Sam's is your source for Hatteras and Cabo Yacht parts.

Enter a part description OR part number to search the Hatteras/Cabo parts catalog:

Email Sam's or call 1-800-678-9230 to order parts.

Middle Aged Crazy Hatt ?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Freebird
  • Start date Start date
  • Replies Replies 60
  • Views Views 11,773
eclipsarkanna said:
Birdman:

Look on the bright side. After I get my long wished for 53ED, just think of the jabs that you can throw at me - at 59 year old with ED parked on an ED. Very appropriate right - save the 58TC owners from a similar fate in both departments, I will hear endlessly.
Yeah, you just go ahead and buy that little Hatt with those little grenade motors. I'll go through with my original plans to resurrect the 58TC and rebuild that 12V71N and make sure the other is okay. Then you and I will set aside the next 10 years or so just to cruise side by side in our respective Hatts in the same direction the birds fly with each change of season.

We'll just see who has the most fun boating (sorry garyd) while my big Hatt powered by those trusty rusty natural 12's passes you left and right, north and south, east and west, (or in YottsmanWillie's case up and down) while your prissy little newer Hatt sits wakeless in some marina where she stranded you! I'll be sure to stop in for a drink or at least waive on my way past to a better climate.

Your honor, I rest my case! :D
 
What if I end up getting the 1984 ED model with the 8-71s! I agree with you on the 92s but not on the 8-71s. We will see how dexterous you are when you visit my pad in the 1000 Islands and that last 5 feet doesn't quite make it around a tight bend and I have to wheel around and drag your ass off one of the famous low flat rocks.

Bill
 
What do dexterous mean? :confused:

You attorneys are all alike with all them big words and stuff! :mad:
 
Them thar are truck drivn words man, not "liarying" words.
 
You old guys get so mushy :rolleyes: . This is a boat site, don't make me pull your Man Cards...... :D
 
thoward said:
You old guys get so mushy. This is a boat site, don't make me pull your Man Cards...... :D
Man Cards? :confused:

I reckon that would be better than you pulling our man parts! :D

"He's the one they call Dr. Feelgood, he's the one who makes you feel alright, he's the one they call Dr. Feelgood, he's gonna pull your man parts right!" :cool:
 
Carl, you hit the nail on the head! I'm the big kid in her life and there is NO ROOM for any other!LOL Not true, we spend splenty of time "test driving" all our friend's kids from time to time and do have lots of fun but the best part is being able to send them HOME!

Randy, Please don't jump on the bandwagon of "you should really have a child of our own" crap. Yeah, yeah I don't know what I'm missing. I do know I will miss out on the threat of teenage drug use, the potential teenage pregnancy, the auto accidents, the DWI's, the potential law suits for whatever the kid does, etc. It really is nice for us to be able to decide where our money goes as opposed to constantly having to pay (in so many ways) for what a kid has done or needs to do. People with kids should really try to understand that some people can be perfectly happy and fulfilled in life without children of their own. It really is okay. Where does it say that EVERYONE should have a kid of their own just because they can? If every person has a kid or two, think of the overpopulation! SOME of us need to refrain for those who feel the need to have 3,4 or 5 kids of their own!!!

For us, this is OUR way. We made the decision and are extremely pleased with our choices so far in life. Melissa will always be a big part in children's lives even after she retires from full-time teaching. She plans to still tutor dyslexic kids and kids that are reading below level. In the many years of extensive cruising we have planned, she will get involved with little local out-island schools and work with kids wherever we are cruising. This way we can do everything we want in life and travel and cruise until our hearts are content and still have a positive impact on many, many children. We take this seriously and believe that this is how we were meant to be involved with children.

Now, if you persist with this I'll have to retort to my fall-back position when cornered with this topic by several proud parents: "It's not me...Melissa is BARON!!!" LOL :p
 
Last edited:
I just had to post my favorite Ann Landers Article here for your benefit Randy. Please enjoy:


Ann Landers' famous "The Childless Couple"

There is nothing sadder than a childless couple. It breaks my heart to see them relaxing around swimming pools in Florida, sitting all suntanned and miserable on the decks of their boats -- trotting off to Europe like lonesome fools. It's an empty life. Nothing but money to spend, more time to enjoy and a whole lot less to worry about.

The poor childless couple are so wrapped up in themselves, you have to feel sorry for them. They don't fight over the child's discipline, don't blame each other for the child's most obnoxious characteristics, and they miss all the fun of doing without for the child's sake. They just go along, doing whatever they want, buying what they want and liking each other. It's a pretty pathetic picture.

Everyone should have children. No one should be allowed to escape the wonderful experience that accompanies each stage in the development of the young -- the happy memories of sleepless nights, coughing spells, tantrums, diaper rash, debts, "dipso" baby sitters, saturated mattresses, emergencies and never-ending crises.

How dismal is the peaceful home without the constant childish problems that make a well-rounded life and an early breakdown; the tender, thoughtful discussions when the report card reveals the progeny to be one step below a moron; the end-of-the-day reunions with all the joyful happenings recited like well-placed blows to the temples.

Children are worth it. Every moment of anxiety, every sacrifice, every complete collapse pays off as a fine, sturdy adolescent is reached. The feeling of reward the first time you took the boy hunting -- he didn't mean to shoot you, the lad was excited. Remember how he cried? How sorry he was? And how much better you felt after the blood transfusion? These are the times a man with a growing son treasures -- memories that are captured forever in the heart and the limp.

Think back to the night of romantic adventure when your budding daughter eloped with the village idiot. What childless couple ever shared in the stark realism of that drama? Aren't you a better man for having lived richly, fully, acquiring that tic in your left eye? Could a woman without children touch the strength and heroism of your wife as she tried to fling herself out of the bedroom window?

The childless couple live in a vacuum. They fill their lonely days with golf, vacation trips, dinner dates, civic affairs, tranquility, leisure and entertainment. There is a terrifying emptiness without children, but the childless couple are too comfortable to know it.

You just have to look at them to see what the years have done: He looks boyish, unlined and rested; she's slim, well-groomed and youthful. It isn't natural. If they had had kids, they'd look like the rest of us -- worn out, wrinkled and exhausted.
 
I get a kick when people tell me I should have had kids and now I will have no one to take care of me. Ha, I can't wait to go to the old folks home so I can act like a dirty old man and get away with it..... :D
 
thoward said:
I get a kick when people tell me I should have had kids and now I will have no one to take care of me. Ha, I can't wait to go to the old folks home so I can act like a dirty old man and get away with it..... :D

Tod, that's one of my favorite comments that people make! The LAST thing I would want to do is be a burden on my children in my old age. The sweet young beautiful nurse that will be taking care of me and wiping the noodles off my chin in my old age has not even been BORN yet! :eek:
 
To Byron and Todd, just like most every topic brought up on this forum and in real life, to each his own.

I would not jump on a bandwagon on this or any other subject which simply came down to personal choices. Nobody had to convince me that I should have children, nobody would have had to convince me not to have them. I simply did what I felt was right for me.

Trust me, I would much rather have had Ryan in my 20's as opposed to my 40's. I would not take anything for him, but I do recognize the plain and simple fact he will factor into my life, and I into his, much more at mine and his age gap than would have been the case if he had come along earlier.

I am fully aware of the simple fact I will not be able to physically keep up with him, and I am the same age as the grandfather of many of his friends. I am going to have to delay any plans as to retirement dreams to at least the time he will enter college, assuming that is his chosen path. That will place me at age 65 or thereabouts. If he does not venture out on his own at age 18, then I can't very well kick him out so Michelle and/or I can go play with my boat someplace.

How many guys have you known who worked their asses off and saved up for retirement dreams only to die or suffer health issues which prevented them from fulfilling their dreams? I know several. The last thing I want in life is to find myself in a hospital bed drawing my last breath while thinking, "why the hell didn't I do things differently when I had the chance".

Yes, I am a firm believer in an afterlife which will be better than the one I have now, but I am certainly in no hurry to get there. I would be perfectly content to live out eternity on my Hatteras with friends and family and all the associated occasional disappointments which go along with both.

Hey Byron and Melissa, or Todd and Ginger, would you like to babysit Ryan for two or three months while Michelle and I cruise the islands this summer? :D

BTW Todd, you chiropractors really crack me up! :cool:
 
Freebird said:
How many guys have you known who worked their asses off and saved up for retirement dreams only to die or suffer health issues which prevented them from fulfilling their dreams? I know several. The last thing I want in life is to find myself in a hospital bed drawing my last breath while thinking, "why the hell didn't I do things differently when I had the chance".
Funny you ask. As our company embarks on yet another reorg (down size) the attached document was floated around.

(Awww shucks, it's a 60kb word doc and the system only allows 19.5 kb.)

According to the article, you lose 1 year of life for every year worked after 50 and 2 years of life for every year you work beyond 55. PM me if you want an email copy of the study. In the meantime, get out there and enjoy your boat...
 
Passages:

You scared the living ...... out of me. I am 59 and 8 weeks to go to retirement. The hell with the next 8 weeks (your article means these next 8 weeks, even if I do sit on the HOF forum most of the day!) will cost me 16 weeks of my life - whoa! So I just picked up the phone and fired an offer off by phone and email to a broker in New YOrk and said I want it NOW.

Bill
 
ThirdHatt said:
I just had to post my favorite Ann Landers Article here for your benefit Randy. Please enjoy:


Ann Landers' famous "The Childless Couple"

There is nothing sadder than a childless couple. It breaks my heart to see them relaxing around swimming pools in Florida, sitting all suntanned and miserable on the decks of their boats -- trotting off to Europe like lonesome fools. It's an empty life. Nothing but money to spend, more time to enjoy and a whole lot less to worry about.

The poor childless couple are so wrapped up in themselves, you have to feel sorry for them. They don't fight over the child's discipline, don't blame each other for the child's most obnoxious characteristics, and they miss all the fun of doing without for the child's sake. They just go along, doing whatever they want, buying what they want and liking each other. It's a pretty pathetic picture.

Everyone should have children. No one should be allowed to escape the wonderful experience that accompanies each stage in the development of the young -- the happy memories of sleepless nights, coughing spells, tantrums, diaper rash, debts, "dipso" baby sitters, saturated mattresses, emergencies and never-ending crises.

How dismal is the peaceful home without the constant childish problems that make a well-rounded life and an early breakdown; the tender, thoughtful discussions when the report card reveals the progeny to be one step below a moron; the end-of-the-day reunions with all the joyful happenings recited like well-placed blows to the temples.

Children are worth it. Every moment of anxiety, every sacrifice, every complete collapse pays off as a fine, sturdy adolescent is reached. The feeling of reward the first time you took the boy hunting -- he didn't mean to shoot you, the lad was excited. Remember how he cried? How sorry he was? And how much better you felt after the blood transfusion? These are the times a man with a growing son treasures -- memories that are captured forever in the heart and the limp.

Think back to the night of romantic adventure when your budding daughter eloped with the village idiot. What childless couple ever shared in the stark realism of that drama? Aren't you a better man for having lived richly, fully, acquiring that tic in your left eye? Could a woman without children touch the strength and heroism of your wife as she tried to fling herself out of the bedroom window?

The childless couple live in a vacuum. They fill their lonely days with golf, vacation trips, dinner dates, civic affairs, tranquility, leisure and entertainment. There is a terrifying emptiness without children, but the childless couple are too comfortable to know it.

You just have to look at them to see what the years have done: He looks boyish, unlined and rested; she's slim, well-groomed and youthful. It isn't natural. If they had had kids, they'd look like the rest of us -- worn out, wrinkled and exhausted.
LOL I just had to comment on this piece. I LOVE IT!!!

As for many of the concerns you and she brings up, why do you think my dream is to get the hell out of as many of those unplesant realities as I can by loading the 58 (or 70?) and heading for greener pastures, bluer water, and calmer seas?

Byron, I pitty the poor little nurse who finds herself in the postion of removing noodles from your chin. You better save up some serious coin there "sister". Given your number of faces and the fact that each has more than one chin, you may just have to stay on your Hatt and let Melissa or her grateful school kids clean you up! :D

Now then, WHO'S DA MAN? :cool:
 
Passages. The one thing I've learned down here in Florida is to keep moving. The guy down at the crab house still works about 40-60 hours per week, he is 93 years old.

The guard at the marina fought in WWII and is 87 years old. Works about 40 hours a week +more if someone misses a shift.

The guy that cleans the props etc.. works about 50 hours a week then another 15 hours diving and scrubbing bottoms, props etc. He is just about 70 years old.


Several of us that worked at a large company noted that retirement was the fastest way to check into heaven. The company rag would come out saying good ole Bill is retiring after 35 years. Obligatory picture of Bill getting watch. about 6-9 months later. Sorry to report good ole Bill passed away. It happened over and over again.

Keep moving, work as unto the Lord! It will keep you going baby. Work Hard Work Smart you will be healthy and happy. Everything might not go as planned or work out perfectly, but when I was in high gear I felt like an aircraft carrrier. Nothing should get in my way and I stayed the course with some minor corrections. It's when usins (so Randy can understand) have too much time on our hands that we get into trouble. I should say at least that's what happens to me.

Feels good to Hijack Randy's thread since he always gets off topic LOL :p
 
Alright, who's the inconsiderate @#$%^&* that just waked out my thread! :mad:

Gary is right about one thing, there is a balance to be had, but it depends on simply going after a dream as opposed to just quitting work. Some people enjoy working, and they enjoy working at menial jobs most of us would consider as punishment for a crime.

Case in point. There was an older fellow in our neighborhood where I grew up who had a small farm and could work circles around us teenagers. In short, he loved what he was doing.

When he reached his 70's, his wife insisted they move to Florida where they could relax and live out their golden years. He reluctantly succombed to her pressure, sold his farm, and moved to Florida. He died within six months of leaving something he enjoyed for something he did not.

Again, none of us can force our dreams or ideas on others and expect a happy ending.
 
Freebird said:
Hey Byron and Melissa, or Todd and Ginger, would you like to babysit Ryan for two or three months while Michelle and I cruise the islands this summer? :D

Send him down and we will spoil him to no end. One condition though, I get to install some cameras and do a reality Liveaboard TV show. I've got $50 that says she pushes you overboard in the first episode.... :D
 
Hey Tod you could get a reality show going and win $100,000.00 on America's funniest home video. Here is R&M anchoring out. Why is Randy duct taped to the anchor oh well he'll be o.k. SPlash :D
 
thoward said:
Send him down and we will spoil him to no end. One condition though, I get to install some cameras and do a reality Liveaboard TV show. I've got $50 that says she pushes you overboard in the first episode.... :D
I'll take that bet you're gonna regret cause I'm the best that's ever been! :cool:

I just won't fix that blown engine so I can swim fast enough to get back onboard! :D Heck, maybe I need to pull the good one out and find me a good sail! Either that or mount an outboard on the swim platform. I could get enough out of the good and bad engine to fix the interior up real nice.

I had a guy on the passagemaker forum tell me it would only take 75hp to move my 58 at about 6 knots. I told him that certainly took any idea of ever buying a trawler out of my head if that's all there was to it!

Anybody got a good used 75hp diesel outboard for sale? Anybody have a big sail for sale? Could be the makings of a redneck motorsailor! Hey Paul, what do you think?
 
Last edited:
garyd said:
Hey Tod you could get a reality show going and win $100,000.00 on America's funniest home video. Here is R&M anchoring out. Why is Randy duct taped to the anchor oh well he'll be o.k. SPlash :D
Kinda goes along the same line of another reality TV show idea I hoped someone would have, "Pimp My Hatt".

Besides, duct tape or not, I've always been the anchor of this family. Sometimes I just have a hard time getting hold of the bottom and find myself being drug through the mud! :D
 

Forum statistics

Threads
38,154
Messages
448,706
Members
12,482
Latest member
UnaVida

Latest Posts

Trending content

Back
Top Bottom