then again, that was the CANADIAN coast guard, its cold up thar ... they prolly had to lean so far overboard to get clear of the side of the boat, they hit the drink! (of course, if they were hittin the drink, that could account for it as well)<br /><br />
Allright I'll fess up. This may be a big mistake where is this thread going.<br />That's why I keep my trusty 2gal bucket onboard (callsign: urinal). Works great in those crowded bays/lakes when you can take care of business in a "stealthy" way. "No sir, I'm just rinsin' out my bait bucket."
So does this also mean that most of our canadian women that drown are found with thier pants around thier ankles? <br />Buy a boat with a porta-potti in/on it.
This hits home. I was fishing in canada the end of September. We were in a deep V aluminum boat without a floor. I was in the bow so I couldn't stand. We didn't have a bucket. I knealed in the seat and started to let loose. Just then I got this huge charlie horse in my thigh. I almost fell in the water, but managed to fall back into the boat. Of coursem, I did manage to **** all over the boat and myself. My brother-in-law couldn't stop laughing. I thought he was going to pee himself.
took the cat fishing ... of course the little biotch just rode her cat box into shore<br /><br /> <br /><br />and on wearing those mittens ... more than three shakes and yer playin wif it!!!!<br /><br />
Over here the bailer is the tool most used by my family for the toilet exercise, except for my wife. She finds the lemonade-cut-down bailer uncomfortable and uses the 2" opening of a stainless bottle perfect. She makes the comment that it's like a female hospital aparutus and works just fine without leaving the cabin or the warmth for that matter. <br />I recall as a teenager my sister trying to pee into a wide receptable in a dingy. Her horror wasn't the act of peeing nor the finding privacy, it was transferring the lot to the sea. Everybody must have had a hand on that lot that day and she wasn't pleased.<br />Ross
it's too easy to be standing up, a wave hits the boat and you lurch overboard-typically the weathers cold, you've got boots and heavy clothes on,no PFD, the motor is still going- and that's it- your clothes get waterlogged and you sink before they even turn the boat around-if you're fishing alone-you don't stand a chance-so guys- no joke- bucket and chuckit
Where is this thread going... I thought this was a family forum??<br />But to my Canuck Buds...Can't speak for the women: we down here in lower North America just hang it over till ya feel the water and do our Bizz... Yea I wish! Once fell over board trying to get that worm accross a 6" gunnell !!<br />Well at least no one asked me if I'd washed my hands <br /><br />Link
Guys, go to Amazon and checkout this book:<br /><br />"Everything you wanted to know about pissing on a small motor boat buy were afraid to ask"<br /><br />By I.P. Freely<br /><br />I hear it is a real pissa...Good bathroom reading. Everythiong comes out in the end.
Nice. Well howdy neighbor(ish). I'm up near the Thrifty's in Saanichton. I was wondering how long it'd be before I found a 'local' here <br />That's a nice area, I've flubbed so many golf balls into that lake off the #6 tee the water level's risen!