I wanted a name with 3 A's in it.old Lunenburg folklore says a boat with 3
A's in the name should be good luck for a boat.however Alianna was on the
boat when I purchased her, the previous owner had 2 daughters Alison and
Anna, just seemed to fit for me and seemed like she was indeed calling me.I
did not change the name because it was exactly right for my boat

 

  _____  

From: CnC-List [mailto:cnc-list-boun...@cnc-list.com] On Behalf Of Stevan
Plavsa
Sent: March 6, 2014 1:49 PM
To: cnc-list@cnc-list.com
Subject: Re: Stus-List Now Boat Names

 

erm. I wanted a pretty name, a feminine name and one that wasn't seen on the
stern of so many boats and not weighed with any sentiment .. I love the name
Victoria for a boat but there's probably a million of those. Virginia, etc.
I just wanted a name, devoid of personal meaning. Probably the opposite of
what most want but that's just me.

 

We kept a spreadsheet of potential names for over a year until we settled on
Suhana. It had the most lasting power out of the rest of the names on the
list and looked pretty. I heard the name on the Radio, Suhana Meharchand
from CBC radio. I heard her say her name on the radio driving home from work
and thought, "what a pretty name". It went on the list and that's pretty
well how the hundred or so other names got on the list too. Over time we
would cross names off that we got bored of. After settling we learned that
the meaning is suitable too: "The meaning of the name Suhana is 'charming',
'name of a star' or 'lovely'." I think my boat is very charming and lovely
:) and there's the C&C star.

 

"sue-hawna", not "sue-h'ana". People at my club always say Suzana. Oh well,
it doesn't bother me and I don't correct people. I've grown up with people
pronouncing my own name incorrectly all my life so it's something I've
learned to live with.

 

Steve

Suhana, C&C 32

Toronto

 

 

On Thu, Mar 6, 2014 at 12:37 PM, Stevan Plavsa <stevanpla...@gmail.com>
wrote:

that's awesome Edd. 

 

On Thu, Mar 6, 2014 at 12:24 PM, Edd Schillay <e...@schillay.com> wrote:

Richard,

 

My wife is also a big fan of that line, especially now that she uses Siri on
her phone and voice recognition on our iMac.

 



 

All the best,

 

Edd

 

 

Edd M. Schillay

Starship Enterprise

C&C 37+ | Sail No: NCC-1701-B

City Island, NY 

Starship Enterprise's <http://enterpriseb.blogspot.com/>  Captain's Log

 

On Mar 6, 2014, at 12:21 PM, Richard N. Bush <bushma...@aol.com> wrote:





Edd, my favorite line of all time* is from the Whale saving movie..."a
keyboard...how quaint"..., which my daughter converted to sailing; she says,
"hank on sails,...how quaint"; 

(* not counting Captain Ron-isms, of course)

Richard

1985 37 CB, slowly emerging from the ice...

 

Richard N. Bush Law Offices 
2950 Breckenridge Lane, Suite 9
Louisville, Kentucky 40220 
502-584-7255

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Edd Schillay <e...@schillay.com>
To: cnc-list <cnc-list@cnc-list.com>
Sent: Thu, Mar 6, 2014 10:28 am
Subject: Stus-List Now Boat Names

As you may have guessed, my boat's name is based on a Lucille Ball / Desi
Arnez-produced 1960's failed train-wreck NBC television series . . . 

 

. . . which led to highly-rated syndication, five spin-off television series
and 12 feature films, not to mention decades and decades of merchandising
dollars for Paramount/Viacom. 

 

For me, though, the Starship Enterprise was an "escape vehicle" - when I got
home from grade school in the 70s, I could leave all the pressures and
troubles behind, turn on WPIX channel 11, and I'll be exploring the final
frontier's strange new worlds, seeking out new life and new civilizations .
. .

 

In 1980, I bought my first sailboat, an O'Day 7-11 sailing dinghy, pretty
much right after the release of The Motion Picture, a wholly lousy film on
may levels, except for the Enterprise itself. Once again, I felt my
imagination was able to escape the day-to-day life in suburbia. There could
be no other name. The sailboat had to be named Enterprise. 

 

When I turned 18, after I got the whole "you're a man now" speech from my
father, I aptly decided to cut school to see the third movie with some
friends for my birthday, and got the worst birthday present ever - the
Enterprise exploded from self-destruct over Planet Genesis. My escape
vehicle was gone. Adulthood slapped me in the face - hard.

 

Fortunately, a couple of years later, I went to see the fourth feature film
- a time-travel story to rescue humpback whales from 20th-Century earth. At
the very end, Kirk and crew were delivered to a brand new Enterprise with a
hull number of NCC-1701-A. The escape vehicle was back and my imagination
could, one again, boldly go.

 

Since then, we have seen several future versions of the famed starship;
1701-B, 1701-C, 1701-D, 1701-E and even a brief glimpse of the 1701-J. 

 

So, like the series, I decided that all of my future vessels will also carry
the name Enterprise, and I'll have my very own escape vehicle to get away
from the pressure of work and life while exploring LI Sound and the
surrounding areas. 

 

As I tell my crew, when sailing on the Enterprise, we have one Prime
Directive - Wherever we go, we go boldly.

 

All the best,

 

Edd

 

Edd M. Schillay

Starship Enterprise

C&C 37+ | Sail No: NCC-1701-B

City Island, NY 

Starship Enterprise's <http://enterpriseb.blogspot.com/>  Captain's Log

 

 

 

 

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