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At the Helm — Live Briefing is happening in 4 days
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⚓ 1) START HERE: Welcome Aboard + Crew Code
WELCOME ABOARD, SHIPMATE! — START HERE From the Founder of Nautical Me! — a community of sea-lovers, storytellers, makers, and modern-day mariners. Whether you’ve read every line of Hornblower…or you still replay Master and Commander at 2:00 AM just to hear the creak of the rigging…or you’re building a ship model and want to swap notes (and a cold beer) with folks who get it… Welcome. You’ve found your port. This isn’t a course. It’s a crew — a place to trade stories, share projects, plan charters, compare notes, laugh at the sea’s stubbornness, and celebrate the nautical life in all its forms. ⚓ Crew Code (Ship’s Articles): 1. Be shipshape. Treat the crew with respect. 2. Salty humor is welcome. Personal attacks go overboard. 3. Share experience, not lectures. “Here’s what worked for me…” beats sermons. 4. No doxxing. Keep privacy and safety in mind—share only what you’re comfortable with. 5. Give credit. If you share someone’s photo, quote, or idea—cite the source. 6. Keep it nautical. (We’re here for sea-lore, makers, mariners, and stories.) 7. Help new shipmates. Everyone was new once. Welcome aboard — your crew and your port. — Phil Wilson, Founder
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⚓ 2) Nautical Me! Category Map (Where to Post) & Title Tagging
Here's our ordered categories for organizing our various threaded discussions. - 🚩 Signal Flags & Honors (Admins) ------> Official announcements + pinned guides + featured “best of the crew.” - 👋 The Dock (Introductions) -----> New member intros, roll calls, meet-and-greet posts, and “where are you from?” - ⚓ Quarterdeck (General) -----> General nautical conversation that doesn’t fit elsewhere—news, ideas, questions, thoughts. - 📖 Captain’s Log (Stories) -----> Sea stories (true or tall), book/film talk, naval history, lore, and “you had to be there” moments. - 🪚 The Boatyard (Makers) -----> DIY builds, ship models, restoration projects, woodworking, nautical décor, and progress photos. - 🧭 The Bridge (Going Places) -----> Charters, bareboating, trip logs, routes, harbors, racing plans, flotilla ideas, and “dream voyages.” - 🧠 Ask the Crew -----> Questions and “what would you do, Skipper?” threads—seeking advice, opinions, and crew wisdom. - 🌊 Sea Wins & Hard Lessons -----> Celebrations and lessons learned—wins, near-misses, mishaps, and what you’d do differently.
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⚓ 3) Captain’s Starter Kit: First 3 Things to Do
Captain’s Starter Kit (No Homework—Just the Good Stuff) 1) Say hello in 👋 The Dock -----> Use the intro prompt and add one sea-thing you love (book, ship, place, or memory). 2) Drop a post in 📖 Captain’s Log -----> Share any of these: - A short sea story (true or tall) - What you’re reading/listening to right now (2 sentences, no spoilers) - A favorite nautical film scene or quote - A piece of sea lore or naval history you can’t stop thinking about 3) Join the crew conversation -----> Pick one: - Ask a question in 🧠 Ask the Crew - Share a win/lesson in 🌊 Sea Wins & Hard Lessons - Jump into a challenge or trivia in 🪶 Crow’s Nest Bonus (if you’ve got a shipmate in mind): Invite a friend who belongs here. Nautical Me! gets better with every great storyteller and maker aboard. Welcome again — your crew and your port.
At the Helm Live Briefing; March 19th, 2026
Topics: 1. The Earliest Combat Ships 2. On Being a Master's Mate under Captain Bligh 3. Nautical Terms 1 4. USS Texas 5. Island Countdown; 25. Dominican Republic and 24. Culebra 6. At The Helm Live Challenge 7. Nautical Terms 2 8. Ferrari HyperSail 30 Meter America's Cup Italian Prototype 17 Min. 59 Sec. 10 Min. 8 Sec.
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At the Helm Live Briefing; March 19th, 2026
[Book] Desperate Voyage and Author John Caldwell
Book reviewers sought... John Caldwell — Author of Desperate Voyage John Caldwell is remembered in nautical circles as the adventurous sailor behind Desperate Voyage, the gripping postwar sea memoir that became a maritime survival classic. First published in the mid-20th century and still reissued decades later, the book is valued for its raw firsthand voice, its relentless hardship, and its portrait of seamanship under extreme strain. Caldwell’s reputation rests not on polished literary flourish, but on the power of lived experience at sea — the kind that makes readers feel the loneliness, risk, and stubborn determination of a small-boat voyage gone terribly awry. His name endures because Desperate Voyage still speaks to sailors, dreamers, and armchair adventurers who admire courage, endurance, and the unforgiving truth of the sea.
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Nautical Me!
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A port-of-call for sea-lovers: stories, makers, charters, books, and lore—camaraderie for modern-day mariners who share and collaborate for fun!
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