Image 1 — Any hope for this mast?
Image 2 — Any hope for this mast?

Any hope for this mast?

Update:

Thanks everyone for the suggestions. Having heard no dire warnings I rigged it this afternoon and had a dandy sail. The boat handled beautifully, flying hull and all.

My original mast is nice and safe hanging on the side of our house just in case this one folds up but I think it is looking pretty good.

Unfortunate I can't put photos in reply comments here.

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I picked up this '84 H16 after my'73 H16 had a catastrophic hull failure. I hadn't noticed the curve to the mast.

There's no obvious trauma - it isn't folded or dented. I'm wondering if it sat for a long time on its side on the trailer and just sagged.

Thoughts? Should I try it? Or use my old mast? I think I'd have to swap the mast bases?

u/4shadowedbm — 1 day ago
▲ 475 r/GreenPartyManitoba+3 crossposts

Manitoba environmental groups are sounding the alarm about pollution in Lake Winnipeg even as they fight a legal battle U.S. mega dairy farms.

The Manitoba Eco-Network and other environmental groups have been fighting the two proposed dairy farms for a year and a half. The coalition claims that phosphorus and nitrogen runoff from the waste produced by the proposed farms will flow up the river to the lake, creating toxic blue-green algae.

“The reality is that lake Winnipeg is very threatened from a number of sources and one more additive stress, the lake simply can’t handle,” said James Beddome, executive director, Manitoba Eco-Network.

“It’s ongoing, we’re in administrative court in North Dakota, we’ll have some arguments over the summer and what we’re calling a drain is not a drain appeal. We continue to engage with experts, so we’ve engaged with experts at the University of Manitoba, we also had another expert down in the states in Hillsboro.”

As it stands, the two projects are moving forward despite the legal challenge. The two proposed farms, located in Hillsboro and Abercrombie, North Dakota, would bring with them a combined 37,000 cows, but it isn’t the only worry for the health of the lake.

“These two projects are a concern, but there’s a number of concerns on the watershed, including other agriculture developments here in Manitoba, drainage of wetlands, impacts from Hydro, impacts from the sewage systems,” Beddome said.

U of W student Allyza Tabirara is in her own fight to save the lake. As part of her Master of Science research that begins this fall, Tabirara is looking at reducing phosphorus in the Lake Winnipeg Basin

“A lot of work needs to be done,” Tabirara says. “The gist of my study is looking at drainage leakage, to see how much phosphorus could be stores in those drainage leakages, and how much that phosphorous can eventually be contributed back to Lake Winnipeg.”

She agrees that the phosphorous levels are hitting the lake on multiple fronts, and is concerned that future generations could lose the lake for good if nothing is done.

“I’m very passionate about my work, I’m very passionate about saving lake Winnipeg and red river and other aquatic bodies that we have here in Manitoba and I think if I can have a percentage maybe one or two per cent in helping stopping that problem, then it would be really meaningful for myself but also for the community,” Tabirara said.

In a statement to CityNews, Riverview LLP, the Minnesota-based agriculture company that proposed both dairy farms, said, “Our dairies are designed and managed to meet or exceed strict environmental standards, and both the proposed North Dakota dairies underwent a thorough, science-based review by the North Dakota Department of Environmental Quality. These safeguards ensure that water quality and natural resources are protected at every stage of design, construction, and operation.”

u/4shadowedbm — 1 month ago
▲ 265 r/NoLawns

Just Venting...

I live in the Boreal Forest in SE Manitoba. IN the forest. My neighbour just hired two young adults to go through their property and use leaf blowers to rake the forest. Leaves and gas fumes and noise. I am watching with horrified interest to see if they are going to put the leaves into plastic bags and then into the transfer station which then gets carted 150 km to the dump.

I don't even know how to start a conversation about how important that litter is for nutrients and habitat. "Dude, go back to the city" crosses my mind as a starting point.

The hilarious (kind of) part is the next big wind will just blow my forest floor litter on to their nice clean forest.

There should be a flair for "brain exploding".

Thanks for listening.

reddit.com
u/4shadowedbm — 2 months ago

Are We Building Stranded Assets?

It seems that all our leaders from Conservatives to Liberals to NDP are talking about pinning our economic future on pipelines and LNG production. Billions of dollars of public investment will be needed to build our fossil fuel extraction and exports.

Climate risks aside - which aren't trivial by any means - will the world still want our increasingly more expensive fossil fuels? Or are we going to have billions in "investments" that will never come close to recovering the cost?

https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2026-05-11/why-70-should-be-the-most-worrying-number-for-lng?accessToken=eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9.eyJzb3VyY2UiOiJTdWJzY3JpYmVyR2lmdGVkQXJ0aWNsZSIsImlhdCI6MTc3ODU4NTkwMSwiZXhwIjoxNzc5MTkwNzAxLCJhcnRpY2xlSWQiOiJURVZaRzdLSVVQU00wMCIsImJjb25uZWN0SWQiOiJGMThDQ0VDNEUzODg0REQxODI4Nzk5N0UxNTVFQ0E5NCJ9.t1MdxG2jdAvT0scM_ltkW5GV4CGU1rV9ZdgeW7Bo2BU&leadSource=uverify%20wall

u/4shadowedbm — 2 months ago