From my point of view, this was a great success again. Managed to get plenty of bargains. The start time was meant to be 10am but it seems that if you want the best stuff you have to be there before 9am. Might as well just make it a 9am start next time.
My top buy had to be a 5" brass porthole, complete with backing plate. I'd like to fit it to Kamala but if it turns out to be too small I can sell it on ebay and recoup the cost of EVERYTHING I bought at the sale which was:
5" Brass Porthole
A HUGE yellow mooring buoy.
A pair of 7' wooden oars for the wooden dinghy.
A new and unused child's lifejacket.
A foam beach cricket set
Some meaty chain to upgrade my outer mooring
A signed copy of Secret Anchorages of Brittany by Peter Cumberlidge
An RYA Competent Crew handbook
All for less than £50.
Wish I'd bought the other two portholes to sell on ebay.
My favourite moment was seeing a trailer load of seagull engines go for £80!
I'm busy polishing up the porthole and it looks amazing.
Saturday, April 30, 2011
Thursday, April 28, 2011
Sponge Overboard!
Today I had some time due to a short working day, and so at 3pm I was rowing out against a F3-4 NE'ly wind to Kamala. I suspected that there was enough wind to keep me out of trouble so I decided to not even drop the motor into the water.
The first thing I found is that under just the mainsail Kamala will not bear away past a reach very easily. Once the genoa is unfurled a little the nose will pull round. The second this is that with her undersides scraped back to the gelcoat and a super-smooth layer of antifoul, she goes MUCH better. Last season I'd struggle to see 4 knots whatever the wind was doing. Today she seemed happy to stay between 4 and 4.5, at one point getting up to 4.7 knots.
The initial plan was to go to Elizabeth Castle Harbour. My mooring lines were still all messed up from the refit work last week and the fenders were all packed away, so in the end the idea seemed more trouble than it was worth for a short sail.
On the way to the Castle, the ship's sponge decided to blow off the coach roof. 'It's just a sponge', I thought at first. A sudden idea to practice an unplanned man-overboard recovery, coupled with the thought 'What if it was Edward?' (my son), had me spending 5 minutes trying to recover the sponge. After a few near passes I eventually got it back. More practice needed, but happy with the outcome.
After this excitement I decided a course change to Belcroute, my usual 'stop and rest' spot, would give a nice sail and a chance to tidy up a few things. So we arrived and I anchored on the lunch hook.
Time to re-jig the genoa. Always too slack in the luff, the tensioner arrangement made no sense as it was and an improvement had struck me on the way over. Too trivial to explain, I don't know why I didn't do it ages ago, but now my genoa luff is taught and can be adjusted.
Finally, a short close-haul back to the mooring. Picked up under mainsail only, first go!
Noticed the top link in the mooring chain is on its last legs, need to find a replacement beefy chain at Saturday's boat jumble.
Not a bad trip and all without the motor. Just as well, as that's next on the list for maintenance.
Other Boats....
Speaking of Jumble, the Wharram Tanenui, 'Jumble' was given away this week. Nearly to me! Having had a look at her today, I was spared. She's in quite a state. Be interesting to see what happens to her now.
Talking of states, as I rowed back along the first row to the dinghy pontoon, the boom of one of the abandoned hulks in St Aubins was out at right angles, just right for taking out the windows of the boat next door. I climbed on, managed to not fall through the broken decking, and lashed the boom amidships. Now there's a fixer-upper!
The first thing I found is that under just the mainsail Kamala will not bear away past a reach very easily. Once the genoa is unfurled a little the nose will pull round. The second this is that with her undersides scraped back to the gelcoat and a super-smooth layer of antifoul, she goes MUCH better. Last season I'd struggle to see 4 knots whatever the wind was doing. Today she seemed happy to stay between 4 and 4.5, at one point getting up to 4.7 knots.
The initial plan was to go to Elizabeth Castle Harbour. My mooring lines were still all messed up from the refit work last week and the fenders were all packed away, so in the end the idea seemed more trouble than it was worth for a short sail.
On the way to the Castle, the ship's sponge decided to blow off the coach roof. 'It's just a sponge', I thought at first. A sudden idea to practice an unplanned man-overboard recovery, coupled with the thought 'What if it was Edward?' (my son), had me spending 5 minutes trying to recover the sponge. After a few near passes I eventually got it back. More practice needed, but happy with the outcome.
After this excitement I decided a course change to Belcroute, my usual 'stop and rest' spot, would give a nice sail and a chance to tidy up a few things. So we arrived and I anchored on the lunch hook.
Time to re-jig the genoa. Always too slack in the luff, the tensioner arrangement made no sense as it was and an improvement had struck me on the way over. Too trivial to explain, I don't know why I didn't do it ages ago, but now my genoa luff is taught and can be adjusted.
Finally, a short close-haul back to the mooring. Picked up under mainsail only, first go!
Noticed the top link in the mooring chain is on its last legs, need to find a replacement beefy chain at Saturday's boat jumble.
Not a bad trip and all without the motor. Just as well, as that's next on the list for maintenance.
Other Boats....
Speaking of Jumble, the Wharram Tanenui, 'Jumble' was given away this week. Nearly to me! Having had a look at her today, I was spared. She's in quite a state. Be interesting to see what happens to her now.
Talking of states, as I rowed back along the first row to the dinghy pontoon, the boom of one of the abandoned hulks in St Aubins was out at right angles, just right for taking out the windows of the boat next door. I climbed on, managed to not fall through the broken decking, and lashed the boom amidships. Now there's a fixer-upper!
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
RYA Powerboat Level 2
I now have this qualification after a fun two days spent blasting around St Catherine's in a RIB with the Tony Cavey training centre. See St' Catherine's Sailing Club if you're interested. Thanks to Henry for being such a patient instructor.
http://www.scsc.org.je/
http://www.scsc.org.je/
Thursday, April 21, 2011
Kamala Relaunched
After a week spent on drying pad number 2 in St Aubin, having the undersides scraped back to the gelcoat then primed and antifouled, it was time to get her off before we got neaped. A couple of helpers came along too...
The crew of two. |
Almost ready to go. |
Dinghy practice, with the kids trying to paddle us around Belcroute. |
The good ship Kamala. |
Grace helming for the first time. |
A picture of concentration. |
Wednesday, April 20, 2011
Kamala's Bottom Gets the Works
After two years of neglect it was time to antifoul. With a week on the drying pad booked, perhaps it was time to remove ALL the cracked and peeling bottom paint, inspired by PBO May 2011 edition.
Option 1: Blasting - £400
Option 2: Chemical Paint Stripper - £100
Option 3: Harris Paint Scraper - £2.75
Guess which I went for.
To get the boat to sit comfortably onto the home made blocks, I had to place them by hand before she settled on the bottom, and then make sure she sat down on them without shifting around. Only one way to do that...
Off to win Battle of the Bands now.
Option 1: Blasting - £400
Option 2: Chemical Paint Stripper - £100
Option 3: Harris Paint Scraper - £2.75
Guess which I went for.
To get the boat to sit comfortably onto the home made blocks, I had to place them by hand before she settled on the bottom, and then make sure she sat down on them without shifting around. Only one way to do that...
every morning!
She's on the bottom here. |
Og came too. |
Just starting. Note the blocks. The chains were meant to sink the blocks but weren't heavy enough. |
Og and Kamala. Twins on the blocks. |
Two more twins. My nephews helping sand. |
Nearly there. |
Primocon. Amazing stuff. |
A new foot has been glued to the port keel with epoxy. The yellow jack is holding it on. |
The bucket is to stop the boat tipping backwards off the blocks. |
Its blue! No more weed for 12 months. |
Job done. |
Thursday, April 14, 2011
A bit of a tidy up.
Sunday, April 10, 2011
Early Start to Clean Up Cushions
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)