Întreținerea bărcii și o observare a submarinului! | Navigand cu Sase | S2 E37

Întreținerea bărcii și o observare a submarinului!  |  Navigand cu Sase |  S2 E37



În acest episod, trecem de la timpul nostru minunat în NYC și ne ocupăm de întreținerea pe care am amânat-o în timp ce ne distram. Mai întâi, driza principală trebuie înlocuită, o pompă de duș este reparată prin „împrumut” de la un alt duș și înlocuim toate liniile noastre de salvare ruginite obosite cu dyneema. Toate acestea în timp ce ne continuăm drumul în susul Long Island Sound. În timp ce ne îndreptăm spre Block Island, observăm ceva foarte neobișnuit prin binoclu! Un submarin în sălbăticie! Wow! Câți oameni ajung să vadă un submarin care funcționează în ocean și îl văd deasupra apei. SUA continuă să arunce mici pietre prețioase în amintirile noastre. ÎNSCRIEȚI-VĂ LA PATREON AICI 👇 https://www.patreon.com/sailingwithsix CUMPĂRĂ MARFĂ AICI 👇 https://theletteringmachine.com/sailingwithsix/shop/home CONECTAȚI-VĂ PE SOCIAL MEDIA AICI 👇 Instagram https://www.instagram.com/sailingwithsix / Facebook https://web.facebook.com/sailingwithsix/ Site web https://sailingwithsix.com/

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47 thoughts on “Întreținerea bărcii și o observare a submarinului! | Navigand cu Sase | S2 E37

  1. As a Long Island resident, I can tell you Port Jeff is a cute town you can walk through in about an hour or so it has great restaurants as well.

  2. Wow, boat maintenance can be challenging but you all handled it like pros! It's amazing how you seamlessly balance taking care of your vessel and enjoying unique experiences like spotting a submarine and visiting a skate park. Your adventurous spirit is truly inspiring! Keep up the great work and stay safe on your sailing journeys. And to the six of you, I wish you fair winds, God's blessings, and may you always navigate smoothly through life's unexpected waves. P.S. Thanks for the Baked Beans and baked potato suggestion, I might just give it a try!

  3. Your ankle biters and groms will enjoy the remark my then 10-yr oldest son made when we spotted a sub while sailing near Montserrat yonks ago. "Don't worry dad. You only have to panic if we're seeing the sub from below". 🙄

  4. First time anyone has videoed a submarine on YouTube. It might have been Russian. I heard they have been snooping around our shores lately.
    It's too bad you didn't get video of your fall. That would have been cool.

  5. Just found out about your channel. I'm absolutely amazed at how your whole family works together, especially the youngest ones who know so much and are level-headed. Mind blown! Living a dream.

  6. Thank you for sharing these fascinating insights and experiences. As a viewer, one can often focus just on the results of maintenance. Seeing what's involved is so informative and realistic. What a marvellous team you are. Hello from London Landlubbers. Stay well and passionate. ; – ) xx

  7. It was a sub coming out of Groton, Connecticut…one of the US Navy's biggest sub bases on the East Coast. Subs are also built there as well, at Electric Boat. Had the same experience once sailing along there…thought it was a lighthouse at first until I realised it was moving!!

  8. Newly found love in your channel! I’m enjoying watching the collaboration and hard work from the entire family! You guys are truly living the dream! Happy sailing! Cheers!

  9. If you can't eat citrus, a potato a day keeps the scurvy away. This episode illustrates that you must know your cordage to run a sailboat. A stray rope can be dangerous! Cozy morning scene at 7:31. Cruising families always seem tight-knit (selective editing?). Wow, submarine sighting! Sweaters starting to come out.

  10. Hey SWS. If big red is really hard to take down due to wind, pull out the genoa to shadow Big Red. You may have already figured that out. Also, let go the sheet (leeward ines) so the sail depowers and snug up the guy (windward), but don't let the sheet go completely unless the engines are off and the props are folded and not spinning. In case you're wondering, yes, those sheets will reach all the way back to the prop! 😉 Fair winds from the Roundabout crew!

  11. 2:30 The Mom always has problems both understanding the rigging plans AND conveying her own ideas to the rest of the equipage. I remember a few years ago she tried to explain her plan on connecting two pieces of rope. 🙂

  12. 3:10 ONLY the South Africans could invent the running rigging that terminates 30 meters above the deck!!! Apartheid, developing nuclear weapons for Saudi Arabia, long halyards with knots on top of the mast… figures!

  13. 5:20 Not to be a pessimist, but the ends on that locking pin are supposed to be spread to prevent it from falling out amd the nut unscrewing. DON'T THEY?

  14. 10:46 GOODNESS ME!!!!! Which re-education village in which part of China manufactures these spanners!!! I have lived a VERY long time on this planet but I have NEVER seen a spanner go like that!!!!

  15. 11:45 Oh, you said truckers and I just remembered to share an impression of Australia I just had. The reason I share is because it (again) explained to me why your family is the way you are. 😀I was watchiing Outback Truckers and there was an episode about a woman who drives a road train in the Outback (surprise, I know). And at some point she drove out of 4 meter deep mud bath and said, now I want to have a shower and go back to see my boys. I knew from previous episodes that she is not married or has kids, so I thought, yet another Western woman calling her kittens/puppies her "children". BUT NO!!!! She went back home and gave a hug to a pair of… FULL GROWN BULLS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Seriously, she has two 1-ton bulls living in her backyard.

  16. 14:39 You guys change sails SO often. You mentioned the wind was from behind. Can your glorious vessel go wing-on-wing? Would be SO much easier than dragging that poor kite all the time.

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