Forum Replies Created
-
AuthorPosts
-
jennyoParticipant
The people that own those big go-fast offshore boats don’t really worry about gas. If you are spending upwards of $100K on a boat that is meant to be raced, your little world isn’t having a recession. It’s the people from Temecula and Tracy that HELOC’d for $80K Cobalt bowriders that are hurting.
jennyoParticipantThe people that own those big go-fast offshore boats don’t really worry about gas. If you are spending upwards of $100K on a boat that is meant to be raced, your little world isn’t having a recession. It’s the people from Temecula and Tracy that HELOC’d for $80K Cobalt bowriders that are hurting.
jennyoParticipantThe people that own those big go-fast offshore boats don’t really worry about gas. If you are spending upwards of $100K on a boat that is meant to be raced, your little world isn’t having a recession. It’s the people from Temecula and Tracy that HELOC’d for $80K Cobalt bowriders that are hurting.
jennyoParticipantThe people that own those big go-fast offshore boats don’t really worry about gas. If you are spending upwards of $100K on a boat that is meant to be raced, your little world isn’t having a recession. It’s the people from Temecula and Tracy that HELOC’d for $80K Cobalt bowriders that are hurting.
jennyoParticipantI was wondering how this would affect the slip/marina crowding situation in SD… I live in Sacramento and it is impossible to get a slip on the river! We have a small 24′ cruiser which we keep in a slip deep in the delta (where the availability is better) but would prefer to move to the Sacramento area instead of driving 30 minutes to get to the boat. We pay $180 a month but would gladly increase it for a closer location. Hopefully all of the price inflation on everything from gas to milk will cause some local slip-dwellers to give up their spots… Somehow I doubt it.
And I hear you about the gas. Used to be paying $4/gallon to fill our 80-gallon tank was outrageous at the gas docks. Now it’s a deal.
jennyoParticipantI was wondering how this would affect the slip/marina crowding situation in SD… I live in Sacramento and it is impossible to get a slip on the river! We have a small 24′ cruiser which we keep in a slip deep in the delta (where the availability is better) but would prefer to move to the Sacramento area instead of driving 30 minutes to get to the boat. We pay $180 a month but would gladly increase it for a closer location. Hopefully all of the price inflation on everything from gas to milk will cause some local slip-dwellers to give up their spots… Somehow I doubt it.
And I hear you about the gas. Used to be paying $4/gallon to fill our 80-gallon tank was outrageous at the gas docks. Now it’s a deal.
jennyoParticipantI was wondering how this would affect the slip/marina crowding situation in SD… I live in Sacramento and it is impossible to get a slip on the river! We have a small 24′ cruiser which we keep in a slip deep in the delta (where the availability is better) but would prefer to move to the Sacramento area instead of driving 30 minutes to get to the boat. We pay $180 a month but would gladly increase it for a closer location. Hopefully all of the price inflation on everything from gas to milk will cause some local slip-dwellers to give up their spots… Somehow I doubt it.
And I hear you about the gas. Used to be paying $4/gallon to fill our 80-gallon tank was outrageous at the gas docks. Now it’s a deal.
jennyoParticipantI was wondering how this would affect the slip/marina crowding situation in SD… I live in Sacramento and it is impossible to get a slip on the river! We have a small 24′ cruiser which we keep in a slip deep in the delta (where the availability is better) but would prefer to move to the Sacramento area instead of driving 30 minutes to get to the boat. We pay $180 a month but would gladly increase it for a closer location. Hopefully all of the price inflation on everything from gas to milk will cause some local slip-dwellers to give up their spots… Somehow I doubt it.
And I hear you about the gas. Used to be paying $4/gallon to fill our 80-gallon tank was outrageous at the gas docks. Now it’s a deal.
jennyoParticipantI was wondering how this would affect the slip/marina crowding situation in SD… I live in Sacramento and it is impossible to get a slip on the river! We have a small 24′ cruiser which we keep in a slip deep in the delta (where the availability is better) but would prefer to move to the Sacramento area instead of driving 30 minutes to get to the boat. We pay $180 a month but would gladly increase it for a closer location. Hopefully all of the price inflation on everything from gas to milk will cause some local slip-dwellers to give up their spots… Somehow I doubt it.
And I hear you about the gas. Used to be paying $4/gallon to fill our 80-gallon tank was outrageous at the gas docks. Now it’s a deal.
jennyoParticipantNewfies are adorable, sweet dogs, but I would worry about how comfortable a dog like that would be in the SD climate. Most Newfies I have encountered lived in the snow or in places where it doesn’t get that warm like Seattle. I have a friend in Oceanside with a wolf-hybrid that has long, thick hair like an Alaskan Malamute, and she (the dog, not the friend) seems to suffer a bit, even on the coast.
But Newfies are amazing, gentle dogs! I used to work at a ski resort in Tahoe where the owners had one named Cosby. Cosby would hang around the lodge looking for toddlers with cookies or a hotdogs in their hands–then you would see the toddler’s ENTIRE ARM disappear into the dog’s mouth. Just as quickly the arm would come out, absent the cookie or hot dog. Kids never knew what hit them.
jennyoParticipantNewfies are adorable, sweet dogs, but I would worry about how comfortable a dog like that would be in the SD climate. Most Newfies I have encountered lived in the snow or in places where it doesn’t get that warm like Seattle. I have a friend in Oceanside with a wolf-hybrid that has long, thick hair like an Alaskan Malamute, and she (the dog, not the friend) seems to suffer a bit, even on the coast.
But Newfies are amazing, gentle dogs! I used to work at a ski resort in Tahoe where the owners had one named Cosby. Cosby would hang around the lodge looking for toddlers with cookies or a hotdogs in their hands–then you would see the toddler’s ENTIRE ARM disappear into the dog’s mouth. Just as quickly the arm would come out, absent the cookie or hot dog. Kids never knew what hit them.
jennyoParticipantNewfies are adorable, sweet dogs, but I would worry about how comfortable a dog like that would be in the SD climate. Most Newfies I have encountered lived in the snow or in places where it doesn’t get that warm like Seattle. I have a friend in Oceanside with a wolf-hybrid that has long, thick hair like an Alaskan Malamute, and she (the dog, not the friend) seems to suffer a bit, even on the coast.
But Newfies are amazing, gentle dogs! I used to work at a ski resort in Tahoe where the owners had one named Cosby. Cosby would hang around the lodge looking for toddlers with cookies or a hotdogs in their hands–then you would see the toddler’s ENTIRE ARM disappear into the dog’s mouth. Just as quickly the arm would come out, absent the cookie or hot dog. Kids never knew what hit them.
jennyoParticipantNewfies are adorable, sweet dogs, but I would worry about how comfortable a dog like that would be in the SD climate. Most Newfies I have encountered lived in the snow or in places where it doesn’t get that warm like Seattle. I have a friend in Oceanside with a wolf-hybrid that has long, thick hair like an Alaskan Malamute, and she (the dog, not the friend) seems to suffer a bit, even on the coast.
But Newfies are amazing, gentle dogs! I used to work at a ski resort in Tahoe where the owners had one named Cosby. Cosby would hang around the lodge looking for toddlers with cookies or a hotdogs in their hands–then you would see the toddler’s ENTIRE ARM disappear into the dog’s mouth. Just as quickly the arm would come out, absent the cookie or hot dog. Kids never knew what hit them.
jennyoParticipantNewfies are adorable, sweet dogs, but I would worry about how comfortable a dog like that would be in the SD climate. Most Newfies I have encountered lived in the snow or in places where it doesn’t get that warm like Seattle. I have a friend in Oceanside with a wolf-hybrid that has long, thick hair like an Alaskan Malamute, and she (the dog, not the friend) seems to suffer a bit, even on the coast.
But Newfies are amazing, gentle dogs! I used to work at a ski resort in Tahoe where the owners had one named Cosby. Cosby would hang around the lodge looking for toddlers with cookies or a hotdogs in their hands–then you would see the toddler’s ENTIRE ARM disappear into the dog’s mouth. Just as quickly the arm would come out, absent the cookie or hot dog. Kids never knew what hit them.
-
AuthorPosts