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Barnacle Bill magazine

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 A subscription wont break your bank and you'll get exceptional value for money. There is a good team of contributors and an enthusiastic and knowledgeable editor so its going to be a good read.  Its on topic for us small boat fans, this deserves support.  ( Plus its cheap while this deal is running).

50% off Digital Subscription for 2016!
12 issues for £12
Offer valid until midnight 24th December 2015
Richard Palmer's photo.

Annie Hill, update.

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For background to this post refer to my post dated Oct 29th

I called in on Annie Hill today,  in part because I was in the area for an engineering job and wanted a break before I drove the 2 hours or so home, in part because she and her friend Marcus are always good to visit, and in part because I wanted to see how she is going with building her new ( junk rigged of course ) home .


Chopping a rebate in a floor timber, she's more accurate than I am, I do that with a multitool and fill the gaps with epoxy!

Bow view of Siblem, there is not a lot of indication of the real shape as yet, but it will come.

She’s got the bukheads made and stood up, the daggerboard cases built and the insides glassed, they’re stood up and fastened in place, and she’s working on the notching for the stringers and some additional floor timbers to take the keel bolts.

View from aft, there is another frame to add 500mm aft of what you can see, its the transom and the twin skegs mount between there and the bulkhead you can see, the cutout visible is the motor mount.  An outboard, inboard, so to speak. 
LOTS of space in that boat for a 26 footer. 

For Annie this is a learning process, her other builds will have been as a helper to a skilled builder so here she is, 60 years old and busy learning how to do it so she can have a little ship that’s truly her own. Go girl!

Her “Fantail” has been sold by the way, so now she’s really committed!

So why build a new boat? One, there is a lot of thin water around New Zealand, and when you live on a very small income, you need to moor in the places that no one else sees as valuable, that plus they’re often the really interesting places anyway. That plus this boat has been designed to suit her proportions,  she’ll be able to see over the cabin top out of the cockpit when sitting down for example.
Oh yes, and at 60 years old, looking to live on board for the rest of her days, she said “ I don’t want to die on a boat made of frozen snot” ( fiberglass as L Francis Herreshoff described it).

The boats name, at this stage anyway, is “Siblem” that’s an acronym for “Small is beautiful, less is more”.  She says that the name might change, but that’s very much the philosophy.

I helped for a little while, just a took a few shavings out of a rebate with a chisel, so I’m now a member of the “Siblem club!”  There arent many of us. Very exclusive you know!
In reality I’m priveledged.  I plan to visit every month or so, will keep you posted.


 One more thing, Marcus has a junk rigged, cabin version of a Portland Pudgy sailing lifeboat for sale, I should have pics in a few days ( reminder to Marcus, hear that Marcus!). If anyones interested in a cheap but very interesting mini mini cruiser give me a shout.  She's in Whangarei New Zealand.

Christmas greetings and a couple of other things.

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With Christmas still happening in many parts of the world, I'd like to wish everyone all the best for the festive season and a happy new year.

Advertising, this blog is running at about 10K page views a month, thats astonishingly good, thanks all who are interested enough to come and read. But its attracting increasing numbers of people posting advertising, anyone wishing to do that should first contact me so I can vet for appropriate content and work out what its worth, or I'll pounce on each post with the delete button.
Too many, or off subject ads are a distraction that we don't have to put up with.

Me? I'll be bathing the dog, he found some interesting things to roll in while we were out for a walk yesterday, then I'll be using my new sawbench to make the boom and yard for SEI. I want to be out sailing her very soon and will report as I get on with that project.

So all the best from summertime in NZ, its a near perfect morning here with the temp at about 20 deg C and rising, perfectly calm and clear weather and its looking like a perfect day.

Trekkies will know this one "Live long and prosper".

Made the spars for SEI today.

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The spars for SEI are simple rectangular sections with rounded corners, sure they're tapered but only in one plane. Easy stuff.

I’ve already got the mast done fiberglassed with a glass sleeve material from Duckworksmagazine and painted, it just needs a leather piece around it where it goes through the partners and the fittings for lazyjacks and halyard bolted thereon.

Heres the glass sleeve link, I did a comparison between a mast of the same size and SEI's mast with the glass sleeve and its markedly stiffer.  Good stuff.  http://www.duckworksbbs.com/supplies/cloth/sleeving/index.htm

So now its time to make the yard and boom.
Yes I know, “Boom” is a noise used for starting yacht races, English is a wonderful language isnt it.

I’d a piece of Fijian Kauri, nice wood, this one seasoned for several years in my stack of interesting and useful pieces of wood, so it can be relied upon to be stable and not warp. Agathis Vitensis is an easy wood to work , not quite as strong as New Zealand Kauri but slightly lighter in weight, both are stable, both strong for their weight.

First job, the piece I had was 50 x 250, ( two by ten) by 4m, (just over 13 ft) which is plenty long enough for that job.  The “Long Steps” build is not far off getting serious and I’ll be needing stringers, so while sawing the lengths for the SEI spars I cut the rest into 25 x 32 stringers for that project. When scarfed up that will give me four stringers long enough for the lower ones on LS.


The two pieces on the right are the boom on the right, the yard on its left. The pieces cut from the ends will come in handy somewhere in the next build, you'd be suprised at how much wood you can soak up in small pieces when making up cleat stock and grounds for frames and seating.  
The rest will be stringers for Long Steps, I'll need about three times whats there but its a start.

Having cut the blanks for SEIs spars, I then used the lovely Leuco sawblade I have in the sawbench as a planer to take the roughsawn grain off, it leaves a near planed finish, beautiful and much easier than dragging the thickness planer out and making a heap of shavings ( note to self,  fix up the old single phase dust extractor system and bring it up to this shed, it’s a pain in the low back region having to manually clear the sawdust from within the saw cabinet).

That done, the spar blanks down to dimension, I marked out the tapers on both, and cut those on the saw.  You don’t get quite the same finish when cutting freehand in comparison to running along the fence so I clamped the blanks to the bench and hand planed them smooth.  Note the Record number 5 plane, the longer the plane the straighter it will make the work.
 
Note, I cut the taper from the near end toward the middle of the spar blank, dont  try it the other way.
The sawbench by the way is an MBS 250. These are sold under various brand names but always have the serial number plate marked MBS 250 or 300.  I get to work on sawbenches among other woodworking machinery, and these are the BEST I've come across and that includes the European and USA built ones, I'll do a review on it soon.
Out comes the elbow grease powered planer, in this case a Record number 5 of about 1930s vintage, very good tool.

Having done that, out came the old Ryobi Router I inherited from my elderly joiner uncle, it’s a beauty, heavy, simple, robust and way better than anything that Ryobi make today.
With a 12mm radius bit I ran along all the corners of both, then got the sander out.
 Rounding the corners off, the router makes the job very easy but I am always seriously careful with them, they bite.
Measure, mark length and trim. It pays to leave the pieces a little over length until you are in the last stages of finishing. The saw is a Japanese Razor saw from Duckworks, I'd be lost without it.

With 120 grit paper and a soft pad on the old Bosch PEX 125 random orbital sander set on slow, I went along and sanded the ends rounded then took out any defects along the full length of the spars. A couple of places had faint sawmarks still showing and my hand planing had left a couple of visible marks which the sander coped with in short order.

With that done I hand sanded the two with 240 grit, laid them out on stickers and after a wipe with a tack rag gave them their first coat of varnish.


Varnished, they will get another two coats tomorrow. I'm using an exterior grade spirit based satin finish varnish, I'll be able to tell you how it lasts in a year or two.

Two more coats of varnish then I can put the leathering on, and the fittings, lace the sail on and we’re getting close to sailing.








Happy New Year to all

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As I write, sitting in my bunk watching the sun set over the estuary, its 8 15 pm on New Years Eve.  Traditionally a time of good wishes to all, a time for making resolutions about what will or will not be happening next year, a time for family and friends and a time for reflection.
To be sure its only another marker on an artificial calendar, but it’s a useful marker, one that is close to the longest day of the year where I live and the shortest where a lot of my friends live. It’s a time when we get holiday breaks, some of which have theist backgrounds, some that are pagan but its still the end of year break.

Its also a time when advice tends to be handed out, much of which causes me to look at the advisor and think, you should take your own advice buddy and if you did you’d be better off than you are, but occasionally there is a gem.

Heres one that I heard yesterday.

“When making New Years Resolutions, don’t make ones you know damn well you wont keep, don’t make ones that you know are beyond your ability, but try making one, and ones enough, that is well within your capacity to achieve, and work on it until its done.  You’ll get a lot of satisfaction from that, whereas to vow and fail just reinforces a defeatist position.”

That’s good advice, a bit wordy though. I’d put it thus--- “Get yourself a mouthful of lifes good things, but don’t bite off more than you can chew”.

All the very best to everyone for 2016.


John Welsford.

Painting her bottom, and other places.

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Owning any big boat is like a race, more or less like the tortoise and the hare in fact.  The hare, that’s the owner, is trying to stay ahead of the maintenance of the ship, while the maintenance needs of the ship are like the tortoise in that the deterioration of paint, varnish, antifouling and such goes on 24/7 all year around.
In winter when sensible people are snugged up in front of a fire reading  cruising stories telling of while coral sand beaches, turquoise waters and tropical sunshine, the race is still on with the paintwork still deteriorating. In summer when out sailing and enjoying the boat, yep, still goes on. Never resting!
If allowed to go on for too long the material underneath, whether wood, steel, aly or fiberglass is going to deteriorate as well so there is no choice but to be a part of that race, and the “hare” had better keep up.

I’ve owned my old ship for about 2 ½ years now, have done quite a lot of small paintwork, varnished much of the interior of the main cabin, filled a million little holes where fittings have been moved and the old screw holes not dealt with, have painted the inside of the cockpit, and  put her aground an hour or so before low tide so she’d lean over enough for me to wade around just more than waist deep reaching under and scrubbing her bottom with a hard broom. 

That latter has been fairly effective, and I don’t get much in the way of marine growth anyway as the water here at my dock is often quite brackish.  But the mud cakes, the antifouling paint wears away, and its past time it was renewed.

That plus the topsides paint has been flaking some, its thick, heavy and now that I’ve been in and sanded it some it would appear that whoever did the paintwork ages ago has short changed the owners and not used a proper priming paint.

More work to be done.

On Tuesday last I did the dreaded thing, entrusted my home to the tender mercies of the travel lift at Gulf Harbour Marina.

She’s up on blocks in a cradle, seems stable, but gosh, when I go up the ladder to go aboard it’s a very long way up, probably 5 metres to eye height when standing in the main cabin, when  Im in there I try not to look out the window!



 The end of day one.  There is not quite standing room under her, enough so that with a slight stoop and a roller on a 4 ft handle I can reach in to paint quite quickly. 
I get very nervous seeing my home up in the air like that, she's a long way up, and I'm very keen to get her back in the water where she belongs.

Day one, rumbled off down the river, through the moorings and out to sea, along the coast and into the marina.
The workberth where the travel lifts operate ( there are two of them) is quite tight to get into, and there was a decent sized catamaran aongside in there which made it an “interesting”  task getting the ship against the dock and tied up.  No bow thruster, or even twin screws, or crew for that matter.  So, just me, 15 tons of ship, that big propellor hooked to old Henry ( the ship is powered by a 6.5 litre 6 cylinder Ford diesel,  135 hp and about 450 nm of torque at about 1800 rpm) and the dock.
As it happened, there was no wind, we made a perfect approach, prop walked  the stern across just before the bow touched the pontoon and I stepped ashore with fenders already deployed, picked up the mooring lines already flaked out  ready for use, and tied her up.
The half dozen spectators were just far enough away so they could not hear my sigh of relief!

The Marina crew waterblasted her to get most of the  rubbish off her underwater sections, which was very effective.  Once perched up on her cradle, it was” into it“ with the tungsten tipped scraper and sandpaper.   By the end of day one I had most of the bottom scraped off,  had wet sanded it to tidy the surface up, had begun the application of the underwater primer paint, and had shoulders that felt as though Atlas had been using them to hold the planet up.

I was a bit preoccupied here, so had let the time run on some, and only just made it to the bus stop to catch the bus back to my home, or where my home is usually docked so I could pick up my pickup and drive out to the local geothermal hot pools for a well deserved soak.

Made it, but had to sprint 500 yards or so to get there, it’s the first stop on that bus route so it doesn’t pay to count on the bus being late!
As a by the way, the public transport system here is a vast improvement on what it was a few years ago, and I find that I use it fairly regularly.  Well done whoever did that!

Day two, sanded off the topsides, applied more primer paint to the underwater areas. I thought my shoulders were sore the night before? Double that.  No, double double that.
Back to the hot pools, had a looooong shower and a soak, remember that my shower is 15 ft up in the air having her outside painted! Came home. Slept like a log.

Underwater primer coat on, topsides sanded off, I'm about to put the masking tape on. 
Note that its all hand sanding here, power sanders spread too much dust and that would upset others painting, a very good reason to find somewhere else next time I want to haul her out. That plus usurious costs, the guys in the yard are great, but they dont set the prices.

Where am I staying?  Aha, the marina does not allow people to stay aboard their boats when up on the hard, so I have set up a hikers tent inside the shed, I’ve a portable head, good mattress, cooker, the icebox from Spook, my little gaff sloop, and of course have lighting and electricity.  My senior card gets me into the hot pools very cheaply and I’m a regular there anyway.  Nice place.

Day three, whooboy!  Sore shoulders! Double treble that.  Finished the primer coat underneath, filled the seeveral dings in the topsides with epoxy filler, ran the masking tape around her and managed to get a full coat of coal black antifouling on.  Another coat tomorrow and that’s done.  I’m hoping that I’ll get through the antifouling by lunchtime and have time to put the undercoat on the topsides so I can get two coats on over the weekend.


First coat of antifouling on, prop and rudder polished ready for its special coating. Note that has to be applied to a heated surface, so there is a paint stripper gun in my near future ( tomorrow morning, dont let me forget!) 
There is a second coat of antifouling to apply, that will happen tomorrow.  The weather forecast is for showers over the weekend which may scotch my efforts to complete the topsides paint, but if I can get the undercoat on I can do the rest at my dock. One way or t'other she goes back in the water on Monday next. 


Note, this is not concours standard painting, its roller and brush, it will look fine from a few yards away, on a dark night, with sunglasses on! But it will protect the wood underneath which is the aim.

I had a thought that Diane Salguero ( did I spell that correctly Diane? If not, my apologies) might have liked to be here, she’s the best boat painter I know, a Port Townsend WA USA resident, and if you need your boat painted, she’s the girl to do it.)
Diane, I know about the weather in WA at this time of year,  its shorts and bikini top weather here and I need you and your paintbrush!

So I’m painting, 12 hour days with sandpaper, roller and brush.  In the meantime, there are many things I’d rather be doing, drawing boats, sleeping, sailing boats, sleeping, building boats, sleeping, visiting friends, sleeping, reading good books, sleeping, watching the sunset, sleeping.

I’m off to bed, even a sleeping bag in a tent set up in my shop is a very inviting prospect right now.

So its goodnight from me.




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That was a bit of an adventure.  I’ve put the old ship on a scrubbing grid a couple of times, but having her in the marina yard perched so high up that I could comfortably walk under her was a different experience.
So, she’s all antifouled, two coats, topsides sanded, some dings filled, spot primed, undercoated and two coats of enamel.
I had time to do it, but the real time consumer is the time required to get each coat dried enough to take the next coat. So it was one coat per day, plus prep for the next.
I’ve had all the through hull fittings apart and checked, greased with marine grease and reassembled, now I can turn the heads seacock off and pull the pump apart to replace the impellor.

Gulf Harbour Marina has just put its prices up, it seems to be the same with most of the other Marinas, all to the same level.  A big increase, they’re really expensive now, my week on the hard cost me almost a grand.  Time to think about the smaller yards that are well out of Auckland, at that price the cost of the diesel needed to get to them is a good investment.  I’ll be shopping around in future.
I have to say though that the guys who run the travelift were helpful and efficient, thoroughly professional.  Not everyone gets to see their home hanging in the slings of a giant four legged crane, that’s hard on the nerves and to see them working with care and attention was reassuring.

Also helpful were a couple of guys from Brin Wilson boatbuilders, I was parked right next to their premises, and one of the guys there suggested that I could use their wheeled scaffold if that would help, it sure helped, a great deal.  Saved me a lot of time.
Also, he and one of the others made a few helpful comments about the painting, sanding and prep work.  Professional short cuts.  Thanks guys.


 The below waterline area has been waterblasted, sanded off, a couple of gouges in the planks filled and sanded flush, spot primed, a binder /undercoat coat put on, and one coat of antifouling at this stage. There was still a lot to do.


I was on the way back from telling the guys with the travelift that I was ready anytime that they were when I took this, all the sanding and primer, undercoats, filler in the dings, new zinc anodes, and two coats each of antifouling and topcoat all done. The prop and rudder buffed and coated, the through hull fittings dismantled and checked, reassembled and in one case replaced, quite a mission in what was really five days.
The travelift is booked in its timeslots a week or so ahead, and the lady in the office is not at all negotiable about it, but the guys often get cancellations or boats not turn up on time and although I was booked to go back in the water at 3 pm, they almost followed me back to the boat and before I could climb back aboard and grab my camera again she was in the slings, down to the lift area and back in the water.  Looking much better as well.
Thanks guys, good service.


The travelift had my ship back on the water at about 11 30 this morning, the weather forecast was seriously awful, there was a high wind warning and an expectation of very heavy rain which means poor visibility and high seas.
There is a cyclone not far out to sea from here, and we’re getting the tail of it, so as soon as I was in the water I was out of the marina and put the hammer down.

When I bought this old lady I was told she’d do 10 knots.  At that time when I tried  to run the engine above half throttle I got a smokescreen worthy of a WW2 destroyer escort in a battle, for years she’d been run at her berth once a week at just above idle to keep the batteries up, but no load on a diesel is not good for them, the engines bores get glazed and the a diesel wont run well after that sort of treatment.  I’ve been running her at higher and higher throttle openings each time I’ve been out, and trying for longer runs rather than  just short loads. That plus a special oil additive in the sump.
Andy from “The Engine Room” a marine engineering and engine supplier tells me that’s the right procedure, so today when heading home, with a 30 knot plus tail wind and quite big seas behind me I pushed the throttle well open to get the speed up to where the waves were not overtaking me, mainly to maintain control but also for comfort.
I don’t have a log (speedometer) in this, or a GPS, so have to calculate the speed on either time over a measured distance or by estimating the distance aft to the stern wave and doing the calculation that Naval Architects use for hull speed.
Yup, 10 knots on both.  Clean bottom, polished propellor and the engine working as it should.  That is really stomping along for a boat like this, BIG bow wave, lots of foam in the wake and and trimming stern down a little.
Quite exhilarating!

Oh, and no smoke from the engine!

So I made it into the river before the weather really cracked up, the wind is up to maybe 40 knots and building, its raining hard, and as I write I’m anchored in the river waiting for the tide so I can get up to my dock. It lacks but an hour ‘til slack water, I don’t want to have to deal with both the wind and the current when docking on my own so will wait.

Its nice to have the job done, now for the cabin and deck paint.

PS.  Its two days sine I wrote this. I was in Norsands boatyard in Whangarei yesterday, visiting Annie Hill to check out her project, and yes you’ll get a report on that in a day or so.  I ducked into the office and got them to work out the charges for a haulout and a week on the hard, plus waterblasting the bottom.  Just under half the cost of Gulf Harbour Marina!  That plus they allow liveaboards to stay on their ships up on the hard for a small allowance,  and I mean small. $14 a week.  That covers the showers and restroom use. Most reasonable.
Its about an 8 hour run up the coast from here, quite a nice little cruise.
Guess where my next haulout will be!

Well, actually I am really hoping that Pam and George up at Whangateau Traditional Boatyard can get their cradle rebuilt, that would be my preference, they deserve all the support that they can get.




Progress from Annie Hill, a report about SIBLIM.

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A visit to the heaquarters of the SIBLIM club.

Credit to Paul Gilbert for the photos, much better than my own amateurish efforts.  Thanks Paul.

For those new to the acronym above, that stands for “Small is Beautiful, Less is More” and is the philosohy behind Annie Hills life, and the new ship that she is building herself.

I visited last week, had a look over the ship to see the progress since my last call at her shed in Norsrands Boatyard in Whangarei. She’s doing well,  all the framing is up, the skegs that will support the twin rudders are in place, these will enable her ship to stand upright on any reasonable surface when the tide goes out.  The bottom panel is dry fitted, some of the cockpit panels are in place, there is nice solid wood tongue and groove panelling on the main cabin bulkheads and she is working on wrapping plywood around that distinctly Junkish bow.


View from aft, the shape is clearly visible now and even some of the interior spaces are starting to give an impression of what they'll feel like later on.

A distinctly Junkish bow.  There is a lot of good thinking behind this, it will make lifting an anchor  and stowing its tackle much easier for someone who is not the strongest person afloat, being small of build makes it easy to get standing headroom in a smaller boat but there has to be thought given to things tasks which are easy for a 6 ft 6in football player.

Tongue and groove panel overlaying the plywood in the main cabin.  Nice!


The outboard motor will mount in between the skegs, in a well which makes it an "inboard", if you know what I mean.  It makes it easy to access, keeps it well protected, out of sight from people who might think that they deserve it more than the owner, and easy to service without having to dismount it.  Good option.

I collect woodworking hand tools, not as a collector of rare and “collectibles”,  but rather to rescue and bring back to life old, disused, and damaged second hand tools. I haunt junkshops and garage sales, will buy if I come across reasonable second hand ones, and have quite a collection tucked away awaiting a good cause.
Annie qualifies as a good cause.

Thats the model of the ship in the background, and we're looking over tools Annie and I. Your'e looking through the space between the twin skegs, good solid legs for when she's aground and strong support for the steering gear.

So I’ve handed over to her a Stanley number 60 bullnose plane, that’s the little short one handed rebate plane,  a straight spokeshave, a decent half inch chisel and a two sided coarse / fine oilstone.  The plane and the spokeshave will come back at the end of her project.

She’s bought a couple of Japanese style pull saws, and is finding them much easier to use and more accurate than the  old tenon saw that she’d been using,  and I noted that she had purchased a cordless impact screwdriver and a few other power tools.  These will speed things up no end.



Now keep that angle the same as you move the chisel back and forth, gradually work your way around the stone to keep the wear even, lots of oil, not too much weight on it ------

We went over the technique for sharpening hand tool blades, that’s chisels and planes, aome very basic stuff so she can get a decent edge without having to wait until Marcus can do it for her. He’s busy earning the bucks that will allow him to haul his Ferro cement 20 ft Flicka and do some work on her.

Great visit, Annie and Marcus are both good company, and it is a pleasure to have bread and cheese, fruit and a cup of tea with them.

I’m going to be away for a while, so it will be maybe two months before I’m back. I’m expecting to see lots of progress.

Work well Annie.



I've been out having little adventures.

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Last week I took the ship out up to Kawau Island, about 2 hours away by sea, visited friends their then went to meet up with the beginning of the Kiwi Raid at Sandspit.
I was the “baggage barge” for the first day, baggage including camping gear for about 30 people was a good sized cargo but there is plenty of space in the covered cockpit aft so apart from needing four loads in the inflatable to get it all ashore at Martins Bay where they were to spend 3 nights at the motor camp while exploring the river at Mahurangi and the islands in the area, it was no problem at all.
I had the pleasure of the company of Roz for a couple of days, she is the organiser behind the Taweh Nugganah raid in Tasmania, those people being the bulk of the participants in our raid here.  Nice to meet you Roz, thanks for the pleasant time, you’re a great “deckhand”.

Raid progress reports here, I wish I could have stayed longer,  next year!
More Kiwi participants too, this is a fabulous event, well organised, well supported with escort boats, the campsites all arranged, food provided, well done all the organising team.

From there, it was Mahurangi Regatta time, the annual event for classic yachts held in the entrance of the Mahurangi River,  there are usually between 250 and 300 boats there and while I’m primarily interested in the small boats, and admit to being biased and wanting pics of some my own designs, this is a fabulous event and one that I hate missing. 

This time, with the aid of Denny on the helm I was able to get around the fleet, hopefully not inconveniencing any of the racers, and got some very good shots.

Waiting near the beach, this is Carlotta Ann, soon to be renamed Kairos, I dont have any connection to the original name and she was an opportunity not to be missed.  She's my most of the time home, big, comfortable and capable. I still have five other boats two of them with sails so I've not defected from the small boat fold.

Breeze, 65 ft on deck, operated by an Auckland Maritime Museum volunteer group, a lovely sight at the Mahurangi Regatta, she sails the course with all of the racers and adds much to the spectacle. Yes I've been up on that yard, while she's not a big ship its still a long way down.

Four of the St Ayles skiffs from the raid, all Tasmanian crews. Thanks for coming over people, great to meet you.

A sloop rigged Pathfinder,   http://www.jwboatdesigns.co.nz/plans/pathfinder/index.htm 
At this stage of the race  lying second to a boat that has won the event multiple times, local knowledge makes a huge difference on this course.

Rogue, slim, easily moved by that big sail. She finished second, well done. 
http://www.jwboatdesigns.co.nz/plans/rogue/index.htm

Saturday Night Special, designed to be a really quick and easy build for events such as the Texas 200, while not at her best in the very light winds ( the T200 is a notoriously windy event, there is an alternative larger sail area rig) she more than held her own among a fleet of very competitive small racers.   http://www.duckworksbbs.com/plans/jw/sns/index.htm

No excuses for just chasing pics of my own designs, the opportunity does not come up very often so I take it where it happens.  But I've more pics and will post again.

We took the ship up the river to Warkworth, the town at the head of the navigable part of the river, being a midday tide and a holiday weekend, plus the Raid boats were up there with John Dory their escort,  it was way too crowded and no space at the dock so I managed to turn us around in the smallest space imaginable without touching anyone else, a maneuver that I was very proud of, tied up at the kayak jetty ( not being used at the time) for an hour then headed back out.

Perfect weather, light winds, just enough to move the boats, sunny and calm, itrs a lovely venue and ideal for boatwatchers, birdwatchers as well, there was a big flock of Fluttering Shearwaters resting just off the point as we came in.

I’m back at my home dock now, have a few jobs to do before I catch the bus into the airport and fly across the Pacific to Santiago to meet up with Howard Rice to help prepare the way for his planned Southern Ocean adventure with his SCAMP.
Check it out here.   http://www.below40south.com
The fundraiser is to make a movie so everyone can share the adventure. The cameras are organised, the filming planned, it’s the production costs that we need to cover, even ten dollars will help.  Please.

I’ve not been to Chile before, New Zealand has strong trade ties with that country and quite a few Chileans live here, but this is a first on that continent for me.
I’m very much looking forward to it.

Watch this space for reports.



On the ( metaphorical ) road again, heading for more small boat sailing adventures.

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The brotherhood of the travelling boots.

Its occurred to me that the hikers boots that I’m wearing have been to seven different countries so far, they’re good friends the two of them, get along well even though they’re almost twins. One of course is a lefty and the other a righty but even so they seem able to co operate and generally arrive wherever it is that they’re going at about the same time.

I’m on my way again, this time to Chile,  will arrive in Santiago in about 18 hours.
Right now I’m sitting in Auckland International airport, within a few metres of the Percival Gull aircraft that Jean Batten flew from England to New Zealand in 1936, setting a number of aviation records on the way.  That flight took 11 days and 45 minutes to cover a bit more than 14000 miles. 
I’m going to be travelling in an aircraft that barely resembles that tiny single engined spruce and canvas plane.  In fact it would be no real problem to fit the “Gull” into the cargo hold of the big Boeing that I’ll be imprisoned within for the 13 ½ hour flight across the Southern Pacific Ocean. We’ll be travelling at around 590 nautical miles per hour, how different it is from Jean in her little light plane t125 mph.  I bet she didn’t complain about the cabin service in her tiny cockpit .


Jean Battens Percival Gull airplane, as I write this I'm sitting about 2metres away from the wingtip on the left of the picture, its a graceful little thing, but a real reminder of how much aviation has progressed since then, remember too that Jean Batten was with us until 1982, so most of this amazing progress has happened within the space of a long lifetime.

This trip I’m making is by the way the longest uninterrupted stretch of ocean that there is north of the five great capes about twice the distance that it is across the North Atlantic from USA to UK.

Which brings me to why I’m travelling.  I’m to meet up with friend and co teacher Howard Rice, and we’re going to be setting up for the big voyage of exploration that he is undertaking next southern summer.
That voyage, in a modified SCAMP, all of 11 ft 11 in long ( 3.575M ) will leave from Punta Arenas in the Straights of Magellan, carry him out through the channels and straights into the Pacific where he’ll turn left, and head south toward Cape Horn.
That latter is not necessarily the objective of the voyage, but rounding “The Horn” is a possibility.  The real purpose of the voyage is to explore the least populated and most rugged coastline on the planet,  riven with steep sided fjords, many with glaciers at their heads, backed by mountains, many un named as yet, and battered by the incessant gale force winds of the Roaring 40s this is an extraordinary place, and one which Howard will be exploring, and documenting.
There will be cameras on the boat, as well as within his support crew back at Punta Arenas, there is already some video “in the can” and the intention is to make a comprehensive video of the voyage, a video which will be available to anyone wishing to see the grandeur of the wildest place on the planet from the viewpoint of a small boat sailor.
There is more on the boat and the voyage in Howards Facebook page here


Yes it costs by the way, and if you’d like to support this, check out the directors website here. http://www.below40south.com.  There is also a lot of information on the voyage there.

  Any donations would be very gratefully received, we’re covered for the actual filming but the production costs will be significant and even a small amount would help to get what will be one of the great small boat adventures out where people can share it.

So I’m sitting here in Auckland airport with several hours to wait until the big silver bird roars down the runway and turns out eastward over the sea.
Its not boring, I’m in a quiet corner upstairs, this is one of the better airports that I travel through, and I’m alongside a glass wall where I can watch the people flow like a gently stirred anthill.  It’s the arrivals area just below me, and there are friends, parents, siblings and visitors arriving, it’s heart warming watching the enthusiasm and emotion with which they are being welcomed.

But I’m going the other way, I’ll be among that crowd downstairs in 20 days.




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We’re staying at a little hostel in Valparaiso, Javier the host is great.  A young man who came to stay at the hostel and liked it so much he bought the place, he’s made it a place of low cost and great character.  Its tucked into a tiny corner on a hilly street, two and a half stories high and wrapped around a tiny courtyard. Its simple, very basic, but cheerful and friendly.


 Casa "Los Gaviotines" (  a resting place for small fluttering seagulls,  Terns) is on a cobblestoned street up the hill behind the Navy offices in downtown Valparaiso, the buses stop just down the hill ( I get the impression that they're all driven by trainee racing car drivers on their last stage of training before trying out for Destruction Derby Stock car racing).  You can walk there from the bus in 10 mins or so and its within easy walk of the harbour and the many excursion boats.

FOR BOOKINGS  javiermilesi@gmail.com 



As you walk in through the door, rooms on both sides but you walk through the cool and darkened corridor into a brightly painted little courtyard, kitchen and rec room with computer on your right, heads and showers at the far end and rooms all around. Compact, but a happy place.

The courtyard from upstairs, my own room to the right.  
Casa "Los Gaviotines" Is highly recommended if you don’t mind basic but clean and fending for yourself.  Breakfast is available, make it yourself but there is a wide variety of foods there.   Good place, just up the road to the left and behind the offices of the Armada de Chile. 
Thats Howard working down there, sometimes the interconnectedness of our modern world is a disadvantage when you're trying to get away from it all.

You’ll recognise it by the street art, that by the way is a real art form here in Chile, they’ve taken graffiti to a whole new level here and it adds much to to therwise plain and sometimes run down buildings.

I like it.  Great place so far in spite of warnings to keep our possessions close and safe, cheap, and full of cheerful helpful people.

Today we’re doing some filming, and then it will be back on the bus to Santiago.

As a by the way, and no she was too far away to get a photo, when I was young, pre teen that is, my dad took me aboard the four masted Barquentine “Esmeralda” when she visited New Zealand.  She’s berthed on the Navy berth here in Valparaiso, looking very good from the little distance we saw her from. A real credit to the Armada de Chile.



Santiago, a hot day and we're travelling tonight.

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Today Howard and I have been walking the town looking at the sights, there are some very grand buildings, lots of parks and fountains.  
 Its a seriously hot day by my standards, probably around 35 deg C, and while the humidity is low its warmer than I'm comfortable with.  I'd have given a lot to be able to strip off and sit alongside these two, but that guy leaning on the pole in the background though that it might not be the best idea.
 One of the many ornate and imposing buildings here, they're well lit up at night and this part of the city is well worth a walk just to see them.
 There is a park with walk and cycleway right through the city, it runs alongside the river below which is carrying the last of the summer melt from the mountains you can ( just, look hard and you'll see them) see in the background.  

We've changed some money, got packed up and checked out of the hostel BellaVista ( recommended by the way, good place if you like hostels) and are shortly off to catch the overnight bus to Porto Montt. That’s way south, about a 10 hour drive so we’ve booked on an up market bus with lay down seats and more space per passenger.  Yes it has a restroom!

 While walking the town we met some very nice gentlemen, mine is a policeman, Howards was sitting in what might have been a barbers shop.  While his friend was better dressed mine was a bit more active.

In the morning we’ll pick up a Chevy Spark rental, actually a Kia Picanto with a Chevy badge on it, and from there we drive to Punta  Arenas to do more toward the “expedition “  that will happen next Southern Summer.  We need to find storage,  sort things out with customs, find accommodation and check out things like launching and docking facilities for the boat. 
We’ve been told that the drive is something special, there will be pics!

Its really hot today, so I’m in the hostels upstairs courtyard where there is a little breeze, looking over toward the mountains and the cablecar that runs through the zoo.  We’ll check that out when we get back on 23rd,  its not until 26th that we fly out so there will be time to do some tourist things after the government things are done.



Wooden Boatbuilding in Castro, Chiloe, Chile!

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Well, the Boot brothers have been doing a lot of walking, together of course, you’ll rarely find them apart from each other.  I went along with them, it keeps them out of trouble you know.
We’ve been exploring part of Chiloe Island just off the coast south of Puerto Montt which is well south of Valparaiso, one of the more southerly of the major ports here in Chile.
We took the ferry over, perhaps a 30 minute ride on a drive on drive off ferry which was an amazingly slick operation. There were at least a dozen of these ferries working when we were crossing, they carry around 30 vehicles each and  operate across a straight where the tidal streams run at ( guessing here, but not exaggerating) up to 8 knots.  This means that they’re going sideways as much as forwards, and the skippers know where all the major eddies are and work them just the same as a white water canoeist does.

On our travels on Chiloe we found a couple of boatyards and stopped with the camera. No problem with walking around in there, the “boatyard” where these pics were taken is the bank between the road and the waters edge, no more than about 20 metres wide, some very simple roofs on poles, and a few truckloads of roughsawn lumber in stacks.
There are repairs going on, and several new builds, I took pics of the biggest, and one of several small boats in frame, and you’d be amazed at how rough, and how basic these are. “Lofting”? All by eye!
Fitting? Axe and adze, and absolutely no more than just enough to get two pieces of wood close enough to get a bolt through. Those bolts? Hardware store mild steel hot galvanised, no fancy stuff here.

This is how the old square riggers were built, no frills, and way cheaper than the current way of building replicas. The fastest and cheapest path to the water, built under a very simple roof on poles with a monster bandsaw and a thickness planer being the only power tools,  axes and sledgehammers being the preferred tools and muscle being the main prime mover.

Have a look!



This little ship in build is about 20 ft long, she's partly planked, the frames are bent in using two temporary ribbands between the keel and the gunwale on each side, she's fastened with galvanised nails bent over on the inside. Some of the material appears to have been salvaged from older boats, and that monster piece of wood in the foreground is a stem removed from a much larger boat which has been demolished and saved for another build.

 About 70 ft by 18, the stem is more than a foot square, she's of much the same shape  and style as the boats we've seen everywhere along this coast.  Raked stem, very full at deck level, fine on the waterline and strong sheerline.

 Another view under the roof. There is a second ship in, she's been stripped out, engine and shaft removed and is being reframed. There are new garboards and some more plank replacements in the forefoot area, those planks being about 1 1/2inches thick, and as with all the others fastened with galvanised mild steel nails.
 We'd stopped to see what was happening in Ancud, the town at the northern end of Chiloe island  and down by the waterfront came across a maritime museum.  Sadly it was closed but this was visible through the fence.  I've no idea as to what or why but she'd be 80 ft, and I suspect typical of a type which would have serviced the coastline in this area. She's a big heavy lump of a ship, cargo carried in a midship hold and on deck, she's no cruise liner but has a certain elegance.
She'd be built in very much the same manner as the ones in the boatyard and the bow end of her is much the same shape and style as the big motor fishing vessels, just the stern being straightened and squared off to cope with the higher speeds given by the big diesel engine.

A complete boat this time, not just a frame. Still in Chile.

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The travelling boots have been doing a lot of exploring,  I went with them of course, it wouldnt pay to let them go by themselves, you never know what sort of trouble they’d get into.

We’ve had some issues getting from Puerto Montt south to Punta Arenas, and in the end bit the bullet and have booked to fly there, and when we’ve done the work we’ll fly back to Santiago.  The first available flight was Friday, its Tuesday today so Howard, the boots and I have been exploring the Austral Highway to see what we could find.

And what did we find?  Stunning scenery, forest clad mountains dropping precipitously into the sea, the road clinging to the cliffs around the headlands, groups of tiny houses behind little bays, fleets of near identical open fishing boats anchored off and more hidden in the creeks and behind sandspits.


We came across these, they're decorative rather than sailing, but interesting and that deep bellied broad beamed shape seemed very consistent with the shape of the very few full sized ones we'd seen. But look below,  we found a real one!

The really serendiptitous discovery though, we having an interest in boats and sailing in the deep south of Chile, was a big traditional sloop rigged sailing boat sitting in a paddock.


The view from the road.   The sea shore is literally just beyond the edge of the grass that you can see. This boat will be winched along the grass, turned at right angles and dragged down the beach by a tractor, then left until the tide comes in to float and sail away.  They're exceptionally rugged little ships, designed for just this kind of use. 
The shed on the right is where the next one is being framed up, and to the right of that are classrooms.
Wouldnt you like to spend some time there with an adze and a hammer!

We pulled over intending to look over the fence,  the boots  though decided that they’d walk me over there to have a closer look and while they carried me around to take photos Jaime the owner came over to see what we were up to.


Shes about 35 ft by perhaps 14 ft, I'd guess at 10 tons, ballasted with rock stowed in the bilges, no interior to speak of but a big cargo hatch in the deck.  You would either sleep on deck or up in the bows below, take some padding, there is nothing there except boat.
The rig is gaff sloop, Jaime having hand sewn the sails from medium duck canvas with 3/4in manila rope boltropes.
These boats carry a crew of four when racing, but two when working for their living.
Yes, this one has a motor, but thats unusual. 


It turns out that not only had he built this little ship, typical of the small coastal service vessels that carried passengers and freight in this area, he is in the early stages of starting a school that teaches traditional boatbuilding, and he himself is the champion racer of these little ships.


A view from inside the shed, thats the next boat being framed up just to your left, with Jaime and Howard up on the deck of the completed ship, that gives you an idea of her bulk, she's a serious carrier for her length and well adapted to the conditions that prevail on this rugged coast.

He and Howard had a very animated conversation, one speaking Spanish with a few words of English, one in English with some Spanish, a lot of gestures and pointing.  Jaime went and got a diploma given to him by the Armada de Chile for his rounding of Cape Horn in a 50 ft or so yacht, and Howard got out his laptop and pulled up the photo of his similar diploma.  Instant brotherhood.


The next ship in frame, built largely by eye, heavy and very strong these are simple boats built with simple tools, using local lumber, crooks and bends selected from trees that are no longer valued for everyday purposes, fastened with galvanised steel bolts and the planking secured by big copper nails.

Jaime has issued an invitation to Howard to come back when the racing is on in September to become one of his crew, and stay in his casa.  ( “house”. I’m learning Spanish.  Banos, that’s the word that you should learn after please and thank you.)

What a coincidence, a really interesting boat, boatbuilding the way it was done, a boatbuilding school, a really nice guy and and new friend. We’ve got his contact details and hope to keep in touch.


Jaime Gallardo and Howard Rice comparing notes, Howard of course rounded Cape Horn in his Klepper Kayak some years ago, was awarded a certificate by the Armada de Chile, and it turned out that Jaime had done the same rounding although in a yacht of about 50 ft long, and had the same certificate. What a coincidence, great stuff.

We’re in Holoperin right now, I’m sitting up in bed in a tiny room upstairs in a “Hostel”.  This is a lovely little town,  it’s the end of the road,  the next stage going south is a very long ferry ride through the northern end of the Chilean Archipelago.  This is backpacker paradise, the scenery is beyond amazing, the town is supported by aquaculture which is big business here and tourism. 
Great place.

Meanwhile, the brothers boot are telling me its time to go for a walk, so I’d better take them out. The footpath is calling.
 By the way, the brothers Boot are actually quite shy, but one has just told me that his name is Lacey, and that the two of them like "Sole" Music.  Nice guys, we're having quite the adventure here in Chile.


More on those little coastal freighters

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And other things.

More on “those boats”.
We’e been to Puerto Varas today, the main town on a major lake near here.  Its very different to the larger city nearby where we’re staying, clean and tidy, the buildings for the most part more modern and up to date, no potholes in the footpaths and everything nicely painted. Very few dogs by the way but Howard managed to find a couple of them and gave them a little to eat. 
But while walking the waterfront we spotted a workboat, the same little sailing coastal cargo ship that our new friend Jaime builds, and this may in fact be one of his, who knows, but there are very few of them being built so it could well be.




We’re back in Puerto Montt again, the Boot Brothers have been out for their evening walk,  we’ve had dinner, and this will be a relatively early night as we’ve a big day tomorrow.
We’ll be flying down the western side of the Andes, the distance is a little over 800 miles, ( 1300 plus kilometers) so we’re expecting to be aloft for two hours if it’s a jet, or three and a half if it’s a turboprop.  Either way it would be a long way if we had to walk.

We’ve five days in Punta Arenas, quite a few tasks to get through but if we can get them done there is a good chance we’ll head out into the wilds and camp for a couple of days.
I’ve no intention of emulating the Antarctic explorers, but at this time of the year the average temperature is around 16 to 18 deg C which is not so bad. I might end up leaving my socks on while in my sleeping bag though.



More ships, but this time its a graveyard

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A graveyard of dreams and ships.  These are Cape Horners, there are the remains of wrecks all along this shore, skeletal remains sticking up out of clear frigid water, ships that came this far and couldn't make it further, the end of the line at the bottom of the world.
The town though is vibrant, growing fast, lots of new infrastructure, good roading, tidy and clean.
This is I think fuelled by tourism, cruise ships come through here a lot, some are based here ( see below) and its a service center for quite a large farming community.
We'll be exploring more.

Pics, from a walk along the waterfront.





Punta Arenas, a fable for most people.

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Punta Arenas, when we read cruising stories, or those tales from the round the world yacht races, or old Joshua Slocums book it seems a place of mystery and  dreams.  But now we're here, its very real. What a place.  The people here have been unfailingly friendly and helpful, that means that we’ve solutions to most of the logistical issues that we came to sort out, will be seeing the Regional Commander of the Armada De Chile tomorrow, and when we’re back in Santiago have contacts within the Chilean Tourism beaureau to go and see. 
So we’re able to take a few hours to see the scenery, talk to people, explore a little and relax.


Avenas Costanera Del Estrecho De Magellanes, the Straights of Magellan.  A place steeped in sailing ship history,  here's the sign indicating the coast road past the city just to prove we're really here.

I’m doing a lot of filming with the video camera, remember that part of the reason for the trip is to get background material for the full scale video that will be made of Howards adventure.  Don’t forget that this will take more than a few bucks to produce this, so please consider supporting this, it’s a way of ensuring that you can both be a part of the experience. Heres the website link.
www.below 40south. com


Chile is big on memorials and statuary, this, as far as I can tell, is a memorial to the first settlers. Huge, elaborate and interesting.  The water behind is the straights between the mainland and Tierra del Fuego, the land of fires.  
This pic was taken from the doorway of the warehouse for the Antarctic supply ships, thats a real live dogsled up there. 
The city is full of wonderful old buildings, this one has a historical rating. But consider how far south we are, and how the building has been adapted to the conditions here. Big and designed as a mass to conserve heat but the big conservatory there to gather sunlight and direct the warmth back into the building.  Solar gain is not a new thing, its been well understood for many generations.

The Boot brothers have been doing a lot of walking, I go along with them of course, they have a real tendency to get into trouble if I don’t. But Lacey, ( he’s the lefty of the twins) told me yesterday that his brothers name was really “Toe”. When I asked why he said it was because their mother didn’t want people to think that he was a “heel”.  “Toe” told his brother to “hold your tongue”!



A good day.

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Its been a very good day today.
One of the jobs that we’d come here to Punta Arenas to do was to contact the appropriate people in the  Armada de Chile, ( navy) and discuss with them the upcoming voyage by Howard in his modified SCAMP.
Another job was to find storage for the boats shipping crate plus scope out the town to find the resources we’d need while staying here during the pre voyage testing and provisioning.
Well, today was the day of the appointment with the zone commander for the Armada. While we were reasonably confident of a good reception there were a few nerves as we were ushered into the “boss’s “ office together with two of his senior staff.
At first our impression was that they were wondering what this was all about, a tiny boat, singlehanded in that region is a vefry high risk venture and it would be their resources that would be at risk to pull anyone in trouble back out to safety so they’re rightfully sceptical of anything outside of a properly equipped expedition ship.
But as the interview proceeded and a series of “Gosh moments” came and went, the atmosphere warmed, there was recognition of the work that has gone into the boat and its gear, the thought and preparation, the experience from Howards previous trip, the courtesy and respect shown in our having come here 6 months ahead of the voyage to make contact and discuss with them what would be needed from their point of view.
Howard had put together a short power point presentation, during which his Cape Horn certificate came up, and Captain Herrera instantly smiled, said “I’ve got one of those” and there was an instant connection, that’s the second time that’s been an icebreaker ( metaphorically speaking, its not that cold here, in the summer at least) for us.
Another moment, those who’ve attended Howards presentations on his voyage around Cape Horn in his 15 ft Klepper folding kayak may recall his tale of walking through a minefield following the lighthouse keepers dogs.  Some have been skeptical of that part of the story, but Captain Herrera confirmed that the mine field was indeed there, and still “alive” at that time.  Since removed by Chliean special forces though. Much hilarity!

There were some suggestions as to communications equipment and agreement on their part that the planning on Howards part was comprehensive and for the most part well executed.  There are a few small things to consider, and their experience in that area  means that their input has real value.
So the interview went very well, and it was with cordial handshakes that we parted, all of us looking forward to meeting again in September next.

The other issue, that of storage and generally having friends upon whom we can call when needed has been solved, oddly enough by a rainstorm overcoming a rusty roof and the ceiling in a restaurant collapsing while we were mulling over where to start looking while having coffee.
Mauricio and his staff coped with the problem calmly, moving us and a couple of tables away from the deluge.  We made jokes about serving towels and shampoo with the coffee, there was much laughter, some conversation and from that friendships have grown.
Proprietor Mauricio has offered his backyard for storage of the shipping crate, knows the area well and may be able to suggest accommodation when we’re down here next and has proven to be a most cordial and interesting friend.
We have been eating regularly at “El Bodegon”, half a block from the city centre, it’s a great place, we get a warm reception  when we go in, not only smiles but there is a big wood stove heating the dining area so its shirt sleeves when outside is distinctly cool.
Our friendship has grown to the point where we can ask for Tony the chef, and tell him that we’d like him to cook a meal, whatever he’d like to cook, and to surprise us.
We’ve had some great food, and strongly recommend the place to anyone coming here! 
El Bodegon restaurant and bar, you’ll like it!




Punt Arenas

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Its been a real scramble the last few days so I've not been able to post, but its catchup time.
So here is a short post and some pics from our days in Punta Arenas.

Punta Arenas, what a place.  The people here have been unfailingly friendly and helpful, that means that we’ve solutions to most of the logistical issues that we came to sort out, will be seeing the Regional Commander of the Armada De Chile tomorrow, and when we’re back in Santiago have contacts within the Chilean Tourism beaureau to go and see. 
So we’re able to take a few hours to see the scenery, talk to people, explore a little and relax.

The scenery is bleak but has a real beauty about it, the town has grown enormously in the past couple of decades and is now a tourist center with some industry as well as a lot of sheep and beef farming, its windy, cool, and the town itself has some wonderful architecture backed by the deep blue grey of the Straights of Magellan and the mountains.  Nice place, we enjoyed our time there, made friends, had a very successful meeting with the Armada de Chile, and are very much looking forward to our next visit when Howard pushes off and sets his course for the south.

I’m doing a lot of filming with the video camera, remember that part of the reason for the trip is to get background material for the full scale video that will be made of Howards adventure. This means that the still camera hasnt been in use as much so Im short on pics. But for those who were interested in the fishing boats, I've got some more from Porvenir on the other side of the Straights.

 Don’t forget that this will take more than a few bucks to produce this, so please consider supporting this, it’s a way of ensuring that you can both be a part of the experience.
Beyond40south.com 

 The Boot brothers have been doing a lot of walking, I go along with them of course, they have a real tendency to get into trouble if I don’t. But Lacey, ( he’s the lefty of the twins) told me yesterday that his brothers name was really “Toe”. When I asked why he said it was because their mother didn’t want people to think that he was a “heel”.  “Toe” told his brother to “hold your tongue”!

I've posted some pics below, and will do some more when I get a chance.  
 A superyacht at anchor beyond an abandoned jetty, the birds are all leaning hard into the stiff wind that prevails here.
 One of the old torpedo boats that used to patrol the southern area of Chiles coast, I imagine that life on board would have been very hard.  But look at the size of those propellors! There is serious horsepower in there.
 The wooden fishing boats are built very cheaply, absolutely no frills, this is the way that the "real" boats were built in the past rather than the way the seriously expensive replicas are built today. This one has come to the end of its life, its had the engine and refrigeration hold removed, and has begun returning to nature.  Its not an uncommon sight here.
 The post office, note the area covered by this office! 
 Derelict Cape Horners, they're being used as a breakwater, a sad end for proud ships.
 I love my little dog, he's my best friend and we go for a walk almost every day, in fact if we dont he makes sure I get reminded.  Forcefully! But I used to ride a bicycle for excersize, and this gent and his doggy friend have found a way to make it a team effort.  The dog is lying on a cushion strapped to the bike, has footrests for his back feet, and a safety belt.  He's a happy chappy, loves the ride.  Nice work team!
Lily from Chile, we met her in a bakery, her late husband came from Michigan where Howard lives and they had lived in California for a long time. She came back to Punta Arenas when he passed on, its her home town.  Lovely lady, we had a lot of fun talking to here and in a very few minutes we were friends.  This is a story that has happened to us over and over again here in Chile, they are very hospitable and friendly people.


Long Steps, the build is about to begin.

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Time to get back to work, on the blog at least as I’ve been very busy on other things.  I got home from Chile to find a pile of work stacked up and waiting for my attention .The engineering work  that helps finance my lifestyle has grown due to one of the very few woodworking machinery engineers in this area no longer being available,  he was an older gent and some of this work being heavy it had just got past him.
I appreciate the work,  the income is very welcome as there is some financial catching up to do, but it does take me away from important things such as boats, design, blogging and so on.
 All that plus maintenance on my ship, a family member needing support and being honest, tired after a long and busy trip away in a country new to me meant that I’ve been a bit preoccupied.

So, I’m close to caught up, and its back to the drawing board, literally.  I’ve two major projects on right now, one is a custom junk rigged cruiser which will stay out of the public eye until the customer is ok with putting it out there  and the other is my own “Long Steps” project.  That’s ben mentioned here before,  but for those who missed it, the boat is a long range sail and oar expedition/adventure boat intended for a 3 month voyage which will be  in mostly open waters. 

My intention is to  get out there and have “the adventure of a lifetime” before the years catch up with me. They’ve been flickering past at a distressingly rapid rate of late and its high time I got on with it.
The idea is to have a boat that is about 70% sail, but which will row well enough to cover a few miles in dead calm, or to work into a narrow space up a river or in a harbour. It has to be able to cope with very bad conditions in open waters, so needs to be close to being fully blue water capable in spite of being an “open boat”, and needs to provide some shelter and comfort for my no longer as young as it once was body.

I’ve two designs which provided information for this design, one being SCAMP, astonishing capable for only 11 ft 11in long, with her ballast, self draining cockpit floor, easy righting from capsize and her little shelter.  Someone recently called that shelter a “Cuddly”,  I suspect that he was using a smartphone which translated “cuddy” into something that was in its lexicon but what a good name!

Anyway, SCAMP has a lot of the virtues that I wanted, but extra length gives speed under both sail and oar, so I looked at Walkabout which has been described by a very experienced sailor as “the fastest monohull I’ve ever sailed”.
It’s a long slim boat, especially on the waterline and moves very well under its modest sail area, as well as being nice to row.
She has other virtues in that she’s easy to roll back up after a capsize, can be sailed away without bailing, and has a particularly easy motion in a seaway.

Long Steps is a slightly larger “Walkabout” style hull, her shape massaged to give more form stability, ballasted with a big water tank under the self draining cockpit floor, with an offset centerboard like SCAMPs one which frees up the cockpit so making a nice space in which to lie down and sleep, she has the same “cuddly” and storage/high up bouyancy locker in the forward part of what looks like a mini cabin, and I’ve used some of the extra space at the after end to provide space in which to stand at the helm as well as a space for my favourite piece of small boat cruiser furniture which is a small swimming pool bean bag.
Yes I tie it in with a lanyard.

So I drew the first draft of the plans, did all the arithmetic, worked over the structure, and was ok with it,  mostly. I did though think that the space under the “cuddly” was a bit tight, and we have some interfereing beaureuocrats  in local governments who believe that dying is bad for you and have made up a rule that when out in boats under 6 metres long ( just under 20 ft) lifejackets ( PFDs) must be worn at all times.  This nonsense only applies in a few places but still, it can be avoided.

I promise, when I get the plans a little further along I'll get them scanned and put a pic up that will include the full sailplan and a bit more detail.
In the meantime, this will give you an idea as to what I'm up to here.

Now I’m not about to row Long Steps up a river against the tide on a hot windless day while wearing same,  and  when I built a mockup I found that that space under the shelter was a bit tight, so I’ve redrawn it.  I’d only built two components, so there is not much to discard, and the Mk 2 version is a little longer, same beam, has a little more freeboard, more headroom and length in the “cuddly” and a bit more volume in the ballast tank.

I’ve two engineering jobs on today so wont be able to do much with that, but the Tax man is sending me a refund this week, part of which will pay for enough plywood to get properly started on the project.  Watch this space!



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