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hurricane

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Posts posted by hurricane

  1. Very nice. My logo is at the bottom. Can you give me an estimate and email it to me at hurricane@piratesofthecoast.com? I have it in electronic form so it can be resized easily. I have it in paths or in any other format you may need to transfer for painting. Would want it in the faded looking black.

    Just the logo, not the name or any type.

    Thanks!

  2. Although many of us love history now, I don't think many of us did in high school. I certainly didn't. The reason was the way it was taught. Small wonder why kids today are turned off. Too many names, dates and places and not enough teaching how historical events trigger other things that lead up to why we are the way we are today.

    My son is almost 13. And it wasn't until I had him watch an episode or two of Connections that he got this. If you haven't watched the series, get it from Netflix. James Burke is amazing and his history is as much suspense and intrigue as it is historical archeology - things like how gold assaying created the atomic bomb. It makes history have meaning and more important, context. I don't think it's the electronics, it's the lack of context. Living history often comes off as boring because there's simply no relevance. Watch how people's eyes light up when you explain how modern sayings that came from this time period, "Don't go off half cocked" or "flash in the pan."

    And people can be turned off by a certain period of history and really find another fascinating. For me, I love the buccaneer period with Port Royal, land campaigns and Morgan. Don't really care of GAoP. So even I gloss over when I am around it. Others like the Civil War or the Revolutionary War instead of pirates. Still others like WW II events. What's rich history to one person may be dullsville to another.

    It has to be interesting and it has to have relevance. Otherwise, it is just another history lesson. The only difference being the audience doesn't have to remember dates and places for the test. You simply can't please everyone.

  3. I think you hit it on the head, Bo.

    If you do exact re-enactment to teach and engage the public, it's rarely going to be successful. The public likes to be entertained these days. They don't want to educate. I suppose that's why far more people watch Survivor and American Idol than the History Channel.

    You have to do it for yourself. Frankly, I think the re-enactments would be much better if there weren't any public around, as you say, "experimental archeology." That way you don't have to interrupt the impression to pose for photos or have someone interject their modern concepts (i.e. PotC) into what you're doing so you have to pull yourself out, address the history vs. fiction, and go back to what you're doing.

    I think some of these events would be more fun for the re-enactors if the public just walked through it as a living diorama/living museum than trying to engage them in something they often seem loath to learn about. When we were at PiP a couple of years ago doing a period tavern, we couldn't even get people to play the games with us. Maddening.

  4. Not to destroy any illusions of stepping back in time, but if you look south at about 3:39 p.m. Friday (if it goes off on time), an Atlas V is launching from the Cape's Complex 41. It's carrying the super secret but no so secret X-37 back up again.

  5. Well Rover doesn't make much sense since there is a Land Rover that's been on the market for decades and people call it Rover for short. So I think you're stuck with the other, unless you want people to think you're talking about your Land Rover instead.

    Unfortunately, beyond that I've never gave my cars decent names, except for the Green Monster and Pos (Piece of Sh**). So I'm probably not much help since I don't like cars.

  6. It was wrecked before he reached Panama. Without the ship's bell or a name tag with Henry Morgan on it, proving it was indeed his ship as opposed to the others that were wrecked is difficult at best. As I said, want to see his cannon? Go to Port Royal, walk through the gate, turn right, head to the wall. They're right there.

  7. You can see three of his cannon at Fort Charles in Port Royal. They were salvaged when he ran his ship aground at Ile a Vache (Cow Island).

    The search for the cannon in the Chagres has been going on for some time. Morgan actually had sent three ships into the river before his own raid, then the Satisfaction. Three or four ships followed and were lost along with the Satisfaction. So it could be any one of the ships and I doubt Morgan really cared. He had a habit of losing ships, especially his flagships - he lost three all told to poor navigation and seamanship.

    Here's one of the cannon being raised.

    http://www.pasthorizons.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/raising.jpg

    It's always nice to find remnants of the past, but I don't think it's anymore earthshaking than the ones sitting at Port Royal that have been traced to the Cow Island incident when he lost the Merchant.

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