WakeWorld

WakeWorld (http://www.wakeworld.com/forum/index.php)
-   Archive through March 15, 2005 (http://www.wakeworld.com/forum/forumdisplay.php?f=218303)
-   -   Kayak boat or ? (http://www.wakeworld.com/forum/showthread.php?t=209188)

surfnfury65 01-29-2005 9:01 AM

I work with a couple guys who claim their "Kayaks" are "BOATS." How many of you consider this to be a true statement?

mikeski 01-29-2005 9:38 AM

From dictionary.com <BR> <BR>Boat: <BR>- A relatively small, usually open craft of a size that might be carried aboard a ship. <BR>- An inland vessel of any size. <BR>- A ship or submarine. <BR> <BR>sounds like a boat to me. Technically you could probably call a floating beer bottle a boat ... <BR>

kybool 01-29-2005 9:39 AM

last I checked you sit in it and it floats. A kayak may not be a "power boat" but they are definitely boats.

01-29-2005 10:44 PM

If they call their kayaks boats, just start calling your boat a ship, lol.

salmon_tacos 01-30-2005 12:18 AM

<b>mark d</b>, <BR> <BR>The problem with that is that a kayak actually is a boat, whereas a wakeboard boat is certainly not a ship. <BR> <BR>KAYAK: <BR> 1. An Inuit or Eskimo boat consisting of a light wooden frame covered with watertight skins except for a single or double opening in the center, and propelled by a double-bladed paddle. <BR> 2. A lightweight canoe that is similar in design. <BR> <BR>CANOE: <BR> A light, open, slender boat that has pointed ends and is propelled by paddles. <BR> <BR>SHIP: <BR> 1. A vessel of considerable size for deep-water navigation. <BR> 2. A sailing vessel having three or more square-rigged masts. <BR> <BR><b>Mikeski</b>, <BR> <BR>I would agree with your post except for the beer bottle thing. I'd say to qualify as a vessel (nautical term) or craft, it would have to carry at least one person.

01-30-2005 10:57 PM

Well, the term "considerable size" is certainly open to interpertation. As for the three masts...would three high polls work? lol

salmon_tacos 01-31-2005 12:00 AM

considerable: "Large in amount, extent, or degree" <BR> <BR>I certainly wouldn't call a wakeboard boat a large vessel. Consider the sizes of these vessels: <BR> <BR>Oil Tanker (large extreme): 1500 x 250 x 200 = 75 million cubic feet <BR> <BR>Wakeboard boat: 20 x 8 x 4 = 640 cubic feet <BR> <BR>Kayak (small extreme): 6 x 3 x 2 = 36 cubic feet <BR> <BR>So the wakeboard boat would be at about the .00085th percentile when it comes to vessel size.

whit 01-31-2005 2:47 AM

What is scary are the number of people that either don't know or don't care about right of way.


All times are GMT -7. The time now is 10:25 AM.