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Musicman · 61-69, M
CreyvinMoorhead · 41-45, M
@Musicman 2006 Monaco Dynasty 42 Diamond IV
Musicman · 61-69, M
@CreyvinMoorhead Yes it is 🙂
Jayciedubb · 56-60, M
@Musicman NNNice! Diesel pusher?
Musicman · 61-69, M
@Jayciedubb Yes it is. 🙂
Jayciedubb · 56-60, M
@Musicman that's a nice setup you got there. My dad's got a nice Diesel Pusher. I forget the make. My mom's got one of those old 1970s GMC front wheel drive space age looking ones. They're kind of funky but they're actually pretty cool too
Musicman · 61-69, M
@Jayciedubb That is so cool. Do they ever let you take it out? 🙂
Jayciedubb · 56-60, M
@Musicman they probably would but I'd never put them on the spot like that. ..nor would I want to take on that responsibility or live with the shame of wrecking something
I haven't been camping in over a decade. But the kind of camping I was into was more like shoreline camping where we pack up everything in my little jetboat and tow what doesnt fit in a zodiac. On a lake surrounded by wilderness (California's version anyway). The whole trip is spent maintaining camp, fishing, skiing, waterboarding, swimming. airgun plinking, shooting anything thats floating out in the distance (bottles n cans) . Night runs across the lake to the middle with a bar of soap for a bath under the stars. ..maybe a joint and a beer.
I go into MacGyver mode sometimes and make all kinds of primitive camping amenities half of which come to fruition the other half remain in my personal ether
I haven't been camping in over a decade. But the kind of camping I was into was more like shoreline camping where we pack up everything in my little jetboat and tow what doesnt fit in a zodiac. On a lake surrounded by wilderness (California's version anyway). The whole trip is spent maintaining camp, fishing, skiing, waterboarding, swimming. airgun plinking, shooting anything thats floating out in the distance (bottles n cans) . Night runs across the lake to the middle with a bar of soap for a bath under the stars. ..maybe a joint and a beer.
I go into MacGyver mode sometimes and make all kinds of primitive camping amenities half of which come to fruition the other half remain in my personal ether
Musicman · 61-69, M
@Jayciedubb I am originally from Virginia. We lived by the Potomac River. My friends and I had aluminum John boat's with outboard motors. We knew we're all the inlets were. We use to camp and fish in them. General swimming was almost a daily event.
Jayciedubb · 56-60, M
@Musicman you know what I'm talking about. my dad used to have a cabin up on the Sacramento River with a dock in the backyard. I imagine the Potomac having a pretty strong current probably much like the Sacramento River. I used to love going on night runs on the river. When you can see the reflection of the Moon on the water shimmering all the way up to your bow. You'll see any obstruction in the shimmering light. Those big spot lights don't light up anything except particles in the air and more Darkness and you know how it is on the river every bend looks like a dead end until it reveals another dead end looking bend. We used to go bar hopping at night and I'd be scooting back home on plane doing 40 to 45 mph in seemingly Pitch Black. Just my running lights.
Hahaha! One cold February night we were zipping back to my buddy's cruiser where we were all (3) going to sleep. I say jet boat but not like a hodrod Berkeley jet with jetovator pedal that shoots 200' long rooster tail. ..no. ..its a tiny twin jet seadoo boat that turns on a dime and gives you 9 cents change. I used to take it everywhere and anywhere. I loved taking it out in big chop.
Anyway, i told everyone i had only 3 rules on the boat. ..sit down, shut up and hold on. They sound like a cliché, but they were very important rules. My buddy with the cruiser who was wearing camouflage snowmobile jumpsuit had been nagging me to do a power spin to impress the other guy. ..i had been planning on it but i knew we'd land under the roost we were going to be shooting out when i whipped it. I didn't want to be wet and far away from warmth. I planned on whipping it within 100 feet of his dock. He had no idea. ,and he wouldn't shut tf up the whole way back. It just so happened that he decided to shift over to the seat on the port side , which is the direction i always whip it in when i have passengers so the centrifugal force throws them into the port gunwale nice and safe like, instead of into the helm or into me.
Where was i. Okay the dude's name is Smurf. So Smurf shifts at the same time I whip it and I sent him launching into the darkness like a frogman. It look like a perfect deployment. LOL and he's wearing that camouflage quilted drenched jumpsuit in at about 3:00 a.m. in complete darkness in the bone cold Sacramento River. It's what tragedies are made of. I made my way to him instantly and he jumped out of the water like he was Jesus. Cursing me like I did something wrong. I told him he would have been okay had he not broken all three rules , defiantly.🤣😅
Have you seen what they're doing to the aluminum jon boats lately with the donor jet skis? They look like a blast and they'll go over anything and they spin just as tight as jet skis or tighter
Hahaha! One cold February night we were zipping back to my buddy's cruiser where we were all (3) going to sleep. I say jet boat but not like a hodrod Berkeley jet with jetovator pedal that shoots 200' long rooster tail. ..no. ..its a tiny twin jet seadoo boat that turns on a dime and gives you 9 cents change. I used to take it everywhere and anywhere. I loved taking it out in big chop.
Anyway, i told everyone i had only 3 rules on the boat. ..sit down, shut up and hold on. They sound like a cliché, but they were very important rules. My buddy with the cruiser who was wearing camouflage snowmobile jumpsuit had been nagging me to do a power spin to impress the other guy. ..i had been planning on it but i knew we'd land under the roost we were going to be shooting out when i whipped it. I didn't want to be wet and far away from warmth. I planned on whipping it within 100 feet of his dock. He had no idea. ,and he wouldn't shut tf up the whole way back. It just so happened that he decided to shift over to the seat on the port side , which is the direction i always whip it in when i have passengers so the centrifugal force throws them into the port gunwale nice and safe like, instead of into the helm or into me.
Where was i. Okay the dude's name is Smurf. So Smurf shifts at the same time I whip it and I sent him launching into the darkness like a frogman. It look like a perfect deployment. LOL and he's wearing that camouflage quilted drenched jumpsuit in at about 3:00 a.m. in complete darkness in the bone cold Sacramento River. It's what tragedies are made of. I made my way to him instantly and he jumped out of the water like he was Jesus. Cursing me like I did something wrong. I told him he would have been okay had he not broken all three rules , defiantly.🤣😅
Have you seen what they're doing to the aluminum jon boats lately with the donor jet skis? They look like a blast and they'll go over anything and they spin just as tight as jet skis or tighter
Musicman · 61-69, M
@Jayciedubb We didn't have a strong current. Our section was fairly calm.
My dad had a 30' cabin cruiser, but as a teenager I couldn't take it out alone. Later once I was 20 he would let me take it out. A few of my friends and I took it down to Colonial Beach for Memorial Day weekend. We had a blast.
Sadly the there was not many bars. You either had to go to DC or Alexandria. There was also a town called Occoquan. Occoquan was closer. The marina always had a place to tie up and the bars were all in a four block radius. Easy to walk to.
The Cabin Cruiser had a 60 gallon tank and you could suck it dry in an afternoon. I had rules like you did. One was no one rode for free. Everyone had to either bring a couple of five gallon cans of gas or some cash for the fuel dock.
My dad had a 30' cabin cruiser, but as a teenager I couldn't take it out alone. Later once I was 20 he would let me take it out. A few of my friends and I took it down to Colonial Beach for Memorial Day weekend. We had a blast.
Sadly the there was not many bars. You either had to go to DC or Alexandria. There was also a town called Occoquan. Occoquan was closer. The marina always had a place to tie up and the bars were all in a four block radius. Easy to walk to.
The Cabin Cruiser had a 60 gallon tank and you could suck it dry in an afternoon. I had rules like you did. One was no one rode for free. Everyone had to either bring a couple of five gallon cans of gas or some cash for the fuel dock.
Jayciedubb · 56-60, M
@Musicman we had a few skiboats and Cruisers, nothing over 27' and always a deep v hull.
We had a nice outboard skiboat with 150 hp 2 stroke merc. When I was 11-14. Back then there were no age or licensing requirements on boats. The only age rule there was was for skiing. There always had to be an observer at least 12 years old to hold the flag up when the skiier was down. The driver could have been 2 years old.. (in theory).
My dad would give me the keys to the boat when i was 11 and me and my cousin would hit the river and be on the water all day looking for races. My cousin is 5 years younger than me. We had a blast!
I had a 23' Cobalt DEEEP V cruiser that i used to take the boys out on the SF Bay. It was built like a brick shithouse. Sadly i had to give it away a few yesrs ago due to my complaining neighbors who knew the boat was stored where I'd been storing it for years before they were aware that this neighborhood even existed.
They're from a landlocked (flyover) state and they had a problem seeing my boat in a city that has multiple access points to the LARGEST BODY OF WATER ON THE PLANET. ..The audacity. But that's a different comment.
That cobalt had a 60 gallon tank that was topped off when i had to give it away. That little jet boat has a 25 gallon tank and i would drain it in 2 hours
We had a nice outboard skiboat with 150 hp 2 stroke merc. When I was 11-14. Back then there were no age or licensing requirements on boats. The only age rule there was was for skiing. There always had to be an observer at least 12 years old to hold the flag up when the skiier was down. The driver could have been 2 years old.. (in theory).
My dad would give me the keys to the boat when i was 11 and me and my cousin would hit the river and be on the water all day looking for races. My cousin is 5 years younger than me. We had a blast!
I had a 23' Cobalt DEEEP V cruiser that i used to take the boys out on the SF Bay. It was built like a brick shithouse. Sadly i had to give it away a few yesrs ago due to my complaining neighbors who knew the boat was stored where I'd been storing it for years before they were aware that this neighborhood even existed.
They're from a landlocked (flyover) state and they had a problem seeing my boat in a city that has multiple access points to the LARGEST BODY OF WATER ON THE PLANET. ..The audacity. But that's a different comment.
That cobalt had a 60 gallon tank that was topped off when i had to give it away. That little jet boat has a 25 gallon tank and i would drain it in 2 hours
Musicman · 61-69, M
@Jayciedubb When I was a kid there was no rules. Not even a flag when water skiing. An observe was just a nicety. Those were the good old days.
Jayciedubb · 56-60, M
@Musicman they certainly were. ..they were good to those of us who survived them🤭. I remember more than a couple times when my dad had to swerve onto the almost nonexistent shoulder of the levee roads that were/are just wide enough to facilitate 2 way traffic at reduced highway speeds. There were a lot more drunk drivers on the roads then. ..my father being one himself usually.
I recall losing to an oncoming drunk driver the extra wide drivers side view mirror that my dad strapped on the caddy when he used it for towing the boat. We'd left the boat and trailer up at the delta in the marina where We'd left the boat tied off to our friends delta type houseboat with all the different levels and cabins and galley, decks and a flybridge, etc.
My dad and his "surrogate" father, a much older drunk neighbor than my father, lost track of the time and the tides and got hung up on the beach they decided to tie up to to spend our day. Us kids were off skiing with the skiboat and not at all paying any attention to the tides ourselves either, we had no need to. When we returned to the beach, we see the 4 drunken adults straining their heads to beet red trying to pull that bohemoth of a launch back into its proper buoyant state, to no avail. The California Delta is the point where the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivets converge as they terminate into the San Francisco Bay, so the ocean tide also effects the water elevation of the Delta.
Hahaha! Those beet faced drunkards had the nerve to try to blame us for our predicament. 🤔 looking back, I wonder why we never tried to yank it off the beach with the skiboat. I've been extremely successful in yanking boats off the riprap (boulders that define the levees) and back into the water that had launched themselves completely out of the water due to lack of experience (wow! So many memories now bubbling up). I yanked them all the way back in with that little 170hp seadoo twin jet boat.
So we were at the mercy of the tide, which gave them more time to get more liquored up before releasing us into the mid dusk part of the day, miles away from the marina. That's the night we all received the lesson of the value of a powerful spotlight, which turned out to be a little less than the value of a rabbits foot when trying to use it to find your way around in the Delta at night.
It was a bit tense, but somehow they eventually got us safely back to the marina safe and sound. I remember when we got the houseboat all tied off, my dad asked his "dad" (he even used to address him as pop) for a cigarette. He'd quit smoking years before but that night drove him back to the habit. ..especially after the rest of the trip home, narrowly escaping the near head on collision, threading the needle between a head on collision with a boat towing pickup truck and plunging back into the darkness of the water we'd just escaped.
My dad was still drunk, which is probably what caused him to do a 5 or 6 point turn into the direction of the truck and trailer. By the time he caught up to him, he (the truck) was already pulled over by whatever typical authority has jurisdiction, and finally to your point about the good ol days, my drunk father stopped to tell the cops what had just happened and the cops didn't think twice about my father's condition. They thanked him for his vigilance.. lol
It was years before my dad was able to give up smoking again. ..eventually giving up drinking many many years later, when my sister had her first kid (RIP😢). He told me he didn't want to be a drunk grandpa and miss or mess up that experience like he did with fatherhood.
Thanks for allowing me to participate in this thread. It's been a nice trip down memory ...creek? ..stream?
I recall losing to an oncoming drunk driver the extra wide drivers side view mirror that my dad strapped on the caddy when he used it for towing the boat. We'd left the boat and trailer up at the delta in the marina where We'd left the boat tied off to our friends delta type houseboat with all the different levels and cabins and galley, decks and a flybridge, etc.
My dad and his "surrogate" father, a much older drunk neighbor than my father, lost track of the time and the tides and got hung up on the beach they decided to tie up to to spend our day. Us kids were off skiing with the skiboat and not at all paying any attention to the tides ourselves either, we had no need to. When we returned to the beach, we see the 4 drunken adults straining their heads to beet red trying to pull that bohemoth of a launch back into its proper buoyant state, to no avail. The California Delta is the point where the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivets converge as they terminate into the San Francisco Bay, so the ocean tide also effects the water elevation of the Delta.
Hahaha! Those beet faced drunkards had the nerve to try to blame us for our predicament. 🤔 looking back, I wonder why we never tried to yank it off the beach with the skiboat. I've been extremely successful in yanking boats off the riprap (boulders that define the levees) and back into the water that had launched themselves completely out of the water due to lack of experience (wow! So many memories now bubbling up). I yanked them all the way back in with that little 170hp seadoo twin jet boat.
So we were at the mercy of the tide, which gave them more time to get more liquored up before releasing us into the mid dusk part of the day, miles away from the marina. That's the night we all received the lesson of the value of a powerful spotlight, which turned out to be a little less than the value of a rabbits foot when trying to use it to find your way around in the Delta at night.
It was a bit tense, but somehow they eventually got us safely back to the marina safe and sound. I remember when we got the houseboat all tied off, my dad asked his "dad" (he even used to address him as pop) for a cigarette. He'd quit smoking years before but that night drove him back to the habit. ..especially after the rest of the trip home, narrowly escaping the near head on collision, threading the needle between a head on collision with a boat towing pickup truck and plunging back into the darkness of the water we'd just escaped.
My dad was still drunk, which is probably what caused him to do a 5 or 6 point turn into the direction of the truck and trailer. By the time he caught up to him, he (the truck) was already pulled over by whatever typical authority has jurisdiction, and finally to your point about the good ol days, my drunk father stopped to tell the cops what had just happened and the cops didn't think twice about my father's condition. They thanked him for his vigilance.. lol
It was years before my dad was able to give up smoking again. ..eventually giving up drinking many many years later, when my sister had her first kid (RIP😢). He told me he didn't want to be a drunk grandpa and miss or mess up that experience like he did with fatherhood.
Thanks for allowing me to participate in this thread. It's been a nice trip down memory ...creek? ..stream?
Musicman · 61-69, M
@Jayciedubb It was my pleasure. I am so sorry to hear about your dad and his friends. Fortunately my dad didn't smoke. My mom did though. My dad liked to have a beer in the summer, but he usually stayed at just one. Rarely did he have a second one. He use to say his favorite brand was whatever was in sale that week. Lol!!!
Jayciedubb · 56-60, M
@Musicman that's my favorite brand of most things. 😁











