11/18/2008 3:50:06 PM



Weather Sign
If you walk out of the house with boating plans and see this weather sign in the sky, forget it, go back in the house, grab a beer and settle down on the sofa!!

Get a closer look.

Distress Signal
The Coast Guard cutter tuned in to a faint distress signal from a sinking pleasure craft. "What is your position? Repeat, what is your position?" shouted the radio operator into the microphone. Finally a faint reply crackled over the static: "I'm executive vice president of First Global Bank - please hurry!"
A Wide Berth

Meaning
A goodly distance.

Origin
'Wide berth' is most commonly found in the phrases 'keep a wide berth of', 'give a wide berth to' etc. It was originally a nautical term. We now think of a ship's berth as the place where the ship is moored. Before that though it meant 'a place where there is sea room to moor a ship'. This derives in turn from the probable derivation of the word berth, i.e. 'bearing off'. When sailors were warned to keep a wide bearing off something they were being told to make sure to maintain enough sea room from it.

Like many seafaring terms it dates back to the heyday of sail, the 17th century. An early use comes from the redoubtable Captain John Smith in Accidental Young Seamen, 1626:

"Watch bee vigilant to keepe your berth to windward."

Berth came to be adopted more widely into the language, just meaning 'distance from'. There are several such figurative uses of it in the 17th and 18th centuries - 'a good/clear/strong berth' etc. We have to wait until 1829 for Sir Walter Scott's Letters on demonology and witchcraft for 'a wide berth' though:

"Giving the apparent phantom what seamen call a wide berth."

Source – Gary Martin – The Phrase Finder

Come Sailing Again
We have been lucky enough to secure permission from Mike Peyton, the famous British cartoonist who has supplied cartoons to the boating community for many years from his home on the East Coast.

Read more . . .
 
They're lost too
Boating Oopsies!

  This series of boating "oopsies" is for your enterainment!

Watch the full size video . . .

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