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About that portable generator thingy.....
Not much of an adventurer myself.....never really have been. But I've
spent a lot of time outdoors in places where one inevitably discovers that, willy nilly, adventures happen. "Adventure" it should be remembered, is the past tense of calamity, disaster, serious pain in the ass, discomfort, injury, illness, terror, deprivation, sweat, tears, and blood.....and poison ivy, just to keep things lively. As a breathing (which is to say, still aging) non-adventurer, I can appreciate the allure of the comforts of home.....regardless of where I may be at any given moment. And, yes, I would gladly accept such comforts wherever I might be at any given moment.....well..... Seeking out the places where angels fear to tread seems to me to imply a certain willingness to forego some of the simple pleasures.....like satelliteT.V., microwave ovens, hot and cold running water, freshly filtered and frozen ice, connectivity.....even (heaven forefend!) moment by moment updates from and to ROFF!.....or used to, anyway. Yes, I DO drive an internal cumbustion engined automoblie to most of the waters I fish.....or did, anyway.....but I balk at insisting on a legal and/or moral right to continue driving in the stream. Easy enough for me, though.....I have never mastered the art of casting through the driver's side window. Might be different if I had my own solar powered mega-death-mobile from the windows of which I could harangue some poor dumb sonafabitch who had the temerity to use his cell phone in the stream. As I continue to breath, which is to say, to age, I hope I will continue to possess.....or at least to learn.....the simple civility and basic sense to do what *I* can do.....and leave the rest to those who can do it without a ****ing nuclear reactor in each ****ing pocket. giles who, in all fairness, has to admit that he thought a "honda generator" was a smallish nation is eastern asia. |
About that portable generator thingy.....
On Jan 11, 4:09*pm, Giles wrote:
Not much of an adventurer myself.....never really have been. *But I've spent a lot of time outdoors in places where one inevitably discovers that, willy nilly, adventures happen. *"Adventure" it should be remembered, is the past tense of calamity, disaster, serious pain in the ass, discomfort, injury, illness, terror, deprivation, sweat, tears, and blood.....and poison ivy, just to keep things lively. As a breathing (which is to say, still aging) non-adventurer, I can appreciate the allure of the comforts of home.....regardless of where I may be at any given moment. *And, yes, I would gladly accept such comforts wherever I might be at any given moment.....well..... Seeking out the places where angels fear to tread seems to me to imply a certain willingness to forego some of the simple pleasures.....like satelliteT.V., microwave ovens, hot and cold running water, freshly filtered and frozen ice, connectivity.....even (heaven forefend!) moment by moment updates from and to ROFF!.....or used to, anyway. Yes, I DO drive an internal cumbustion engined automoblie to most of the waters I fish.....or did, anyway.....but I balk at insisting on a legal and/or moral right to continue driving in the stream. *Easy enough for me, though.....I have never mastered the art of casting through the driver's side window. *Might be different if I had my own solar powered mega-death-mobile from the windows of which I could harangue some poor dumb sonafabitch who had the temerity to use his cell phone in the stream. As I continue to breath, which is to say, to age, I hope I will continue to possess.....or at least to learn.....the simple civility and basic sense to do what *I* can do.....and leave the rest to those who can do it without a ****ing nuclear reactor in each ****ing pocket. giles who, in all fairness, has to admit that he thought a "honda generator" was a smallish nation is eastern asia. So AC would be a no-no too right? ;+)) Actually I agree with you if I were camping. But basically what I have is a tin cabin and i want to do longer stays. Lights are nice as is a heater, both of which require juice. Fires are anethma for much of the year in wheat country. Ive never been able to burn outside and gas or kero lanterns in a camper are not a good idea. What it comes down to is triple aaa headlamps, or a 12v marine, and the ability to recharge after 2-3 days. Solar can do it at a price and I already use a tiny bit and will use more. But this time of year a little generator would be welcome, although double bagging it helps and chipping the ice off the beard in the AM doesn't take that much time. Dave |
About that portable generator thingy.....
On Jan 11, 7:05*pm, DaveS wrote:
On Jan 11, 4:09*pm, Giles wrote: Not much of an adventurer myself.....never really have been. *But I've spent a lot of time outdoors in places where one inevitably discovers that, willy nilly, adventures happen. *"Adventure" it should be remembered, is the past tense of calamity, disaster, serious pain in the ass, discomfort, injury, illness, terror, deprivation, sweat, tears, and blood.....and poison ivy, just to keep things lively. As a breathing (which is to say, still aging) non-adventurer, I can appreciate the allure of the comforts of home.....regardless of where I may be at any given moment. *And, yes, I would gladly accept such comforts wherever I might be at any given moment.....well..... Seeking out the places where angels fear to tread seems to me to imply a certain willingness to forego some of the simple pleasures.....like satelliteT.V., microwave ovens, hot and cold running water, freshly filtered and frozen ice, connectivity.....even (heaven forefend!) moment by moment updates from and to ROFF!.....or used to, anyway. Yes, I DO drive an internal cumbustion engined automoblie to most of the waters I fish.....or did, anyway.....but I balk at insisting on a legal and/or moral right to continue driving in the stream. *Easy enough for me, though.....I have never mastered the art of casting through the driver's side window. *Might be different if I had my own solar powered mega-death-mobile from the windows of which I could harangue some poor dumb sonafabitch who had the temerity to use his cell phone in the stream. As I continue to breath, which is to say, to age, I hope I will continue to possess.....or at least to learn.....the simple civility and basic sense to do what *I* can do.....and leave the rest to those who can do it without a ****ing nuclear reactor in each ****ing pocket. giles who, in all fairness, has to admit that he thought a "honda generator" was a smallish nation is eastern asia. So AC would be a no-no too right? ;+)) Actually I agree with you if I were camping. But basically what I have is a tin cabin and i want to do longer stays. Lights are nice as is a heater, both of which require juice. Fires are anethma for much of the year in wheat country. Ive never been able to burn outside and gas or kero lanterns in a camper are not a good idea. What it comes down to is triple aaa headlamps, or a 12v marine, and the ability to recharge after 2-3 days. Solar can do it at a price and I already use a tiny bit and will use more. But this time of year a little generator would be welcome, although double bagging it helps and chipping the ice off the beard in the AM doesn't take that much time. Dave Dave, Though you have had considerable input solar, I haven't seen much input wind power. Given that your place is located near a huge wind farm, that option should be well worth looking into. There are numerous small scale wind generator setups now available, and I believe you can even find plans on the web for DIY (all except the generator itself) wind turbines. Bob Weinberger |
About that portable generator thingy.....
On Jan 11, 10:11*pm, Bob wrote:
Dave, Though you have had considerable input solar, I haven't seen much input wind power. Given that your place is located near a huge wind farm, that option should be well worth looking into. There are numerous small scale wind generator setups now available, and I believe you can even find plans on the web for DIY (all except the generator itself) wind turbines. Bob Weinberger- Hide quoted text - - I did look into wind a year ago or so. And where i am is down from a gap to the West of me venturi effect. However, consensus seems to be that negs are 1. more moving parts and maintenance than solar.2. you still need a connection w/ the grid or a gen-set, 3. need a fairly large battery bank to store a useful head of power. I was surprised that there was more stuff available than a few years back, but mostly you were on your own piecing together a system at this point in time. And i suck at electricity as you can probably guess from the questions Ive been asking in these threads.:+)) Are you doing any fishing lately? Dave |
About that portable generator thingy.....
Just tossing in my two cents worth.
As an amateur radio operator (no longer "active") I used a tiny and very quiet Honda 300 watt gasoline generator with a 12v output, charging a marine battery which in turn powered a 120vac inverter rated at 600 watts. I bought the generator from another "Ham" who had bought it in Japan while employed by the US in a military-related capacity. As long as my peak power demands were less than about 500 watts, and not constant, the little generator kept things going nicely. If the generator ran out of gas, the battery kept the inverter going long enough for me to walk out and refuel the "system." It all worked pretty well, surprisingly. In fact, I've done a similar thing with a gasoline generator powering a 12v battery charger, maintaining a battery providing power for a 1,000 watt inverter. It wasn't efficient, but it worked. I'd guess one could replace the generator with a sufficiently large solar/wind supply to charge the battery. |
About that portable generator thingy.....
On Jan 13, 12:37*pm, DaveS wrote:
Are you doing any fishing lately? Dave Not really. After 7 decades of heaping abuse on this body, I've become pretty much a fair weather fisherman. Also, I haven't figured out this salt water flyfishing thing. Bob Weinberger |
About that portable generator thingy.....
Bob wrote:
On Jan 13, 12:37 pm, DaveS wrote: Are you doing any fishing lately? Dave Not really. After 7 decades of heaping abuse on this body, I've become pretty much a fair weather fisherman. Also, I haven't figured out this salt water flyfishing thing. Bob Weinberger The only question I have about Sal****er fishing is, IF you use salted minnows in freshwater fishing do you need to use freshwater minnows for salt water fishing??? I think the method used by Micheal J. "Crocodile" Dundee looks interesting.... |
About that portable generator thingy.....
On Jan 13, 11:26*pm, Bob wrote:
On Jan 13, 12:37*pm, DaveS wrote: Are you doing any fishing lately? Dave Not really. After 7 decades of heaping abuse on this body, I've become pretty much a fair weather fisherman. *Also, I haven't figured out this salt water flyfishing thing. Bob Weinberger We should get together over in Dayton. Smaller rivers than you are used to but lots of lower impact access. Per the salt I have been and still am a neophyte. Except for the catch as catch can stuff around the island for cutts and the rare Silver. Suggest you plug into this blog on the Tacoma Trib web site and read back a year or two. Good pix and realism as to what's out there. Good article a few issues back in Northwest Flyfishing mag also. http://blog.thenewstribune.com/fish/page/2/ Dave |
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