
Baluchi in his bubble
As we posted earlier this month, Reza Baluchi, an extreme runner, attempted to run the almost 1,000 miles from Florida to Bermuda in a sort of bubble — an inflatable cylinder with a metal frame, that looked sort of like a clear hamster wheel. Not surprisingly, he made it about 70 miles before he needed rescue by the US Coast Guard. The rescue cost taxpayers roughly $144,000. Incredibly, it now appears that Baluchi is going to attempt the same lame stunt again. From his website:
Reza plans to save money, design a 4th generation bubble and return to Miami to bubble across the Bermuda triangle again in January. His 4th generation bubble will be his best design yet. He’s going to make it faster with 4″ deep fins that will propel through the water quicker, especially with the 28 soccer balls he will stick between the frames that wrap around the circumference of the bubble.
Downrigging is one of those necessary chores on a sailing vessel at the end of a season before the winter sets in. The good folks at the
Captain Ron Strathman
Next season, the SS Badger may no longer be the “the filthiest ship on the Great Lakes.” With the end of the current sailing season, SS Badger will no longer dump coal ash into Lake Michigan. For years, there has been a running argument over whether the ship is a
If you are in the neighborhood, this is a most worthwhile event. There is also exiting news. At the fundraiser, the 



Carnival Magic Back in Galveston —
There are reports of a “small fire” aboard the 19th-century composite clipper ship, 
