Sun tui is back in the water and has been out three times. I miss my father but have taken her out with my daughter and with friends. She looks beautiful, freshly painted and crisp.
Sun Tui II

Sun tui is back in the water and has been out three times. I miss my father but have taken her out with my daughter and with friends. She looks beautiful, freshly painted and crisp.
Yeah, it’s kind of like a selfie. I have one other one up, much more subtle, where my face is visible…. but you have to look very very carefully.
I am entering this into Photrablogger’s Mundane Monday Challenge…. thank you!
Inspired in part by this beautiful story:
“I’ve frequently not been in boats“.
http://everything2.com/title/I%2527ve+frequently+not+been+on+boats
Twilight on the Salish Sea in 2005.
For Ronovan writes weekly haiku word prompt: the words are gain and hound.
loose the hounds of talk
give a rumor such weight gain
obese heart attack
A photo of my parents, that I took during college. Dressed and made up for a costume party. I made the dragon on my mother’s shoulder in college and gave it to my sister. She gave it back to me the last time I saw her in hospice.
Happy Father’s Day
For Ronovan Write’s weekly haiku challenge, the words are lock and gab:
mothers and fathers
if you can’t play nice, my dears
sit and lock your gab
the picture is my father playing guitar
Sun Tui, my father’s boat and now mine, is back in the water. Two weeks ago today. Another boat ran into her and broke a chain plate and bent a stay last summer, just when I was thinking of sailing. I had not sailed her in about three years at that point, because of my sister having end stage cancer, my father’s emphysema getting worse, both dying.
Sun Tui means wind/water machine, I’m told. She is a 23 foot sloop, with a nearly full keel. She has plywood sides, not planks. She was built by American Marine in Hong Kong in 1959. She has a sister ship in the San Francisco Maritime Museum, the Mermaid. The Mermaid has a different keel. The Mermaid was sailed from Japan to San Francisco by Kinichi Horie, who made the first known solo nonstop crossing of the Pacific in the Mermaid in 1962. He was promptly arrested, because he was 23 and it had not occurred to him to bring a passport. He is known as Japan’s most famous sailor and has sailed many more boats all over.
My father bought Sun Tui in 2002, for $1900.00. Her sides were rotting out. He had the Port Townsend Shipwright’s Co-op replace the sides with 17 layer plywood. He said proudly, “The plywood is guaranteed by Lloyd’s of London.” He had a new jib made and a mainsail cover and a full boat cover. Then we sailed quite a lot, mostly in Port Townsend Bay. My daughter says she hated it when she was little. My father always brought oreos and orange soda. We would sail for a few hours because the kids would start banging against the walls and anyhow, I always had more work.
We raced, too. We were classed with the Thunderbirds, which are faster. They are lighter and have less keel. The trade off is that if one were to go out on the Pacific, Sun Tui is more stable. We beat the Thunderbirds once because my father knew the tides and that there was a backswirl along the shore. The tide carried us along more quickly, even though it seemed out of the way.
Once my father was out with the small fleet for one of the races and it was foggy. They were waiting for the fog to lift. The ferry goes back and forth from Whidby Island and the sailboats huddled to one side of the bay or the other, so the ferry wouldn’t squash them. Many boats quit, but my father stubbornly stayed out until the fog lifted enough to race. They gave him a pennant for tenacity on that one.
Sun Tui has had three major overhauls since my father bought her. The picture is from 2010, after the second, being carried back to the water, mast not back in place yet. I’ve sailed her three times since she went back in the water, now. I miss my father, but I think of him when I sail.
A year ago a friend asked me, “Did they teach you latin in medical school?”
I said, “No, but I took two years in high school. Then I was an exchange student to Denmark and forgot most of it.”
He is learning latin. He is studying verb conjugation and he showed me various Youtube songs to remember it. So here is my present tense conjugation poem. Next, it needs a tune…. or a voice to set it into memory. I am going to hint to another wordpress author/reader……
There are a few other tenses to work with besides the present active indicative. I think that to make each one memorable, a different rhyme pattern or tune should be used. Let’s see. Go to it fellow noders! Veni, vidi, vici!
Amo: amare with an o
and you must drop the ARE, you know.
That’s I love, you know it’s true
The latin version of “I love you.”
Amas: amare with an s
Drop R and E, please say yes
You love, in latin, present tense
You love latin beyond all sense
Amat: amare with a t
Drop R and E, you start to see
She loves, he loves, it loves me
So much love is great to see
Amamus: add a mus you must
Drop R and E, a change is just
We love in the here and now
We love poems about purple cows
Amatis: tis time to add a tis
Drop r and e, remember this
You all love, ya’ll is not a word
But yawls are sailboats so I’ve heard
Amant: N and T complete the pattern
Drop r and e, you’re not a slattern
They love, they do, they truly do
They love me as much as you
In summation
a revelation
of loving latin
conjugation
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