NettleNet® Boat Pools.
NettleNet® Boat Pools
were invented in 1978 by entrepreneur and professor Dave Dianich,
shortly after he purchased a waterfront home in Poquoson, Virginia
only to discover that he and his family couldn't swim in the Chesapeake Bay
because of the overwhelming presence of stinging Sea Nettles.
Not one to let a bad situation stop him, Dave set out to find a solution to the problem.
Over the years he tweaked his original design,
until he found the perfect combination of materials
necessary to create a jellyfish free swimming environment that meets the storage,
durability and ease of use requirements of boat owners and dock users alike.
Over the next 25 years, Dave Dianich sold his pools to thousands of customers,
mostly through word of mouth and grass roots marketing efforts.
In 2004 one of his many deliriously happy customers, David and Kathy Nolte,
avid Chesapeake Bay boaters and owners of several small businesses,
learned that Dave Dianich had invented a new product, the Track-It-TV., in 1996
and wanted to devote full time to a new world-wide market.
Armed with the first hand knowledge of the happiness and fun the pool can bring
and convinced that the product had only reached a fraction of its market potential,
David and Kathy formed A Fresh Tack, LLC and purchased the company
and continue the tradition of enabling kids and adults to swim easily among the Sea Nettle jellyfish.
This makes for thousands more happy cruisers and waterfront home owners around the Chesapeake Bay.
Call David and Kathy at 800-962-9020 or
check out their web site www.NoJellyFish.com
for information on happiness with this outstanding product.
Locating Satellites
Here is a tool that uses your vessel's Latitude
and Longitude to find elevation and azimuth for any satellite, so you can point your dish to any satellite.
Adobe Reader
Track-It-TV® documentation is offered in PDF format.
If you dont have an Adobe Acrobat reader, use this link to get a free copy.
XHMTL Web Site
The Track-It-TV® web site has been designed
as an XHTML web site.
It has been validated using www.w3c.org
validators and meets all of the XHTML standards for HTML and CSS.