March 8, 2008

Dynamic Inertia

3/8
Newton's first law of motion says that an object at rest tends to stay at rest and an object in motion tends to stay in motion with the same speed and in the same direction unless acted upon by an unbalanced force. Well, we most definitely are in motion here in Lunenburg. Our dynamic inertia brings us full ahead into the unbalancing force of the imminent black-diamond slope of work as we speed to the final weeks before our departure.

We’ve been sending down braces and their gear from aloft for overhauling. The braces are what we use to adjust the angle of out squares’ls. When we want to brace hard to starboard, we cast off or ease away the port side braces, and haul away on the starboard braces, for example. It’s much more difficult to do all this underway, so it is one of our major rigging priorities. It’s also exciting to getting back into the rig, spending several hours a day out on the Picton Castle's yardarms.


Plus, being aloft on the yards is a great workout. After the first couple days, every muscle in my body was sore. My legs get sore from supporting my body, my lower back and abs are sore from keeping balance, and acting as the fulcrum point whenever I have to haul anything up, which in turn works my shoulders and arms. I can feel myself getting back into square-rigger shape.

The biggest beneficiary is my lower back. I have had back problems since the end of the summer, and my friend Rebecca, a licensed physiotherapist has worked on it and given me two acupuncture sessions to alleviate the pain in exchange for homemade fried chicken dinners. But being aloft is basically one continuous back extension exercise, and as my lower back muscles have strengthened, the back pain has diminished. After two weeks with many hours aloft, I feel good as new.

The weekends have been pretty epic here too. Last weekend we all headed to shipmate Amanda’s house on Briar Island, situated at the doorstep of the Bay of Fundy, famous for its 50-foot tides.

Briar Island may be one of my new favorite places. Salty beauty as I have ever encountered, right on par with beloved Gloucester. Amanda’s big brother is a lobsterman, as is her father, and he took us out for a spin around the island in his boat, letting everyone take a turn at the wheel as we circumnavigated the island's ragged basalt shoreline. Pictured here are my friends and former shipmates, Rebecca and Logan.
After that, Finn, Maggie and I headed back to Lunenburg to stand watches at the ship with Lynsey, as a nasty storm was blowing in. Unfortunately, our weekend gained a new adventurous flavor while passing through the backways in Nova Scotian blizzard, Maggie’s car spun off the road and settled in a snow banked ditch. The car and her crew were fine. It was cold, and the snow was coming in horizontally. While we waited for the tow truck, we found shelter in an abandoned hunting cabin a 50 or so yards off the road. The truck pulled us out and we turned back for Digby, the nearest town. It turned out to be no big deal, but at the time it was pretty intense feeling stranded in a snow covered back woods highway, 60 km from anywhere.
Life looks to continue its upward swing in momentum here, as Chad, my buddy of buddies, is headed here for a proper Picton Castle/Nova Scotia weekend, a road trip to Boston, and then I am flying back to Kansas City for the next weekend and my brother Brian’s 16th birthday. Then, back to it, getting ready for the trip, an Atlantic crossing, tour of Europe, duck into the Mediterranean, down Africa, across to Brazil, up through the Caribbean, and back here. Then, maybe, things will slow down…

5 comments:

Cara said...

I appreciate that drawing...


You're turning into quite a spiderman.

codysletten said...

Ben,

Hello my name is Cody. I going to be joining the ship in Bergen. We met back in October during my interview. I was just wondering if you had any tips on what I should be bringing and not bringing with on the trip, and any others tips you might have for me. Please don't go out of your way, I just thought I'd give it shot.

Thanks, see you in Norway,

Cody Sletten

Ben Rogers said...

Don't know if you'll get this Cody, but if you want to give me your e-mail address I can send along a message. Your profile is locked.

codysletten said...

Ben,

codysletten@gmail.com

Thanks a lot for getting back to me.

Cody

Unknown said...

WHY oh WHY do people have to ruin science. Your definition is off... by alot... but the only reason you use it is because you had writers block, opening with something unrelated or slightly related, allows for an easier transition into topic. But it DOES NOT make sense.

Sigh.

And there is no such thing as dynamic inertia.

Now repeat after me "I will not encourage misinformation for the sake of an opening paragraph."


Newtons First Law of Motion: An object in rest stays in rest and an object in motion stays in motion, unless an outside force acts upon it.

don't go adding "speed, direction, tends, unballanced forces" to it... they have nothing to do with the law. That's net force, covered in a different chapter. Newtons First Law of Motion is about the Preservation of Energy, Work Energy Functions... INERTIA. An objects resistance to change... sqrt(M)!


And do you know the worse part of this whole fiasco? That first paragraph is practically incomprehenible, "black-diamond slope of work" means nothing in contemporary english...

I understand you were trying to create some alliteration, but realize that you still have to follow some basic rules.

Ship of Work makes perfect sense, no? Simple trick is to replace your allertiation with the noun it represents...

Nvm. Crazy Person. Just googling "dynamic inertia" to see peoples take on a revolutionary new way to attact people-who-can't-think-worth-shit infomercials