Willow-B
Veteran Member
Or -
now THATS funny!!!!!!
Or -
I once monitored a radio call from a boat I couldn't see around a bend. When a boat came into sight, I called and asked if he was the large white trawler coming around the bend.
He replied (in an obvious huff) "No this is the large white Motor Yacht coming around the bend.
Now let's talk about why the agency that licenses and regulates vehicles powered by engines is called the Department of Motor Vehicles.
What I still can't understand... why are parkways called that and driveways called that??
I once monitored a radio call from a boat I couldn't see around a bend. When a boat came into sight, I called and asked if he was the large white trawler coming around the bend.
He replied (in an obvious huff) "No this is the large white Motor Yacht coming around the bend.
Ive said on a few occasions, if you really have a trawler you dont need to ask,"is this a trawler". But not everyone knows they dont have a trawler. Case in point. I was looking at a marina in oklahoma, in Okmulgee IIRC, at the end of the canal system. The dock master told me he lived on a trawler in the marina. I was looking for a slip for my Krogen trawler and was interested in other trawler owners. Well,,, his "trawler" was an aft cabin motor yacht with a pair of 375 hp 3208s. He just went slow. So it was his trawler.
Marin You are probably right but no way will you win or change thinking amongst the general population.
Hell....I have a Carver...no confusion here!!!
John--- The reality is that if you enjoy it, and if your boat allows you to all things you want and like to do with a boat, it is totally irrelevant what you or anyone else wants to call it.
This "discussion" on linguistics has been interesting, but it has squat-all to do with what's important about recreational boats, which is boating.
Are you sure it wasn't Marin kicking back smoking a pipe driving that bitch????!!!
I still just call my boat a boat. Not a tug, not a trawler, just boat..
It really is a great boat. And I will encourage that people do not look past boats like mine if they have an open mind and want to cruise under power. There are many advantages of owning an American made mass produced boat....like the windows don't leak!!! Or factory support(Carver has a file on my boat and equipment as it left the factory)!!!! Or an owner's manual with useable system diagrams!!!! A story: I have a close friend that is probably the best marine electrician around here(He owns an Albin 43). He was helping me with an electrical issue and heard him mumble under his breath..."If only we had a wiring diagram"...I went and got the owner's manual and there it was...a detailed wiring diagram that served the purpose we were looking for.
SO while styling is not exactly "trawleresque", there are upsides.
.....because most folks when they see a Manatee are stumped by it's good looks and nautical mystic.
Naval architects identify nine types of vessels, Yachts being the type we have. Most folks think telling someone you own a yacht might give them the impression that your the yacht club type blue blazer, white shorts and knee socks, etc. Using the term trawler denotes a more blue jeans tee shirt type. I'm going to try using "Kroghaven" because most folks when they see a Manatee are stumped by it's good looks and nautical mystic.
Anything designed by Noah can't be all bad.
When someone learns that I have a boat they often ask "What kind of boat do you have?". I tell them it's a trawler and they understand. Isn't that what language is about? Communicating?
I tell them a Nordic Tug 26. It's more specific. If they know boats, they know what it is. If they don't know boats, using the words trawler or tug would confuse them, because it is neither. I usually tell them it is a blue boat. They seem happy with that description, and they don't have to maintain a false pretence that they are interested in boats.