine level of detail and making the required adjustments all at the same time things are changing"
4) "There's nothing . . . absolutely nothing . . . half so much worth doing as simply throwing money at a boat."
5) "If you want to know what sailing is all about, just get in the shower with your clothes on, turn on the cold water, and eat a soggy peanut butter sandwich. While you're doing all this, drop a $100 down the drain every 2 minutes"
6) "What a ship is, you know, it's not just a keel and a hull and a deck and sails,
that's what a ship needs. But what a ship is,... really is, is freedom."
Captain Jack Sparrow
7) "Now I'm sick of a life that is too complicated. I want to wear shorts year round. I want to swim in the morning. I want to fish. I want to shop for fresh food in small markets. I don't want to work my butt off to make payments and then pay for insurance and cleaning and maintainence and upgrades for things that I really don't need to survive. I am cold and tired and I need a break. I don't want my job anymore. I want to laugh with my family in the sun. I want freedom."
8) "If a man is to be obsessed by something, I suppose a boat is as good as anything, perhaps a bit better than most"
E.B. White
9) "20 MPH ain't fast unless, you do it in a 1000sq 3/2 house on 10foot waves"
10) “Would you get bored of cruising?” One of the replies stuck out in my mind. The poster said “I got bored…but it took six years. Best six years of my life! Nothing has to be forever to be worth doing!” In my mind that is perfect!
11) "You haven't been cold until you've been cold on a boat. I guess it's the humidity/moisture, but it is just REALLY cold."
Bill Dietrich
12) “The pessimist complains about the wind; the optimist expects it to change; the realist adjusts the sails.”
William Arthur Ward
13) "Se navega por los astros, por la mar, por la tierra, por las gentes, por los sentimientos...se navega."
Altair
14) "How inappropriate to call this planet Earth when clearly it is Ocean."
Arthur Clarke
15) "Any damn fool can navigate the world sober. It takes a really good sailor to do it drunk."
Sir Francis Chichester
16) "When a man comes to like a sea life, he is not fit to live on land."
Dr. Samuel Johnson
17) "Off Cape Horn there are but two kinds of weather, neither one of them a pleasant kind."
John Masefield
18) "For one thing, I was no longer alone; a man is never alone with the wind-and the boat made three."
Hilaire Belloc
19) "Sailors, with their built in sense of order, service and discipline, should really be running the world."
Nicholas Monsarrat
20) "I was born in the breezes, and I had studied the sea as perhaps few men have studied it, neglecting all else."
Joshua Slocum
21) "Only two sailors, in my experience, never ran aground. One never left port and the other was an atrocious liar."
Don Bamford
22) "Out of sight of land the sailor feels safe. It is the beach that worries him."
Charles G. Davis
23) "The goal is not to sail the boat, but rather to help the boat sail herself."
John Rousmaniere
24) "Prevention is, as in other aspects of seamanship, better than cure."
Sir Robin Knox-Johnston
25) "The question that used to bother me at times, do not weigh anything before the immensity of a wake so close to the sky and filled with the wind of the sea"
Bernard Moitessier
26) "To deal with men is as fine an art as it is to deal with ships. Both men and ships live in an unstable element, are subject to subtle and powerful influences, and want to have their merits understood rather than their faults found out [...] After all, the art of handling ships is finer, perhaps, than the art of handling men."
Joseph Conrad
27) “I really don't know why it is that all of us are so committed to the sea, except I think it is because in addition to the fact that the sea changes and the light changes, and ships change, it is because we all came from the sea. And it is an interesting biological fact that all of us have in our veins the exact same percentage of salt in our blood that exists in the ocean, and, therefore, we have salt in our blood, in our sweat, in our tears. We are tied to the ocean. And when we go back to the sea, whether it is to sail or to watch it we are going back from whence we came."
J. F. K.
28) "Wherever we want to go, we go. That's what a ship is, you know. It's not just a keel and a hull and a deck and sails; that's what a ship needs. But what a ship is...what she really is...is freedom."
Jack Sparrow
29) "Sailing a boat calls for quick action, a blending of feeling with the wind and watter as well as with the very heart and soul of the boat itself. Sailing teaches alertness and courage, and gives in retourn a joyousness and peace that but few sports afford."
George Matthew Adams
30) "Borders? I have never seen one. But I have heard they exist in the minds of some people."
Thor Heyerdahl
1) "Twenty years from now, you will be more disappointed by the things you didn't do than those you did. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from safe harbor. Catch the wind in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover."
Mark Twain
2) "A bad day sailing is 100 times better than a good day at work"
3) "Sailing requires the management of all the systems on the boat, plus all the controls on the boat, while assessing the weather and navigation. It's planning everything to a fine level of detail and making the required adjustments all at the same time things are changing"
4) "There's nothing . . . absolutely nothing . . . half so much worth doing as simply throwing money at a boat."
5) "If you want to know what sailing is all about, just get in the shower with your clothes on, turn on the cold water, and eat a soggy peanut butter sandwich. While you're doing all this, drop a $100 down the drain every 2 minutes"
6) "What a ship is, you know, it's not just a keel and a hull and a deck and sails,
that's what a ship needs. But what a ship is,... really is, is freedom."
Captain Jack Sparrow
7) "Now I'm sick of a life that is too complicated. I want to wear shorts year round. I want to swim in the morning. I want to fish. I want to shop for fresh food in small markets. I don't want to work my butt off to make payments and then pay for insurance and cleaning and maintainence and upgrades for things that I really don't need to survive. I am cold and tired and I need a break. I don't want my job anymore. I want to laugh with my family in the sun. I want freedom."
8) "If a man is to be obsessed by something, I suppose a boat is as good as anything, perhaps a bit better than most"
E.B. White
9) "20 MPH ain't fast unless, you do it in a 1000sq 3/2 house on 10foot waves"
10) “Would you get bored of cruising?” One of the replies stuck out in my mind. The poster said “I got bored…but it took six years. Best six years of my life! Nothing has to be forever to be worth doing!” In my mind that is perfect!
11) "You haven't been cold until you've been cold on a boat. I guess it's the humidity/moisture, but it is just REALLY cold."
Bill Dietrich
12) “The pessimist complains about the wind; the optimist expects it to change; the realist adjusts the sails.”
William Arthur Ward
13) "Se navega por los astros, por la mar, por la tierra, por las gentes, por los sentimientos...se navega."
Altair
14) "How inappropriate to call this planet Earth when clearly it is Ocean."
Arthur Clarke
15) "Any damn fool can navigate the world sober. It takes a really good sailor to do it drunk."
Sir Francis Chichester
16) "When a man comes to like a sea life, he is not fit to live on land."
Dr. Samuel Johnson
17) "Off Cape Horn there are but two kinds of weather, neither one of them a pleasant kind."
John Masefield
18) "For one thing, I was no longer alone; a man is never alone with the wind-and the boat made three."
Hilaire Belloc
19) "Sailors, with their built in sense of order, service and discipline, should really be running the world."
Nicholas Monsarrat
20) "I was born in the breezes, and I had studied the sea as perhaps few men have studied it, neglecting all else."
Joshua Slocum
21) "Only two sailors, in my experience, never ran aground. One never left port and the other was an atrocious liar."
Don Bamford
22) "Out of sight of land the sailor feels safe. It is the beach that worries him."
Charles G. Davis
23) "The goal is not to sail the boat, but rather to help the boat sail herself."
John Rousmaniere
24) "Prevention is, as in other aspects of seamanship, better than cure."
Sir Robin Knox-Johnston
25) "The question that used to bother me at times, do not weigh anything before the immensity of a wake so close to the sky and filled with the wind of the sea"
Bernard Moitessier
26) "To deal with men is as fine an art as it is to deal with ships. Both men and ships live in an unstable element, are subject to subtle and powerful influences, and want to have their merits understood rather than their faults found out [...] After all, the art of handling ships is finer, perhaps, than the art of handling men."
Joseph Conrad
27) “I really don't know why it is that all of us are so committed to the sea, except I think it is because in addition to the fact that the sea changes and the light changes, and ships change, it is because we all came from the sea. And it is an interesting biological fact that all of us have in our veins the exact same percentage of salt in our blood that exists in the ocean, and, therefore, we have salt in our blood, in our sweat, in our tears. We are tied to the ocean. And when we go back to the sea, whether it is to sail or to watch it we are going back from whence we came."
J. F. K.
28) "Wherever we want to go, we go. That's what a ship is, you know. It's not just a keel and a hull and a deck and sails; that's what a ship needs. But what a ship is...what she really is...is freedom."
Jack Sparrow
29) "Sailing a boat calls for quick action, a blending of feeling with the wind and watter as well as with the very heart and soul of the boat itself. Sailing teaches alertness and courage, and gives in retourn a joyousness and peace that but few sports afford."
George Matthew Adams
30) "Borders? I have never seen one. But I have heard they exist in the minds of some people."
Thor Heyerdahl
Sailing
a boat calls for quick action, a blending of feeling with the wind and
water as well as with the very heart and soul of the boat itself.
Sailing teaches alertness and courage, and gives in return a joyousness
and peace that but few sports afford.
Read more at http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/keywords/sailing.html#GTmUku5zF0AqO0td.99
Read more at http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/keywords/sailing.html#GTmUku5zF0AqO0td.99
Sailing
a boat calls for quick action, a blending of feeling with the wind and
water as well as with the very heart and soul of the boat itself.
Sailing teaches alertness and courage, and gives in return a joyousness
and peace that but few sports afford.
Read more at http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/keywords/sailing.html#GTmUku5zF0AqO0td.99
Read more at http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/keywords/sailing.html#GTmUku5zF0AqO0td.99
23.3.12
Nasa Earth Science
17.3.12
7.3.12
Refreshing
Not 100% sailing but a very good shot and edited video.
By the way, a GoPro camera is on my whishlist...
By the way, a GoPro camera is on my whishlist...
16.2.12
Sea Survivors
Sometimes things can go very wrong and that's when the human will and preserverance can make the diference. Well, of course a good dose of luck can also make the difference.
Some survival at sea stories compiled by Christine Vrey and found in the Listverse site.
7.2.12
1.12.11
I love Sailing
Promoted by RYA, monthly prizes are there for the filmmakers and photographers that can best capture this love about sailing.
You can find some more info here
24.11.11
11.11.11
30.10.11
12.10.11
Living the Dream
This is the best Lottery Ad ever made! (at least for the sailing dreamers out there)
11.10.11
5.10.11
What created Earth's Oceans?
According to National Geographic, comet Hartley 2 offers new clues.
Interesting article here National Geographic
3.10.11
Red Tide
Amazing phenomenon
Red tide is a common name for a phenomenon also known as an algal bloom (large concentrations of aquatic microorganisms), an event in which estuarine, marine, or fresh water algae accumulate rapidly in the water column and results in discoloration of the surface water. It is usually found in coastal areas.
@ Wikipedia
Red tide is a common name for a phenomenon also known as an algal bloom (large concentrations of aquatic microorganisms), an event in which estuarine, marine, or fresh water algae accumulate rapidly in the water column and results in discoloration of the surface water. It is usually found in coastal areas.
@ Wikipedia
27.9.11
Vision or Extravagance?
Wired.com has published an article about this $40 Million Luxury Solar Sailboat
Check the full story here:
http://www.wired.com/autopia/2011/09/a-40-million-luxury-solar-sailboat-for-low-emissions-indulgence/
Check the full story here:
http://www.wired.com/autopia/2011/09/a-40-million-luxury-solar-sailboat-for-low-emissions-indulgence/
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