Yes, I recall watching old cowboy movies and always figured they were
dealing with trained horses or that horses being very dumb just figured the
cowboy knew how to tie a know and it wasn't worth their effort to try to run
away.  Boats (and I guess airplanes too) aren't like those horses.  My boat
never let me forget when I make a mistake whether I am tying knots or
anchoring or adjusting sails, she seizes the moment doesn't let me forget
how dumb I can be.  It's a battle of wits out there; mine against  other
nature.

My Eagle ceremony was postponed from November 22nd 1963 to December 7th
1963.  Two dates that are easy to recall.  So I am years older than you...
I didn't learn to sail until 1964 when I was a councilor at a boy's camp in
Canada on a very deep/cold lake where I taught swimming and canoeing. I
remember seeing it snow 2" on the morning of 17th of August that summer and
then going swimming in the lake that afternoon!  Seems like star wars, "In a
galaxy far far away..."


Joe McCary
Aeolus II, West River, MD #4795
www.aeoluswestriver.net
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


> On Behalf Of David Shugarts
> 
> What was really hilarious was when I got into aviation, and watched people
> tying down the airplanes.
> 
> (I may seem to digress, but, you may notice in the old cowboy movies that
> most of the actors don't know how to put a hitch on a rail when they tie
up
> their horse at the saloon. You watch them kind of vaguely put a couple of
> turns around the rail and then stop and wonder how that's going to hold,
but
> then they just saunter into the saloon anyway.)
> 
> 
> --Dave S. (Demitri)
>   Eagle Scout since 1965

Reply via email to