Sunday, November 18, 2018

Earwigoagin: Ten Years On


Yesterday, November 17, 2018, marked the ten year anniversary of Earwigoagin. I started this blog with a post responding to Tillerman's writing challenge, a take on "Who's Coming to Dinner". Over the past year this blog has been sputtering a bit, posting has become somewhat erratic but I still have material in mind so I haven't decided to wrap up this gig yet. I would like to thank some of the readers who have contributed to Earwigoagin over the years and with whom I have had interesting email conversations; from France, Bertrand Warion and earlier in this blog's life, Romain Berard; from New Zealand, Neil Kennedy; from Australia, Andrew Chapman and Chris Cleary; from Whidbey Island, transplanted Englishman, Michael Scott, and from up-some-river in the Pacific Northwest, traditional boatbuilder Michael Bogoger. I'm sure there are others I'm forgetting at the moment but I'll get around to adding to this list. TOH to my local friends, Tom Price and John Zseleczky who have taken an interest in this blog and offered up their two cents whenever I meet up with them. (And a special nod to Pete Teeling who seems to have this blog memorized, dragging up old posts whenever we cross paths.)

Early on I discovered that if you switched out the header photo every now and then, you could write a post on that photo. If you do an image search on Earwigoagin's Header Photos you get a good snapshot of this blog.

Blogging is, for the most part, an anonymous activity, but I have taken enormous satisfaction that some readers have enjoyed this blog and, also that some readers have been able to take away useful information. Thank you!
Almost forgot. I would also like to thank Tillerman for ranking Earwigoagin as his best sailing blog of 2011.

3 comments:

Dieharddinghysailor said...

Thanks for your entertaining and informative blog all these years! I can easily spend a happy hour browsing the many and varied topics, how you find them all is amazing...! It's good to now that there is still thriving dinghy activity around the world, as well as discoveries to be made of the weird and wonderful.!

Cheers..!

Michael.

doryman said...

...and Doryman, who has been here from the very beginning....

Tweezerman said...

Wow! How could I have forgotten Doryman? I'll rectify that immediately.