So Far the Gray Whale migration is at a all time high. It’s been the best year in over 7 years. we have been seeing the gray Whales migrating south every trip this year. 
Come out and see it for yourself!!
So Far the Gray Whale migration is at a all time high. It’s been the best year in over 7 years. we have been seeing the gray Whales migrating south every trip this year. 
Come out and see it for yourself!!
Why not give them a day on the water with Sail San Diego!
When we send a certificate we give them the choice- they don’t need to decide right away.
We can also sell certificates for private lessons.
We sail for three-hours on beautiful 40′ Catalina’s. This boat will comfortably seat up to 12 guests but we only take 6 guests at a time. Our focus is small intimate groups and if your recipient wanted to combine a certificate, they can add on more people.
We stock the boats with all of the complimentary beer, wine, non-alcoholic beverages, and a variety of snacks to enjoy while under sail. The boats are stocked with all of the extra jackets, blankets, hats, wind-gear, sunscreens, sunglasses, binoculars and much more!
These certificates do not have an expiration date and are sent out the day they are ordered.
Pricing: $85.00 per person and $4.95 for shipping and handling.
Gift wrapping options available .
If you’re trying to buy happiness, you’d be better off putting your money toward a tropical island
get-away than a new computer, a new study suggests.
The results show that people’s satisfaction with their life-experience purchases — anything from seeing a movie to going on a vacation — tends to start out high and go up over time. On the other hand, although they might be initially happy with that shiny new iPhone or the latest in fashion, their satisfaction with these items wanes with time.
The findings, based on eight separate studies, agree with previous research showing that experience-related buys lead to more happiness for the consumer. But the current work provides some insight into why.
Among the reasons:
Satisfaction with a purchase could also come down to mindset. When participants in one study thought of material purchases, such as a music CD, as an experience (many hours of enjoyable listening), they were more satisfied than those who viewed the purchase as just a material item.
In another study, 142 participants were asked to think about either a material or experience-related purchase they had made that cost at least $50. Then, they answered questions about: how difficult the decision was to make; how concerned they were that they made the right choice; and how satisfied they were with the purchase initially and at present.
The people who thought of a material purchase were significantly more likely to report feeling concerned about the buy and less satisfied with their choice at present than those who had recalled an experiential purchase.
A third study involved 164 participants who were asked how they felt about a hypothetical situation in which they had made a purchase, but later found out that other, superior choices existed. They imagined either buying a material good, such as a wristwatch, laptop, MP3 player or a pair of jeans, or an experience, including a meal at a restaurant, a movie viewing, a New York City
show, or an island vacation.
Subjects who imagined a material purchase were more likely to be disturbed by the availability of better options, and in turn, reported diminished satisfaction with the buy, than those who imagined an experiential purchase.
And participants were more likely to be jealous of a rival’s superior purchase if the item in question was a possession rather than an experience.
Since materials are more easily compared with other things than experiences are, material buys bring more concern and less happiness than experiential ones, the researchers from Cornell University say.
The results were published in the January issue of the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.
Sunset magazine’s August 2011 issue features and article all about sailing on the west coast.Set Sail (pgs 68-75, Aug. 2011 issue) outlines different kinds of charter boats most often used in sailing charters along the west coast and gives you a primer on the basics of sailing.
Sail San Diego is featured in Sunset’s “Favorite charter companies” section of the article!
So go out and grab a copy of the magazine and get out sailing!
as a sailor heading out into the sea
I can steer for no other place
a mean gale blowing across my face
High winds save me, I require the breeze
The Sun breaks the clouds, but it’s only a tease
Life could seem so easy on the corporate tack
…But even my 5th hurricane won’t turn me back
It must be a Mexican island, in the distant horizon
But the expansive waters I see, feel like heaven to me
I don’t care when ocean wants to play rough
Just a little, even more, is never enough!
So we start next year hunting the gray whale
Not for oil or food, But for the sight of her tale
As we slip silently in the ocean, full with sail
We could just continue heading south, sneeking some Ale
alas we can not, with a the sea sick client pucking in our pale.