#1 2008-04-24 10:04:49

Two from this past weekend's trip.

http://img113.imageshack.us/img113/8194/img0791xi2.jpg

http://img84.imageshack.us/img84/2931/prideds2.jpg

And a bit of the cruel (well only cruel if you're a power boater or freight mate):

http://freshcrash.com/boatcrash.htm

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#2 2008-04-24 10:12:58

That is a beautiful ship.

How many people does it take to sail it? Do you guys go out there to learn, or to party?

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#3 2008-04-24 10:32:43

Learn, party, pillage, plunder, rabble rouse...cavort with other dirty deckhands.  Climb the ratlines drunk, swing from a masthead...harass the land trapped and generally miserable visitors.  Sing along to Flogging Molly and any other worthy music.  Throw large objects at anyone who mentions Jimmy Buffet, boose cruises, Jamaica, or parrots.  Generally thumb our noses at anyone in a floating object with more than 15cc's of engine power. Spend most of our time praying for good wind and smacking down anyone that dares bring a banana on board.

That boat there takes a company of 12.  2 captains, 2 mates, deckhands, engineer, and a cook.  Of course normally it's about 6 crew unless it's a long trip.

My current takes a company of 4.  1 captain, 1 mate, 2 deckhands - but it can be run well with 2 who know their stuff.  Any of which may also double as engineer and cook.  I've learned a lot about diesel engines, dual tank switching, stuffing boxes, yawl boats, wiring, oil changing, and other things I really am not sure I want to know about.

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#4 2008-04-24 12:16:25

Did anyone say...."FLOGGING MOLLY'S"?

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#5 2008-04-24 15:10:50

Nce RT. Which schooner is that?

edit: thats the Pride isn't it. It says she moved down the bay from winter docking this past week. The rig looks deceptively small from that angle.

A friend was the mate on the original Pride in 1986 when she was hit by a microburst downdraft from a squall line. She took a knockdown and a miscaulculated flaw in her stability combined with the error of placing a deck hatch too close to her rail caused her to flood and never right. She started to sink even before the crew could free the sails. Went down in a few minutes. They barely got the liferaft clear and  2 crew plus the captain never appeared from the ship to clamber in the raft. Unfortunately they had no radio or functional Epirb. The friggin analog Epirbs in those days were the size of a scuba tank, they now are as big as a tall boy beer. With no distress call being sent they drifted for 4 days with no one being aware of the tragedy till they signaled a freighter at night with a flashlight. My friend proposed in the raft to his wife of this day. Saying if we live through this together we should get married.

They are pretty tough folks. Undeterred they went on to buy a beautiful 80 foot new wood schooner and chartered their way around the world. Giving birth to a child along  the first trans pacific voyage. Sounds rich but they were not. Doing it  by diligent work and fortunate business.

Last edited by Johnny_Rotten (2008-04-24 20:56:37)

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#6 2008-04-24 15:42:31

Roger_That wrote:

Learn, party, pillage, plunder, rabble rouse...cavort with other dirty deckhands.  Climb the ratlines drunk, swing from a masthead...harass the land trapped and generally miserable visitors.  Sing along to Flogging Molly and any other worthy music.  Throw large objects at anyone who mentions Jimmy Buffet, boose cruises, Jamaica, or parrots.  Generally thumb our noses at anyone in a floating object with more than 15cc's of engine power. Spend most of our time praying for good wind and smacking down anyone that dares bring a banana on board.

That boat there takes a company of 12.  2 captains, 2 mates, deckhands, engineer, and a cook.  Of course normally it's about 6 crew unless it's a long trip.

My current takes a company of 4.  1 captain, 1 mate, 2 deckhands - but it can be run well with 2 who know their stuff.  Any of which may also double as engineer and cook.  I've learned a lot about diesel engines, dual tank switching, stuffing boxes, yawl boats, wiring, oil changing, and other things I really am not sure I want to know about.

You find a good crew and these types of boats can be loads of hearty fun mixed with moments of sublime beauty.

When my friend first got our 105 foot square rigged topsail ketch and we were launching the charter business the initial CG liscence requiremnt was just 3. I don't think they took into account what it takes to actually sail and based that on the extremely adept manuverability of the dual adjustable prop configuration and powerful auxillery engines. Before we attracted a  pool of crew we took a couple of day trips on the bay with just a captain, stewardess and mate. Even managing to set all the working sails which only required the manipulation of 90 of the 140 lines of running rigging terminated around the deck at belaying pins.

This experience was great ammunitin whenever some tired overworked deckhand started complaining about having to keep recoiling the miles of line whenever we braced the yards around for a tack.

Having sailed on 18th century boats that are completely rigged with rope and before the age of the donkey engine I gained a new understanding of what it meant that labor was cheap in the past.

When I later did troubleshooting for our technology company it was driven home to me how much this has changed. The cost of labor in our country is so great that it is often the primary factor in service costs. It was somewhat disheartning to both me and my clients to have to show them that while the fix for their expensive equipment was a rather simple electronic repair, which we were quite capable of doing, the cost of labor to access it in the field was so high that it was better to junk the entire system and replace it with new.

Last edited by Johnny_Rotten (2008-04-24 15:49:22)

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#7 2008-04-24 16:09:08

It's not a schooner... it's a Sailboat.

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#8 2008-04-24 17:07:22

Roger_That wrote:

And a bit of the cruel (well only cruel if you're a power boater or freight mate):

http://freshcrash.com/boatcrash.htm

Oh never fear me pretties, I have some great tales of harrowing snail boat cruelities.

But to start I will share this sight I got to watch over a few months.

http://img514.imageshack.us/img514/4452/aplpanamalp4.jpg

2 winters ago I spent the winter and spring in Mexico moving US based racing sailnoats to and fro. This APL lines container ship made a careless turn entering into Enenada and wided up on the beach in front of the villas and tourists on Christmass day.

Of course the Mexicans are experts at making lemonade when life hands you lemons and an entire industry was born on the beach.

http://img99.imageshack.us/img99/1710/aplpanama5oo8.png

An unfortunate combination of higher high spring tide and an ensuing  storm pushed it right into the breakers. You could walk out and touch it at low tide. As you can see it is rather full. I suppose it might be some poetic justice for this American company  trying to offload its US bound cargo in Mexico rather than Long Beach. A taste of things to come once they complete the new giacantic cargo terminal 1000 miles south in Mazaltan bay and the superhighway they are building north to the new international port of entry in Kansas. All for the express purpose of serving the American market.

But I digress. This monstor had so many containers onboard that it was hopelessly stuck. They tried heaving.

http://img258.imageshack.us/img258/6125/aplpanama2hf9.jpg

It did not budge a foot. They unloaded about a quarter of the 1000 or so with a helocopter. This took a month and could only lift the topmost lighter containers. On the next high tide a month later they tried the tugs again. No dice.

http://img245.imageshack.us/img245/8455/aplpanama4pj0.jpg

I went down the coast while they started moving the largest helicopter in the world up from Brazil and came back tanned, wind burned and gorged on trolled tuna and fine tequila to find it still there. It was a weird site to see approching from the sea. There was so much cargo that it began to impact the American market. Apple had a major crisis when it could not get its shipwrecked parts to build products. Sony ran out of inventory. With only a few Higher high tides a year spaced a minimum of a 4 weeks apart they were in a pickle. They then got serious and built an entire pier out across thebeach to the ship and constructed huge skycranes. 2 more were built upon the ship itself just to move containers across the deck to where they could be plucked off.


http://img99.imageshack.us/img99/8898/aplpanama6iz9.jpg

But there are so many containers on these ships  It took a month to unload. The cranes could only move a container every on average 20 minutes or more rather then the 2 minutes x 4 cargo cranes at a modern terminal.

I went south agian and upon returning in late March the thing was still there, unloaded put awaiting the final Spring tide of the season. The next one wasn't till July.

http://img180.imageshack.us/img180/4153/aplpanama7vg1.jpg

They finally succeded in yanking it off the beach with the assistence of giant pumps which cut out a channel in the sand and then reversed to pump water in to liquify the sand below the keel.

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#9 2008-04-24 19:59:01

A friend was serving as Captain when he managed to take this jibboom,

http://img174.imageshack.us/img174/2485/californianxw4.jpg

And stick it through the side windows of a VW parked on the pierside. Thereby picking it up, sweeping it across the pier and depositing it precariously balanced along the bulkhead's edge.

As you can see from the sailplan the jibboom sticks 40 feet out and up from the bow. Making it quite a challenge to bring this single screw wooden hull alongside a dock whenever the wind and current are unfavorable.

http://img294.imageshack.us/img294/476/casailplanmt0.jpg

Somedays it sucks to be master. It isn't that often that a ship totals a car either. Try explaining that to your insurance company.

Last edited by Johnny_Rotten (2008-04-24 20:02:22)

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#10 2008-04-24 20:36:05

Some shipmates were running the brig to the right on a trip up the Columbia river.

http://img174.imageshack.us/img174/889/hcrichmondbcrd2.jpg

Way upriver through the many locks, they were carrying guests on a pleasent daysail when all of a sudden the elevator train bridge they were passing under descended without warning on top of them.

Normally kept in the up position these unattended automatic bridges are not supposed to have unscheduled decents of their spans without much clanging of alarms, sirens and flashing of lights. But as luck would have it, and to the momentary disbelief of the crew, there it was decending on top of them. And I mean right into them. It hit the after Main mast structure square in the middle and kept coming down. With the most awful cracking sound you never want to hear on a wooden boat, the bridge shattered the mainmast's two topmasts and the yards pealed off dangling by their chains and rigging. The span then split the main mast, which is the lowest section made from one sold douglas fir 2 1/2 feet wide, like kindling all the way down to the keel step. The boat gave such a tremendous shudder that they did not know if it had blown out the keel timbers. The crew were grabbing the passengers and rudely shoving them into fetal positions tucked against the bulwarks as debris rained down on them from above. When the boat twisted free in the current and popped out from under the bridge to everyones surprise there were no injuries and no damage to the hull.

It was such a freak accident of timing. The CG cleared the ship and crew of any fault. The rail line then settled for all damages without a fuss counting their blessings no one was killed.

That was a pretty good tale for the crew to tell. But nothing like the crazed look they got in their eyes when they recalled what it was like to bring such a heavy bluff-bowed,  round hulled underpowered squarerigger across the booming Columbia River bar. When the ship's cannons came loose in the rolling, to smash back and forth across the deck before jettisoning themselves over the side.

Oh and that brig is seen in quite a bit of the first Pirates of the Carribean as the Interceptor Jack Sparrow stole.

Last edited by Johnny_Rotten (2008-04-24 21:20:50)

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#11 2008-04-25 08:07:10

Johnny_Rotten wrote:

Nce RT. Which schooner is that?

edit: thats the Pride isn't it. It says she moved down the bay from winter docking this past week. The rig looks deceptively small from that angle.

A friend was the mate on the original Pride in 1986 when she was hit by a microburst downdraft from a squall line. She took a knockdown and a miscaulculated flaw in her stability combined with the error of placing a deck hatch too close to her rail caused her to flood and never right. She started to sink even before the crew could free the sails. Went down in a few minutes. They barely got the liferaft clear and  2 crew plus the captain never appeared from the ship to clamber in the raft. Unfortunately they had no radio or functional Epirb. The friggin analog Epirbs in those days were the size of a scuba tank, they now are as big as a tall boy beer. With no distress call being sent they drifted for 4 days with no one being aware of the tragedy till they signaled a freighter at night with a flashlight. My friend proposed in the raft to his wife of this day. Saying if we live through this together we should get married.

They are pretty tough folks. Undeterred they went on to buy a beautiful 80 foot new wood schooner and chartered their way around the world. Giving birth to a child along  the first trans pacific voyage. Sounds rich but they were not. Doing it  by diligent work and fortunate business.

I am very familiar with the original Pride's story.  Such a sad story.  However I was not privy to the interesting tidbit you added in.  I always thought that if I ever found someone I'd be happy with again, it would be while on a boat... we'll see.

Pride II got dismasted over in France last year (or year before?) when she was doing a transatlantic.  There are some interesting photos I have somewhere...but I have to sift through about 8000 poorly organized sailing images...haha.

I'd like to deckhand on Pride, but alas I am committed to land and a few pets at the moment that I don't have the heart to re-home.  Plus some bills I need to pay off first because I'm pretty sure crewing isn't going to pay those at all...

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#12 2008-04-25 08:30:00

Awesome pics and stories JR.

The only interesting things of recent that I can add to that are these: 

We had one of the boat's benefactors offer to give us hand tongs for oystering.  He brought them up from Crisfield on his Lexus.  Need I say more?:

http://img218.imageshack.us/img218/8679/img0746ab6.jpg

The other incident I witnessed was watching the Thomas Clyde snap her boom mid-race.  The captain had just put on new sails, but hadn't attached his reef lines yet.  Due to the windy weather (duh) and an unexpected puff of wind, the boom snapped like a tooth pick.  I was glaring through my 200mm lens from my boat at the time, as they were right behind us.  I brought Lawrence photos the next year of his boom-snap.  In true waterman fashion, he guffawed "Goddamn I'm still paying for that".

http://img222.imageshack.us/img222/1729/img7192bw3.jpg

http://img224.imageshack.us/img224/6366/img7237cg9.jpg

About 2 years ago, our captain and relief captain walked off the boat with no notice.  Long story, their own fault really.  We had a relief captain come up from Cambridge who while docking after a cruise, took out the end pylon and a huge chunk of the wood under our bowsprit.  The pylon finally got replaced this year, as well as the chunk missing.  He literally knocked the pylon in half.  Luckily it took more of the damage than our boat.

http://img218.imageshack.us/img218/4484/img7426ep7.jpg

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#13 2008-04-26 15:52:39

I found this link to a story that always knocks em down..

http://img508.imageshack.us/img508/7474/towboat01hz9.jpg

http://img255.imageshack.us/img255/5055/towboat02ek1.jpg

http://img166.imageshack.us/img166/6262/towboat03wo1.jpg

http://img255.imageshack.us/img255/6185/towboat04mm5.jpg

http://img166.imageshack.us/img166/6804/towboat05pm3.jpg

http://img166.imageshack.us/img166/4295/towboat06er2.jpg

http://img255.imageshack.us/img255/655/towboat07dw5.jpg

http://img166.imageshack.us/img166/3231/towboat08sw8.jpg

http://img166.imageshack.us/img166/1796/towboat09oa1.jpg

http://img166.imageshack.us/img166/1979/towboat10au9.jpg

http://img166.imageshack.us/img166/1610/towboat11wv1.jpg

http://img166.imageshack.us/img166/8862/towboat12cd4.jpg

http://img166.imageshack.us/img166/6861/towboat13gc4.jpg

http://img255.imageshack.us/img255/6052/towboat14dk4.jpg

http://img508.imageshack.us/img508/9304/towboat15dh3.jpg

http://img508.imageshack.us/img508/4676/towboat16qw1.jpg

http://img508.imageshack.us/img508/6814/towboat17bn1.jpg

http://img516.imageshack.us/img516/8787/towboat19tc9.jpg

http://img516.imageshack.us/img516/1729/towboat20vb6.jpg

Note in the last pics the smoke coming out the stack, that's a tough engine.

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#14 2008-04-26 16:34:21

I find all of this boat porn kind of intimidating, because all I have is a little dinghy.

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#15 2008-04-26 17:20:01

Don't let those myths deter you. Heck look at Whoogah. She likes them the older the better. Ones that require alot of handiwork just to coax them up to a modicum of speed, She is not afraid of a little dirt and the smell, even actually enjoys to get her hands all sticky with tar. When all others see is too much a work and more than a bit outdated she is able to find something to get all excited over.

Last edited by Johnny_Rotten (2008-04-26 17:22:58)

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#16 2008-04-26 17:40:32

Johnny_Rotten wrote:

Don't let those myths deter you. Heck look at Whoogah. She likes them the older the better. Ones that require alot of handiwork just to coax them up to a modicum of speed, She is not afraid of a little dirt and the smell,

https://cruelery.com/sidepic/winslow.homer.jpg


Winslow Homer painted this a 100+ years ago and I sailed a boat just like these from here to Nova Scotia and back alone when I was still too young to drive. I've sailed on about everything that floats but human density beyond  solo always makes me itch to hit the rat lines.

Auto-edited on 2020-08-02 to update URLs

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#17 2008-04-27 17:11:17

Hey JR,

That was both true, and perverted.  Depending on which way you look at it.

I prefer my boats old and crusty.  Just not my men.

RT

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#20 2008-04-30 01:14:32

Oh, good god. I actually remember that show.

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#21 2008-04-30 01:42:07

Taint wrote:

Oh, good god. I actually remember that show.

I used to try to watch it when I was a kid, but I could never figure out what the fuck was going on.

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#22 2008-04-30 07:38:37

tojo2000 wrote:

Taint wrote:

Oh, good god. I actually remember that show.

I used to try to watch it when I was a kid, but I could never figure out what the fuck was going on.

It may come as a shock to...absolutely no one that Hollywood is making it into a movie.

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#23 2008-04-30 13:20:32

OK, I lead this topic off course. Now, I'm returning it.

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#24 2008-04-30 13:40:32

Since Dirkman isn't around to say this I'd just like to point out on his behalf that this thread is one big tease.

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#25 2008-04-30 14:42:12

Taint wrote:

OK, I lead this topic off course. Now, I'm returning it.

Hey even a landlubber can have the full salty experience. This is usually a 20 minute ride across a few miles of inland waters of puget sound. There isn't enough fetch in most wind directions to raise a swell. But the rips can do strange things in these waters

In the much more narrow passes I have seen standing waves 4 to 5 feet tall during the peak ebb or flood.

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#26 2008-05-03 01:42:59

A crushing defeat ends this sea saga.

It is amazing this one was recovered. How it was done makes for a pretty good read.

Last edited by Johnny_Rotten (2008-05-03 01:43:25)

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#27 2008-05-03 01:45:24

Johnny_Rotten wrote:

A crushing defeat ends this sea saga.

It is amazing this one was recovered. How it was done makes for a pretty good read.

i have read this, a couple weeks ago or so, and i do concur that it is worht the reading.

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#29 2008-05-04 02:21:57

http://www.wired.com/images/slideshow/2008/04/gallery_survival_gadgets/4_urban_skiff.jpg

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#30 2008-05-04 04:47:26

Awesome. for years I carried in bags a vintage sailing Klepper along on coastal explorations.

But that reminds me of one of my favorite voyage accounts ever. I think it was in the 1970s National Geographic published the account of a voyage from The Irish sea to Newfoundland via Iceland  in a leather currach. All to prove possible the surviving written accounts from Irsih monks of the 6th century discovering the new world.

http://img120.imageshack.us/img120/7571/saintbrendangermanmanusgm0.jpg

Certainly one of the most crazy voyages of the modern era ever undertaken. No radios, no epirb, no modern navigational aids, no engine. Had they not stopped in the Hebrides islands and picked up a hulking hairy scottish volunteer who showed them how to survive on seal blubber, other local delicacies and had the endurance to lean into the freezing heaving seas to sew up leaking seams from the outside with sinew, slathering them with seal fat they would have never been heard of again.

They actual made it though. So while I suppose the Irish may have discovered the new world, as my forfathers come from a part of the US where I grew up thinking it was normal to spell  with two ll s and two dd s, where every place was named bryn this or lea that, I prefer to believe that Welsh Prince Madoc discovered the new world in 1170 and sired many native children.

Oh yeah here it is Tim Severin and the recreation of the Brendon voyage.

http://img404.imageshack.us/img404/9734/brendonvoyagehl7.jpg

Last edited by Johnny_Rotten (2008-05-04 04:59:27)

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#31 2008-05-04 18:11:36

http://www.xmere.com/forums/uploads/ple/plane_porn.jpg

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#32 2008-05-04 18:31:22

No No NO, this is boat porn you can only show aircraft porn if it is humping a boat.

The main squeeze approaches from the rear.

http://img120.imageshack.us/img120/3236/octopus3zp2.jpg

The little something something on the bow.

http://img145.imageshack.us/img145/2/octopus7dh9.jpg

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#33 2008-05-04 20:45:10

YES BOAT PORN ONLY!!!

Sorry, I have nothing else of value to contribute.  I just got back from 2 days of luxury camping (meaning there were bathrooms with actual showers in them).

Eh, it was at the beach though.  Camping on the beach is awesome.

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#34 2008-05-05 00:53:45

Excellent link, J-R.  I hadn't heard much about Prince Madoc since my senior year at Purdue, where I minored in Anthropology.  My favorite Anthro prof, Dr. Watson, had told us something of Prince Madoc, but since he was such an ardent Cambrophile, we mostly dismissed it as more of his beer-soaked ramblings.  I'd be interested to find out follow-up information on that research.

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#35 2011-10-11 10:32:16

http://fastcache.gawkerassets.com/assets/images/4/2011/10/xlarge_imonaboat.jpg
~ click ~

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#36 2011-10-11 13:24:45

This is the one going through feasibility studies in my laboratory now:

http://cdn.makezine.com/make/blogs/blog.makezine.com/assets_c/2010/11/dug14-thumb-600x616-58763.jpg

Mr Toad wrote:

There is nothing quite as much fun as simply messing about in boats

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#37 2011-10-11 20:41:37

My favourite boat porn...

http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_aUmqzFo_9tY/SwDIenNuj7I/AAAAAAAAAKg/dD2Qb2vg8y4/s1600/DSC00418.JPG

http://static.panoramio.com/photos/original/48941344.jpg

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#38 2011-10-11 21:03:14

That is nice boat porn indeed!

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#39 2011-10-11 23:29:31

https://cruelery.com/uploads/359_rambler_phaedo_3.jpeg

Auto-edited on 2020-08-02 to update URLs

Last edited by Johnny_Rotten (2011-10-11 23:32:53)

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