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Report on Saturday Night Special.

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A while back I drew up a boat I called the “Saturday Night Special”.  A reference to a cheap throw away weapon used for a single job.  The boat was intended for events such as the Texas 200, was to be a quick build and would have good performance with one or two aboard, and to handle the often very windy conditions that prevail there.

There have been a dozen or so of these built so far, all of them built and finished much more nicely than the original concept entailed, and several of them participated in this years T200.

For those who don’t know it, that’s a 200 mile, five day sail up the eastern coast of Texas, camping along the way in places where one has to be completely self sufficient.  It blows, the hot desert pulling air in off the Gulf of Mexico, 25 knots plus, generally over the stern quarter is common. Blazing sun, big waves, shallow waters, mud, narrow channels, it’s a challenging event, one which attracts a good entry each year  and I’m complimented that so many have chosen my boats in which to participate.

Booby and Kirsten Chilek took their Saturday Night Special on this event, and Bobby has written an excellent story of their journey up the coast.  It’s a very good read,  you can find parts one and two here.


Heres a video shot of the boat under way, moving right along, steady and stable.


Here’s his impression of the boat itself, I'm very pleased and highly complimented, thanks Bobby.


“FINAL THOUGHTS ON THE SNS
After the way the boat performed in the Texas200, I am thoroughly impressed with this design. The boat is exceptionally seaworthy, in all the conditions we faced that week, the boat never gave us cause for concern and as the week wore on I became less concerned about what waves we might encounter in the bays.  She is very stable on all points of sail, I have come to believe that she will be quite difficult to blow over.  I have had her pretty far over and she just holds there, with the side decks, she is unlikely to take on water when heeled way over.  She is  quite capable of sailing in shallow water, this opens up so many areas that are off limits to others.  She is fast.....I mean FAST.....very capable of planing!  I look forward to getting her to do this more as I really learn this boat.  I love the way this boat is fully decked, and the front and rear storage compartments.  We had everything we needed for the week packed in there.  We could have put in more but were trying to give some nod to weight control.  The boat is light, maybe 250 pounds???  I haven't weighed it, but my son and I can lift in on and off the trailer. I also like the the fact that you can sleep in the cockpit, this is very useful when you arrive at your camp and find it less hospitable than anticipated.
As far as my sail trim problems, I have resolved most of those.  Turns out I changed too many things at once and have returned most of the changes back to design spec.  The main problem is that I just need to learn the lug rig.  Most of my sailing has been with the Marconi rig, I have some gaff experience too, but it wasn't a huge adjustment.  I know this sail is fast because Chuck Pierce has a lug rig on his Mayfly 14. I have also seen John Goodman flying along in his Goat Island Skiff, so there is nothing wrong with the lug rig, there is just a learning curve.  I feel that the curve is well worth it, because it is the easiest rig to deal with on the water I have ever had and one of the quickest to set up when you arrive at the boat ramp.  I am convinced that I could have this boat launched in 15 minutes after arriving with a little practice, this makes the boat very useable.
This is the fastest, most versatile, seaworthy, easy to use,  fun sailboat I have ever had!
And .........I got to sail the Texas200 in it, what a blast!  “


    



Its nearly summertime here.

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Supporting oneself with the income from plans sales is not easy.  I watch the others in this field and note that pretty much all of them do the design work and plans sales as either part of a larger business that might include doing survey work, or boatbuilding, or something completely different.  But other than living a very simple life, getting the utmost value from every dollar spent, its not really a living.
So I do other things as well as draw and build boats.

I spent many years selling, installing, comissioning and trouble shooting heavy sawmill and wood processing machinery.  I managed a sawmill for a while, ran quality control audits on some companies who made structural laminated wooden beams, and through all that built up a good knowledge of the principles of woodworking machines, how they function and how to fix them.

That’s how I earn my extra cash, that plus my Government Superannuation allows me to travel, to drive a decent vehicle, and to have some choices in life. It does though burn up time that I'd rather spend on important things like boats and boating.

Just recently, the company that I contract to for machinery repairs ran a notice in their monthly customer newsletter that they had this service available, and there has been a good response to that, its kept me out there swinging my spanners and hitting things with hammers rather than writing my blog, so what I’m saying here is “Hey,  I’ve been busy”.

Boatbuilding, and even drawing has been slow of late so the engineering, although time consuming is a nice little business that makes a difference for me.  It’s a distraction from the important stuff though, and I’m getting withdrawal symptoms.  I’ll be drawing this morning, out in the workshop this afternoon  One stringer to fit and I can start fitting up the lower plank on Long Steps. 

That stringer has to go in, and the plank on so I can determine the shape of the (off) centerboard case, it slots through the join where the plank butts up against the bottom panel, remembering that this boat doesn’t have a true keel, its got a long narrow panel, flat from side to side and curved from bow to stern. It’s a big timesaver in that there is no keel structure to build, and the framing is “egg crate” style on top of that, stringers wrapped around and planking applied.

So I’ll be out there this afternoon, its “engineering tomorrow”, and I’ve a job that will take me to Whangarei, a bit over an hour away, on Wednesday.  That gives me an opportunity to drop in and see Annie Hill and how her new ship is coming along.  Its upright now, good progress.

>>>> A few days along from the above.   I’ve fitted and faired off the lowest stringer both sides. It’s a fairly heavy one at 25mm x 30mm, it has to lie fair across some well spaced frames and the heavier section is needed to do that, plus its got a near 80 degree twist from the midships section to the stem so there is quite a bit of material to be planed off.
Done that too, and am busy getting the plank shapes off, that’s not hard, it’s a matter of taking a slice off the side of a sheet of plywood then clamping it into place, tracing the lower edge and cutting, then doing some trimming to fit, and when that edge is right the top edge is simply traced off the top of the stringer and cut.

I need the full plank shape for the plans, so I’ve begun by making the first piece, that’s 2.3m back from the stem, there will be another length from the stern forward and a short length to bridge the gap between the two.  I’ll be making a simple scarf joint with a butt bock behind to hold them together, then taking the full plank off, fiberglassing the inside to beef up this plank. 
It will be glassed outside as well, and the join between the bottom and that plank will be taped with 150 wide double bias tape, the reason for all this is that when beaching the  boat there is a lot of stress on this area, so rather than have a hole punched in it, I’m adding strength where needed.

That first section, the one that many people find quite challenging due to the combination of curve and twist has gone on easily, the long slim boat is easy to lay plywood around as there are no hard curves and that twist up to the stem is spread over the first 2.5 metres or so.  Not a big deal at all.

At this stage I’m leaving the mizzen mast box just dry assembled, until I have the masts I wont know what diameter hole to put through the partner block at top and bottom so it has to wait.  It wont be hard to access later on so that wont be a big deal.

I did though start on fitting the rudder gudgeons and pintles, drilled the holes, 20mm, way oversize, masked them off and filled them with epoxy filler. They’ll be sanded off smooth and flush then redrilled to take the bolts, and countersunk to take neoprene “O” rings smeared with anhydrous lanolin to seal them off.
If I hit something with the rudder the shock wont then break the seal and let water in.

 Spending a few hours out there working on the boat is good for the soul and the sanity. I should do more of it.



Sanity, until Sunday last I’d only sailed SEI on the river, its narrow and the currents run really quickly so its tack, tack, tack, maybe two or three minutes apart.  Not enough time to get a real feel of the boat, to play with sheeting angles and tune the rig, move my weight around and see what difference it all makes.
Friend Blair, and new friend Charles were going out in the “real” sea for a sail last Sunday, so I wheeled SEI up the track from the dock to the carpark. Its still too early in the season to get the pickup and trailer down here, wet and soft, I’ve been bogged twice and don’t want to do that again so it was muscle power to get her up there.
Its very steep that track, I gave up carrying her before I got halfway up.  80 kg and nearly 5 metres is a big lump to carry on ones own.  So I put a sausage fender under the bow, pushed her along to the balance point, put a second fender under the bow and pushed, and so on. 
Hoisted her up on the trailer, an ordinary garden trailer with a bit of padding, strapped the rig on and away we went.


Charles with his leeboard "Rogue" still on the trailer, Blair on the beach about ready to go, me heading on out.  You can see the lighthouse off in the distance on the left, its the vertical thing nearest the left of the picture, about 5 or 6 miles I think.  A nice sail on a nice day.
For those who dont know it, thats Rangitoto Island, a, hopefully, extinct volcano that lies across the mouth of Auckland harbour, it was last active somewhere around 900 to 1000 years back. Fingers crossed.
Pic by Emma 



If you’re into Google Earth, we sailed, Blair in his Saturday Night Special and I, from Narrow Neck Beach in Belmont on Aucklands North Shore to Rangitoto Light and back. Downwind in light conditions, and back with just a little more breeze.  Charles stayed nearer the beach, but took some pics of us as we neared him. Thanks Charles.

We're off.  You can see that there is a lot of traffic out there, thats the main channel, handles all the shipping plus there is a lot of recreational craft out there.  Labour weekend is the last weekend in October here and is generally thought of as the beginning of summer.  This day was about 20 deg c, very pleasant.
Another pic by Emma. (Thanks too for the picnic lunch, much appreciated) 

Performance wise? I sailed away from the SNS downwind in light conditions, then Blair sailed past me upwind. I was playing with the trim and sail shape, made it back to the beach before he did but he had been having a relax and not paying attention, plus I was working both tide and windshifts so who knows. In any case both boats are performing pretty well.

Both Blair and I wanted to know how our boats behaved in a capsize, so he hauled “Tomorrow” over. He reports that she didn’t want to capsize, took some effort to get her over.  She floated high and stable but there is a lot of water to move to get her dry,  Watching him right her it was evident that she came up easily and the boat was stable enough swamped to climb over the side so she’s about as I expected.  Good! No worries there.


SEI is not quite so good, I knew she needed more bouyancy, have even mentioned that in the building guide that will be with the plans, recommending that polystyrene blocks be fitted under the centre thwart.  But she was unwilling to tip over, took almost all my weight standing on the rail to get her to lie down on her side. I was able to right her easily, but she floats a little too low to board and bail her so today I’m cutting and fitting those blocks.

Note, did that this afternoon. 

Its our “mini raid “ this weekend, starting mid afternoon from Sandspit, out to Kawau Island, back on Sunday. Details on Facebook, the Dinghy Cruising NZ Facebook page.

I’m very much looking forward to it. Best get to work on that boat, provisions to go on board and my camping gear to organise.



Notice.  Friend David Jasper Robertson had a nice website going a year or five back, it got a bit much, life got in the way and he let it slide. But he’s back again, with a slightly different focus this time, more relaxed and as a story teller rather than as the “authority who tells people how it is”. 

He’s only just got started, but there is some content there which you might find of interest, here’s the link.




Upcoming travel. Sailing, and boatbuilding.

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Its past time to put up more posts here, I’ve been a bit preoccupied of late, yes its happened before and will probably happen again.
But Howard Rice’s adventure is coming up, Denny and I will be heading out on the big silver bird to meet up with him in Chile,  ( many thanks to those who have contributed to the Video Fund, some of that is helping us to get the “footage in the can” and travel is a large part of that). That comes up in 14 days time so we’re beginning to select our baggage items, and that time will flash past.
Yes I promise to post about the trip here and probably on Facebook.

I’ve been an “engineer” more than a boatbuilder or designer of late, we’ll be away for a month and I need to be completely up to date on that before we fly out so its been a busy time. Boatbuilding has been happening though and I’ll get some pix for you in a few minutes when my cameras batteries charge up a bit, the ones I took before I started writing here were almost black and I got puzzled about it until the screen flashed up the “charger needed” indicator, so they’ll happen soon.

In the meantime I’ve been away for a short cruise in SEI.

Of course its springtime here, a time of blustery winds and very changeable weather but also a time when there is some real warmth in the sun, when the water changes from deep dark green to sparkling blue, and the horizon seems not to be so far away that its out of reach.

Five of us set sail from Sandspit, about an hour or a little more north of Auckland central.  Far enough away from the madding crowds to be a peaceful place.  We were heading for Kawau Island, once the seat of Governor Grey, the Queens representative here in the early days.
He had a home built there, the “Mansion” of Mansion House Bay, and imported quite a few exotic trees and animals, Wallabys ( like minature Kangaroos) and Kookaburras with their call that sounds like maniacle laughter amond them.
With the growing population of native birds such as Tui, Bellbirds and Weka among the rapidly improving forest cover it makes for a subtropical near paradise. 
Being around 25 miles north of the several city marinas its two sheltered harbours are a very popular cruising destination , but this early in the season it was not at all crowded.



Launching at Sandspit, it was blowing quite hard so being in the lee of the barge was good, some shelter helped us get rigged and away with fewer hassles.  Rogue being unloaded from her trailer, SNS behind and SEI almost up against the barge. While sandy this boatramp is quite a good place to launch except at high tide when there is no space between the water and the seawall. There is a secure carpark nearby, you pay but its better than risking the vehicle or trailer.

Our sail across was brisk, I’d not had SEI out on a breezy day in open water before, she’d been my workhorse under oars for picking up trash in the estuary where I live, suffering many scrapes and dings and the indignity of being dragged over oyster beds and up on to a cement dock so she looks a little older than her true age.
But that crossing, about 6 miles or so across a quite open bay in a solid force five over the stern quarter, that’s 18 to 21 knots of wind, was really good fun.  Blair in his Saturday Night Special and I were just about even. A gust would set him surfing and a couple of boatlengths ahead, then I’d catch one and pull level. In general there is not much between the two boats, he’s a little faster in strong winds, and SEI is a tiny bit faster in less wind.

We pulled into Squadron Bay in Bon Accord Harbour, and loafed around for a while, then, as it was getting on in the afternoon and SEI not being set up to sleep aboard I headed on back out, tacking up the narrow harbour against an increasing breeze, around into North Cove where my friends house is.  I’d arranged to stay there overnight, and the tides meant that I was able to row right up to his jetty in the morning or evening.

It was a great sail, the short steep chop a good test for SEI’s shape which I’d drawn specifically to cope with that sort of thing, she doesn’t pitch much, is stable and with a single reef made great progress upwind , tacking reliably, and pointing well. 
It was exhilarating sailing, a little spray coming aboard but nothing major, and I was soon clear of the point and around into North Cove.

I rowed the last bit up to the jetty, the winds swirling around behind the point made sailing a bit of a lottery so down came the sail and out with the oars, she rows well and the rig stows low along the port side of the boat so it doesn’t obstruct the rower.

Had a nice evening with Bill, but next morning I sailed out to the entrance of the cove to find that the water outside was a mass of whitecaps. Yes, I’m chicken,  self preservation is high on my list of priorities so I turned tail and went back to the jetty, spending the day pulling mangrove seedlings beside his dock and then helping to repair his water pump.  While it wasn’t quite what I’d gone there for it was good to be able to help, and he’s good company.

Sunday morning though was a lot better, still fresh but not excessive, the sun was shining and the forecast was for the wind to swing south and moderate so out we went, SEI and I, and were soon around to Harris Bay where the group were anchored in mirror calm waters.
They’d had a great time doing very little, a venture up to Mansion House bay had occupied them the day before, and all had been comfortable overnight.

It was decided that we’d go across to the Kawau Yacht Club and have a late breakfast, met the very hospitable crew there and had a breakfast that, in the words of Arlo Guthrie,  “couldn’t be beat”. Remember Alice? She wasn’t there.

From there we had a nice sail in somewhat tricky winds around to Mansion House Bay where Barbara Bates from Pathfinder “Varuna” treated us to a very good lunch, and we hand fed a couple of Peacocks while sitting in the sun.
Being as we were all of us due home that night we headed out back toward Sandspit early in the  afternoon, and had a very good sail back in about 15 knots of wind, again over the stern quarter and again with Blair and I there was nothing in it for speed, our impromptu contest ending about as level as it could be.

Here we are at Mansion House Bay, Paul in his Whiting 16 was out in the bay being the good samaritan towing a couple of younger folk in a dinghy back to their base. This is a truly lovely spot.  The boats are, left to right,  Blairs Saturday Night Special, Margaret and Frank Bate's "Pathfinder" My SEI" and Colleen and Charles Popes Rogue.

I might have had half a nose in front at the end, but then, so might he, depends upon where you were standing to judge it. Check the video taken by Paul Mullings, he’d left quite a bit before the rest of us and was standing on the jetty as we came in. Thanks Paul.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hp6wjKHymCg

It was a great weekend, and we’re all of us looking forward to the next one.  At this stage, we’re thinking of a day sailing meeting on Lake Pupuke in March, all of us seem to have busy summers ahead of us so we’re planning well ahead.
Join us, you’d be welcome, we’re mostly bigger dinghies and open cruisers but all are welcome.

Watch this space for details.

Boatbuilding, the frame of  Long Steps is all complete, apart from the offcentrecase and needing to glue up the tiller line tunnel and the mizzen mast step. That latter can wait until I’ve a better idea as to what I’ll use as a mast, probably carbon fibre but there are budgetary considerations so it could be spruce.
I have the lower planks cut out, the inside of the forward sections of them fiberglassed, and the port side one glued in place. The fiberglass? A layer of 6 oz boat cloth each side close to doubles the impact strength of the 6mm meranti plywood, I’ll be glassing the outside when the boats all planked up.
Taping a section of the join between the bottom panel and the lowest plank.  Thats 150 gr x 100mm tape, and its been set wet on wet over a glue mix fillet, the area will be covered with 150 gr fiberglass cloth as well, inside and out.

This boat may well need to be be dragged up a surf beach, all rocks and pebbles so I’m making the lower part of the hull as tough as I can.

The starboard side lower plank, I've glassed the forward section before I hang the plank, thats the "parka nylon" squeegeed on over the epoxy and glass to help the finish. Why did I only glass the forward section? Simple. I ran out of cloth so did the area thats really hard to get at and will do the rest when the plank has been fitted. 
The joins in the planks would normally be scarfed but as I was making the planks up "on the boat" this is easier, the plans will have a full scale drawing of the template, with glass inside and out this is plenty strong enough for the job.
No problem bevelling the stem, 2 minutes with a 100mm angle grinder with a 40 grit sanding disk on it, the eyecrometer was used to get the bevel right.  Epoxy glue is marvellous at filling gaps, just as well.


The seam from lowest plank to bottom panel will also be glass taped each side, more insurance against rough handling and the first tapes are in place.

Note on the pics of the plank being glassed I’ve a white fabric over the glassed area.  That’s what we call “Parka nylon”, a slightly porous very finely woven material that many light shower proof jackets ( parkas) are made of, and you can tell because they don’t keep the water out very effectively.
If you are choosing cloth for this, you should just be able to suck air through it, that makes squeegeeing bubbles out much easier.
I use this stuff instead of “Peel Ply” which is a cloth specifically produced for use when fiberglassing, when squeegeed on over the resin it leaves a much nicer finish than just leaving it, easier to sand smooth and get a base over which to paint. It tends to reduce any “bloom” as well.
This was my first time using parka nylon , it’s a fraction of the cost, and so far it seems to work well. Worth the experiment!



The entry angle of the bow is very fine, she's actually quite slim down on the waterline, don't forget that she's intended for both sail and oar.




Getting close to the big day

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"The big day" being next Wednesday.  Its Sunday morning here and I've still a lot to get done before we fly out to Chile to meet up with Howard, David of Lutra Productions, Sophia who will travel south from Santiago to Punta Arenas to be our translator, ( I can say please and thank you, ask where the restroom is and order a meal as long as its chicken and rice with vegetables so I can survive in a Spanish speaking world, sort of).

For anyone who's not caught up with what this travel is all about, have a read in "here". http://below40south.com/   There are 10 videos under the "Media" heading, and lots of reading.

Yesterday I spent the day with family, we had an early Christmas lunch, I mowed the grass around Dennys house, have mine to do today, then its packing.  Lots of drawing to do, all stuff that I should have got done weeks ago but of late there really needed to have been two of me to get through all the jobs.  Wedging things apart enough to take a month out at the busiest time of year ( summer here of course, unlike you northern hemisphere people who are in the cold )  is not easy.  But one way or another Denny and I will be on that plane on Wednesday evening.

I've some tools to pack, there are a few little jobs to do on Howards boat, clothing for Santiago where the temps are plus 30 deg, thats around 90F,  and for Punta Arenas where it will be about 12 deg, thats early 50sF. So two lots of gear, tools, some reading matter, computer and charger plus adaptor plug.  I have to be able to carry all this, and there are weight limits on the airline so it will be probably about 25 kg, (55 lbs).

I will be blogging as we travel, so --- Watch this Space.


Blog from Argentina

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Well. The Boot Brothers are at it again, off on an adventure.  You’ll recall that they tend to get into trouble if they’re allowed to go off on their own so I make sure to go with them. “Lacey”, that’s the one that fits on my left foot, is very outgoing, he’s the trouble maker. He’ll go off to explore anything that seems interesting and will kick anything he doesn't like to the curb, while his shy brother “Toe”  ( his mother named him that so no one would think he was a “heel” ) is the one who holds his tongue and just follows along one step at a time.
So far on this trip they’ve carried me off on a short drive into the city in son Brendans BMW 320( he’s very proud of it), a wait at the bus depot then a two hour ride on a pretty nice bus up to the Airport in Auckland city.
A longish wait, ( we like to get to the airport with time to spare) and we boarded a very nice Air New Zealand flight to Argentina.  The flight was 11 ½ hours which is a long time to be confined to such a tiny space but the seats on Air NZ are better than those on most aircraft so we were ok, able to sleep some and were well fed.
I watched “Suicide Squad” which was entertaining and “Petes Dragon”.  Not exactly intellectual stuff but it passes the time.
 Air NZ has just won the award for the worlds best airline, for the fourth year in a row! The service, the meals, the seating and the inflight entertainment is as good as it gets in cattle class. Recommended.

Buenos Aires, we arrived mid afternoon, but by the time we got ourselves through the very efficient customs and Immigration, got to our hotel and had a short break, a walk and a meal it was time for bed, after all we had to be down in the lobby for our taxi at 3 am. 
We wont get to see the city this time, about all I can say about  this part of Argentina is that its flat and busy, we could see the skyscrapers of the city off in the distance but with such an early start in the morning we couldn’t risk getting lost trying to go into town.

The Holiday Inn is a very nice, but typically western hotel, the kind you’d find in any country that handles a lot of travellers, sort of generic four star.  But the bed was comfortable, the meal, after some extended discussion in English with a waiter who only spoke Spanish, was good, and the desk service in the lobby as good as it gets.

3 15 am, a very zoomy cab ride back to the airport and a really slick check in, and here we are with an hour to wait before we head to the boarding lounge.

I like to look for differences when we, the Boot Brothers and I , are travelling, and cars are one of the “differences” that I watch for.  Renault and Citroen, with a good seasoning of VW, and a few Japanese built ( rebadged Mazda)  Fords make up the bulk of the vehicles, The trucks are almost all European, the buses Chinese or French, and most are modern and in fair condition.  Interesting, the only American vehicle we’ve seen was the worlds rattiest Ford F100, and believe me I’ve seen some ratty ones but this one beat them all.  Interestingly all the many many motorbikes are Indian, that’s not the “Indian” beloved of the USA vintage bike fans, but little 125cc bikes from India.  Thousands of them, like flies among a herd of cattle.

I did spot a very late model Bently Continental!

So as I write the Boot Brothers are under the table, conspiring with Dennys flower power shoes. There seems to be a lot of fraternisation going on under there, and while I’m glad that they’re getting on well, there seems to be a lot of giggling going on and I’m worried that unless I make sure that they’re put at opposite ends of the room at night they’re going to be getting into mischief.



Punta Arenas, the southernmost city on earth.

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There are settlements at Ushuia and Porto Williams, but they're quite small, P A is a city of close to 150 thousand.

While the air temperature is ok, probably around 16/18 degrees, the wind chill factor is fierce.  That wind cuts like a knife, and today it was blowing pretty hard.
The Straights out there were grey blue and white, roaring white capped waves marching endlessly as far as we could see.
Tough weather for sailing.
But of course we’re not, we’re ensconced in a nice little apartment, its warm in here behind the windows and it was my turn to cook tonight.  Stir fried chicken & mushrooms in rice with vegetables and the remains of a very nice loaf of bread with bananas or oranges for dessert.

My turn in the kitchen tonight,  didn't poison anyone which is good.

We’ve been around the town a bit today,  found the supermercado (supermarket), several outdoor equipment shops, our friend Mauricios café, and had a good long chat to our friend the Zone Commander of the Armada de Chile (Navy).
It gets a bit cold here at times, remember that this is summertime! 

Its been quite a profitable day from the point of view of getting some essential jobs done, there are a few more to be ticked off the list before the boat arrives, then more work on the boat, provisioning to do, find a means of transporting it, and get the boat all rigged and cold water sea trials to conduct.

We’re enjoying “Punta”, the architecture is interesting, the people friendly, the weather “different” and we’re getting the essential jobs done.

Sophie joins us tomorrow, she’s our translator so we’ll have a team of six to house, feed, ( I’m glad I only had five to cook for tonight,  the frying pan was pretty full) and transport.  But the cameras are running, the weather is bright, the boat arrives in three days and we’ve a place to work on it before we launch it.

The Boot brothers are getting pretty friendly with the Floral twins,  you can see an enigmatic little smile on each of the girls, while the brothers both of them have their tongues hanging out. 
I'm not sure about this. Could be trouble brewing if we're not careful!



Adios for now from Denny, Howard, David, Phil and myself. 



Article 2

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We’ve been in Punta Arenas for a few days now, got quite a lot of things organised but the boats not here yet, so the film team, that’s the five of us, took the ferry to Porvenir across the other side of Estrecho de Magellan, that fabled passage from the Pacific to the Atlantic. Its dangerous for sailing vessels, and in places even powered ships should proceed with caution.
The crossing it in the 2000 ton ferry was smooth, fast and efficient, I’d guess that it runs at around 18 knots and leaves very little wake, and as it came into Porvenir the helmsman followed the narrow channel up to the harbour and flicked this massive lump of a ship around a very tight 90 deg corner at a speed that would have towed a whole team of waterskiers.
Impressive.

The ferry, I was told that its about 2000 tons, carries 45 cars and 8 heavy trucks, 250 passengers plus some assorted freight. With time spent picking up the stern anchor and laying it again at the other end so they can hold the vessel straight on the ramp its about two hours from boarding to walking off at the other end. 

There is a little boatyard next to the ferry dock, which is just a very wide and gently sloping concrete boatramp, the ships landing barge type ramp being lowered onto the sloping concrete to allow cars and trucks to drive on and off.
That boatyard is about as simple as it  gets, I suspect that there is a big tractor somewhere and the fishing craft are simply dragged up the beach onto the flat, jacked up and put on blocks. 
The fishing boats are simple carvel built wooden boats, rough, powered in the main by converted truck engines, and for the most part are under 40 ft, some as small as 25 ft. They’re an interesting shape from a designers point of view with very fine entry, widely flared bows and a very flat run with the transom having little or no deadrise.
I’d say that they’ve evolved to cope with the short steep chop that is kicked up by strong winds here, that shape wont pitch much but I think some of the bigger ones would roll a lot.

The town is perhaps 2000 people, biting cold today, bleak, all of the buildings somewhat small, close together and inward looking, there is a surprising number of burned out shells of houses and warehouses in the town, perhaps a comment on old fashioned heating methods, and it overlooks a shallow harbour with a very narrow entrance.

It does have a charm of its own, in part because its  very different from anywhere else any of us have ever been, some of the views are stunning, and the buildings are very different.
A little corner shop in Porvenir, its about 12 ft square, seems to have one of every item ever seen in a corner shop. This is a land of contrasts, so many tiny businesses alongside a large and immaculately maintained military base, a very modern ferry terminal alongside a boatyard full of battered little wooden fishing boats, a modern Mercedes bus alongside the most beaten up Datsun pickup I've ever seen.  Interesting place.

Our first stop was the museum, where we learned a lot about the Yaghan and Ona people, the indigenous peoples, now extinct .https://www.culturalsurvival.org/publications/cultural-survival-quarterly/yahgan-ona-road-extinction
We also learned a lot of the history of the gold mining and farming industries that flourished here from around 1870 until the gold ran out in the early 1900s and the farming proved largely uneconomic, although there are still a lot of free range cattle farmed.

Currently the main income earner for the area is tourism, and a less fancy tourist destination you’d be very hard put to find, but the bus service ( phone him up and he comes to your house, toots his horn and picks you up, same in reverse with the return,  great service) which runs back and forth to the ferry about 8 km away is great.

We only had a couple of hours as today there was only the one ferry trip out and back, so we checked out the museum, went to a tiny little restaurant and had “a meal that couldn’t be beat” and I’m not kidding.  Simple fare, lots of it, tasty, warming and cheap.  In terms of value for money and simple satisfaction it was great.  Gnocchi, Casseroled chicken, a cold Chicken and corn dish, pork, beef and mashed potato.  Point to what you wanted and a dish FULL was handed to you.
That was the choice but it met with universal approval.

So it was back on the bus, a quick tour around town picking up locals heading for the ferry and a few minutes around the boatyard with the cameras for David and I then a seat in the warm passenger lounge for a little under 2 hours and we were heading “home” to our casa.

 A Ship shipping ship, when we first saw it it was shipping a ship which itself had ships on board. ( I could go on but I wont) It sinks down, floats the cargo onto the deck, pumps the tanks and lifts up, sails away and unloads the same way.  
It had an oil rig construction ship on board, which I think is going to be used to help in building a big wharf for a port extension.

View from the ferry as we came in, those little fishing boats are mainly hunting crabs, its the down season right now as the crabs are breeding. I've seen some of those crabs, and I'd hate to have them hunting me, they're BIGF. Around 20 inches across their legs and 6 or 8inches across the body.
The boats are interesting, wooden, rough, effective, ranging from about 25 ft up to 40 ft. There are giant stern trawlers out there as well, they catch the fish in deeper waters and I did get some pics of a couple of them up on the hard being maintained, 200 plus feet long, big deep vessels that do most of their fishing out in the Pacific. 

Good trip. Its an interesting place.

By the way some of these photos pan, I've made them large so you can pick up the detail but they need to be grabbed with the cursor and panned from side to side.






We are staying with some very generous people.

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BLOG CASA

Our hosts here have been amazing, they’re on board with the project and want to  help in any way they can. 
We’re staying in a comfortable little two bedroom apartment, nice and sunny, has a kitchen where we’re taking turns to cook for the group.  Right now I’m chewing on a toasted sandwich made by Howard.

The puzzle as to where to keep the shipping crate that Southern Cross has been shipped in, plus the gear that comes to help with preparation but which wont be be needed on the voyage was bothering us, but when we asked if the crate could be put on the road verge outside there was some rapid conversation, and consultation with Mama, and they’ve offered to keep the crate in the driveway that leads to an apartment that they’re building on the other side of the Casa from where we stay.   No cost, we offered, but no, no cost.  Wow!
That’s going to make live much easier for  us, the boat, the work that will done on it, and the crate all in one place and no worries about security or having to move lumber and stores from our original place to where we’ll work.
So much easier,  thank you from the bottom of our hearts.

For friendly, comfortable accommodation within walking distance of the central city and the waterfront,  highly recommended.

You'll meet Ivette David Rotenberg, Gonzalo Gallardo David, Carlos Gallardo David and Ivette Gallardo David







Some history

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History.

On the way into Punta Arenas from the airport the other day we spotted the topmasts of a pair of square riggers. They were too far inshore to be on the water, the rigs appeared to be complete, and I’d heard that there was a replica of Magellans ship somewhere so,  today we drove down there for a look around.

Bingo, a small maritime museum!  Small? Sort of, FULL SIZED replicas of
Magellans ship, the HMS Beagle, the James Caird and an Azores whaleboat plus a typical Chilean coastal trading schooner. 

All built on site from local lumber, interiors as per the originals, no sails but rigged.
Amazing ! 







Looking over the “Trinidad” replica, it is evident that life on board would have been extremely hard. She’s no cruise liner, and when one considers how poorly those Carracks and Caravels sailed to windward, and how difficult some of the areas which they explored are, its not suprising that only 18 of the almost 250 men who set out on the journey made it back to Europe.

The next ship we called on was what I think is an Azorean Whaleboat.  There were no signs to tell us the history but those boats are distinctive.  The lines shout speed, and there was a lot of whale hunting here in the south in the 1800s.



From there, it was up the stairs and onto the replica of “ HMS Beagle”, that’s Darwins ship, the man who developed the theory of evolution.
She’s a typical ship riggedsquare rigger of her era and the difference between her and the Trinidad is very evident.  The Beagle would sail rings around her much older predecessor, and the accommodations while tight and uncomfortable by our standards are much better than Trinidads
middle decks.







The James Caird replica reminded us of the extraordinary voyage by Ernest Shackleton from Elephant Island on the Antarctic ice across the Drake Passage between the ice and Cape Horn to South Georgia island. Such a tiny cockleshell, canvas decked, navigated by the simplest of instruments and with essentially no accommodations other than being under the very makeshift decks.


There is also a replica coastal schooner, not a boat in which we were particularly interested. We’ll be back sometime, and will get pics of that as well.

All of these built there on the spot by local labour, with very little equipment other than hand tools and a big table saw.  Well worth the visit!

When we came back though, there was mischief afoot. So to speak.
Toe was sneaking out with one of the Flora twins, you can see she’s letting him take the lead and he has his laces around her to comfort her when the pair of them know that they’ve been caught.
They’re now back in the bottom of the wardrobe, separate ends, doors closed. Grounded!




Checking out the coastline from here.

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Yesterday we went for a drive along the coast toward Cape Froward ( not a spello) which is one of the more notorious spots around here.  The wind howls down the channel from the west and is forced through a relatively narrow gap between mountains and consequently can be much stronger than they’d otherwise be.
We got about 60 km away from town before we came across a big bushfire,  not spectacular but the locals were taking it seriously with helicopters, SUVs full of fit liking guys and truckloads of equipment heading out to combat it.
The road was closed at that point, so we turned around and headed back, found Porto Hombres which would be the jump off point, the last civilisation that Howard will see before setting off across the straights into the winding channels and mountains that lead out to the Pacific, which as we all know, isnt “Pacifico”.

Porto Hambres is a really interesting little place, being the off season for the giant crabs which is the basis for the inshore fishery catch the tiny harbour was full of boats, many of them rafted up and a few onshore for maintenance.
Some were past their “use by” dates, one new one in build, there were a couple of burned out wrecks and a cobweb of lines rigged to massive concrete anchors buried well back from the shore holding all in place.

There are warnings in the sailing guides that yachtsmen should be wary of obstructing the fishing boats or entangling themselves in their mooring lines, but it also says that its possible to raft alongside.

We had a good look at possible entrys and exits to the harbour, where it might be possible to tie up ashore, and whether it will be practical to sail in and out.
This could be the last piece of civilisation that Howard sees before he heads out into the maze of channels and islands to the west and south.
That will depend upon the wind direction, but looks as though it will work.

All along the coast, in tiny coves or stream mouths there were fishing boats. Almost all dark blue, all very much the same model.  I’d love to go out in one to see how they behave, solid little boats, a bit rough and ready but well suited to the conditions.

This area has some very nice homes by the way, It’s almost the “Costa del Sol” of the area, numerous childrens playgrounds at the beaches suggests that it’s a holiday area.

Again, an interesting place.


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Its high summer here, the longest day of the summer was just a couple of days ago but, but, there are days when its not warm and sunny. 
Yesterday started out rainy, about 4 dg C, but by afternoon it was 15deg C and warm enough for just a light sweater.  So changeable.



Here’s Denny on one of the cooler days, she’s up on the passenger deck of  the ferry to Porvenir, she was back into the warm cabin quick smart.

With the good ship Southern Cross out of the container in which she was shipped, the crate delivered and unloaded, a group of friends and our crew picked her up and carried her around into the shelter of the covered driveway of our unit here at Casa Willetu.  Shes safe here, we can work on her as we need, and there are some jobs to be done.

Today has been a day of meetings, visitors, small jobs and not as much progress as we’d like.  However apart from a Harbourmasters inspection we’re through the paperwork, we have materials and tools, a workspace and time, so with luck we’ll have her ready to go in three or four days.



 Our mermaid/translator checking out the interior of Southern Cross.  Sophia has travelled with us to be our translator and help us with the officials of Customs and Shipping, the Zone Commander of the Navy and some others with whom we needed to be precise and clear.  Thanks Sophia, may there be lots of chocolate in your future.


 Southern Cross in her temporary workshop, there is a steel gate between her and the street and the entrance to our unit is just to the left.

Big smile, his baby has arrived with no shipping damage, we're able to get on with a few little jobs and with luck he'll be ready to go very soon.
Howard checking out the interior, this boat has a huge amount of storage for a small boat, and its just as well, there is a lot to go in there.
Its not all "boat" we get out for a walk to stretch our legs now and again, the city is full of little surprises.  This was a particularly nice garden in a city where they are uncommon.  As well as the brightly coloured flowers I liked the Bug in the corner of the driveway, it was in very good shape.


Report from the far south.

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I miss that big smile already.
8 Am Wednesday 28th.

Christmas dinner here in Chile is celebrated on Christmas eve, and we’d not thought about it much, but there are odd coincidences happen here. Author Terry Pratchet said “Million to one chances happen nine times out of ten” and in magical lands such as this, that has been happening to us.
We found a pizza restaurant, were sitting at one of the long bench tables watching an enchanting encounter between twin Dutch boys, about 7 or 8 years old, and a slightly younger Chilean girl.They played together as though they had known each other forever, and the girls mum, sitting next to us shared some of her pizza with Sophie, the two chatting away happily.
At the end of the meal Mama mentioned to us that she was the owner of a restaurant about three doors away and that they were putting on a special menu for Christmas dinner, and we might consider having our celebration there.
We did, five courses, all very different to our usual fare, and amazing.  Wonderful, recommended.  Broccolinos, if you get this far south, recommended!


From left to right, Denny, me, David Nichols our film maker, Howard, one of the few shots we've got of him without his hat on, and Sophie our helper and translator at Broccolinos, where the chef does his best "grumpy chef" impersonation. He told us that he's "practicing his cooking". It was a superb meal. 

A couple of days ago Denny and Sophia took the day off and went off on a tour of the “penguino” colony on Magdalena Island out in the straights, the walkways are roped to keep the sightseeers from disturbing the birds too much but the penguins seem totally unfazed by the people walking along.  Some have made nesting burrows right on the edge of the path, and at this time of the year had fluffy chicks almost as big as their mums and dads.  Our ladies were amazed and intrigued,  that’s a trip that’s well worth the effort and modest cost.

https://www.getyourguide.com/punta-arenas-l32360/magdalena-island-penguin-tour-by-boat-from-punta-arenas

It was a busy day yesterday though, some of the team were delivered to the airport for the beginning of their long journey home , that was Denny and Dave on the morning trip, and Sophia heading back to family in Santiago on the evening run. We’re missing Dennys big smile and laughter, Daves quiet presence with the video camera, and Sophia translating when we have to negotiate in Spanish. 
Adios amigos for now.

In between the two trips Howard and I got the replacement mizzen mast glued up using the floor of the crate as a workbench, we’ll have access to the crate again at 9 this morning and will be loading the glued up hollow spar along the side of the car ( rental cars can do anything!)  and heading off to the Nao Victoria museum where the Magellan ship and the Beagle replicas are. There is a small workshop there where, in the shadow of the two big historical ship replicas we can make as much noise and mess with the power plane as we need to.

Setting up in the shipping crate to glue the hollow box spar up, we managed to hire a skilsaw and will get a power plane today, the box spar was the best option with the tools and materials that we had and it has been assembled with aluminium foil in the hollow centre to act as a radar reflector.

I’d expect that we’ll have the shaped and sanded blank back here later today, it shouldn’t take long to get the last few bits glued on and ( fingers crossed that there aren't any distractions) we’ll be putting the first coat of varnish on tomorrow am.

Am and pm are taking a little getting used to here,  there is maybe 3 ½ hours between the two, it never does get properly dark  here at this time of year, its tempting to stay up late as its broad daylight at 10 pm, and the sun is way up in the sky by 5 am so its hard to get enough sleep.
The little unit we are occupying now is better in that respect as we’ve bedrooms that don’t have big windows letting the early dawn in to disturb us.

“Southern Cross” sits happily in the breezeway between the units here, dreaming of the sea so close.  I’m sure she can smell it we can see the Straights from the gate into where she sits.
There is not a lot to do, a tiny bit of paint where the hatch covers had to be relieved to allow for the thicker gasket material ( thanks Keith Nasman for that, very much appreciated), there are some holes to fill where there have been some fittings moved, then its close to time to load.


Carving and sanding those reliefs under the hatch closure buttons was a fairly precise job, and as these two hatches swing on carbon fibre hinges that are well fastened I had to fold myself up pretty tight to get in there to do the job. Still, it got done and they just need a lick of paint and they're all ready for use.
Note the "GoPro" cameras, there are two more on board which will be used either by hand or from a moveable mount.  Don't forget to support the movie, we've lots of good stuff on video so far and the best is yet to come.

It's been interesting watching the weather out there at sea, I’d guess that so far one day in five was a day on which it would be possible to sail all day, two more when its ok to sail early in the morning and late in the evening and two days when days when hiding in a sheltered spot and reading a book would be the best alternative.
Two days ago the water was smoking, spray driven by 60 knots or so of wind covering the waters surface as far as we could see!  That qualified as a "read a book day"!
Sailing at night would be a real possibility too, with such long evenings, and some light even at midnight making miles while the wind is down would be a good bet.

I’m about to have breakfast, and damn, I got two mugs out for the morning cup of tea but Dennys in Santiago, will be on the 13 ½ hour flight to Auckland this evening.  Ah well, a second cup wont hurt.




 The official "Below 40 South, a voyage to the dark side of the moon" tee shirt, it looks good, but I have to say that the model helps that.

Still available from the official website, thats the tee shirt, not the model.

http://below40south.com/


January 1st 2017. All the very best to everyone.

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Blog for Jan !st.

First of all, happy New year to all.  Its been a year of ups and downs, but arent they all,  so make the best of the opportunities that 2017 offer, grab them and enjoy yourself rather than letting your commitments and fears weigh you down.
This can be a great year, but its up to you to make it that way.  Good luck everyone.



We've had a little time to go sightseeing, here's Denny up on the lookout above the town, weathering the gale!  Its an interesting place, some great old buildings with ornate and highly decorative styling, houses that are quite tiny by our standards sitting on very small lots with no gardens, although I have to say we did find a few lovely exceptions to that, and a combination of wide streets and very narrow alleys. Its a picturesque place, I'm glad to have been here long enough to get to know it a bit.

Here in Punta Arenas we're steadily working our way through the tasks that need to be completed before the good ship Southern Cross heads on down the Straights.  We can see the end of those tasks, and they’re achieveble within the timeframe before the truck with its crane turns up on Tuesday to take her down and puts her in the creek alongside the replicas of the HMS Beagle, Magellans ship, the James Caird and the others there at the Nao Victoria museum on the edge of the water a few km from town.  It’s a very appropriate place from which to set sail, the sense of history there is wonderful.

Today the last of the woodwork will be glued and screwed onto the new mizzen mast, we had a small modification to do yesterday, the gaff jaws were a little tight so we eased the slightly obloid secion just above the boom collar and recoated it, today there will be a glue fillet applied to that collar and several small items fitted, tomorrow the varnish will be applied and ‘whew” its done.


Howard in our "workshop".  This is the shipping crate, 16 ft by 6 ft x 5 ft headroom, its a bit tight and working bent over all the time gets tedious but really its serving us well,  in this pic he's fitting the boom support collar to the new mizzen mast, we'd run out of the usual nitrile gloves and couldn't find replacements so those garden gloves are having to stand in. 

Stores sorting goes on, you have no idea how big the pile of stores and gear is, SCAMP has very capacious lockers, and it takes a lot to fill them to the brim.  When laid out on the spare room floor it’s a huge pile! Wow!


Part of the gear sort is selecting the clothing.  This is himself trying his brand new high tech drysuit, I'll get the brand and model when he wakes up, but can testify that it is without a doubt the best sailing drysuit that I've seen. It has two modes,  the top and head cover can be rolled down and stored within what looks like a red jacket but which is part of the "system" , with a draw cord sealing the suit at the waist, or rolled up and covering the whole body and head. 
One of the outstanding things about it is that it is easy to get into and out of, not like the usual drysuit!

Sunday today,  it’s a quiet day here apart  from the church bells, I suspect that there are more than a few hangovers and sleep ins after last nights celebrations, but they’re missing a lovely day.  10 am, the breeze is gentle ( yes that’s not always the case) and the sun is shining. We’re having another cup while awaiting our hosts arrival to unlock the area where the crate with tools and gear are stored, and are feeling very happy about our new years eve celebrations.

Our friend Mauricio, the proprietor of El Bodegon café and bar had invited us to a late night supper at his house, after working late and a false start  which lead us in precisely the wrong direction ( don’t press the wrong button on a borrowed GPS) we arrived in time to see the new year in, had a great meal, wonderful conversation, and when we got home, a good sleep.

Thanks Mauricio, Son Nico and Mama.  You made what could have been a night when we were lonely and wishing we were home, a night of companionship and celebration.





Packing the little ship "Southern Cross"

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We’re packing the boat today,  been at it for four hours now. Nearly done.

Remember that this boats hull is just under 3.60m long, that’s 11ft 11 inches.  Tierra del Fuego has a very challenging  coastline, arguably the most dangerous on this planet and there are no opportunities to stop and resuplly. Everything needed to sustain life, sail the boat, keep dry, cook and eat, communicate with the outside world and survive if things go wrong had to be fitted in there.  All that plus four GoPro cameras with a box of fully charged batteries, a satellite phone, GPS navigation system, and much much more. The pile of gear was huge, plus all the boats sails, the cockpit tent and the two main and two secondary anchors had to be stowed and and and!  It’s a long list!


Just beginning, Howard is  making a detailed list showing where each item is stored so he can find everything when he needs it.  Good idea, I once pulled my cruising dinghy up on shore and stripped every piece of gear out of it in an attempt to find a bottle of port that I knew was on board.  Found it, it was the second last item left on the boat. Thats not practical when hiding from a Southern Ocean storm and its snowing!  


The heavy bags go in the bottom of the midships lockers, that improves the boats stability and by keeping the ends of the boat light it helps her sailing characteristics.

I'd guess that at this point we had more than half of the gear and stores on board, stowed away, and room for what you can see here plus some space to spare.


Seat cushions in place, the secondary anchors being rigged in their bags, hiking footstrap in place and most of the canvaswork fitted.  The blue item is a folding seat padded too. Look comfortable? This will be Howards home for up to 3 months, and that in near Antarctic conditions!
( Technically Tierra Del Fuego is "Antarctic territory". Not solid ice but seriously south.)

Almost done, just a couple more bags the water ( one of the lockers is dedicated to fresh water bottles so there is space for them too) and the bags you can see up there past the bow.  

But its all in there, a place for everything and everything in its place!
There is still space, the three lockers aft have not been filled yet, yes there is a bit more to stow but the boat has capacity to spare.  Amazing to watch it all disappear into the spaces under the cockpit, under the seats and into that big space forward.

The truck with the crane comes tomorrow, will take her out and swing her into the water alongside the museum, and all going well there will be sailing trials the next day.

We’re beginning to watch the weather forecasts!




A good cup of tea.

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A good cup of tea is very hard to come by when travelling.  Its not easy here in NZ either, the restaurants worldwide seem to revel in making the worst tea possible A cup of lukewarm water with a teabag on the saucer will at best make brown water that tastes like mud.  They say that they don’t sell a lot of tea, its not hard to figure out why.

I got home to my ship after being in Punta Arenas and Santiago Chile for 5 weeks, ( got a good cup of tea at the hotel Cabo de Hornos by the way, the manager there is a German lady and likes things done properly, well done ) and came home to find, no water. Plenty around the boat, but none in the taps.
All the usual noises when the taps were turned on but not even a dribble.

Ok, fill the tanks, I’d had guests on board while I was away and just assumed that they’d been generous with the shower, put the hose in for an hour, those two fresh water tanks are about 300 litres each so it takes a while.

Had water from the hot tap, none from the cold? Maybe I need a new pump.
The ship is 44 years old, quite a few things are close to their use by date so I just assumed that the pump had given up.
A day later, no water from the hot tap either!

The fresh water pumps are down in the engine room and that’s under the main cabin floor, I have to roll up the carpet and uplift the floorboards to get to Mr Fords home, so I left it for a couple of days while doing some other chores.

When I did venture down there “hola!” ( I’ve learned some Spanish while away) Water! Lots of it.  Ventured a taste? Fresh water!
The stuff outside being salty, it could only have come from the water tanks.

Ok, what next.  No the bilge pumps would not work. Plenty of current in the batteries, so off I went and bought a small Rule bilge pump and some hose, connected directly to the main battery bank, pumped her out, then had a look at the mess down there.  Oil everywhere, the water had been above the oil dipstick hole.

First job. Oil and filter change in the engine. That’s a fairly major job and involves pumping out, then replacing 26 litres of 30 grade diesel oil, not multigrade, so its not an off the shelf item.  Off into town, just made it on Friday afternoon before the guys closed, but then got stuck in rush hour traffic.  It took 2 hours to get home which did not see me feeling tranquil and serene!

Saturday morning,  the engines running again, check the oil several times while Henry rumbled away, no sign of cloudiness, same with the big hydraulic gearbox, but I did grease all the bearings on the driveshaft and the stern gland, just in case.

Next, the pump.  I took it out and aha! The fitting on one end had gone brittle and had cracked, that had let all the water in the two tanks, plus all that I’d put in since, out into the bilge.

Next, the pump had inlet and outlet spigots for 10mm id hose. The hoses that fed and received the water in that line were half inch, as were all the fittings for those hoses.  Whoever had fitted this little in line pump had made up some interesting little plastic adaptors, which had gone brittle and literally fell apart in my hand.

So, off to the boat parts shop, found a pump about the same size, shape and capacity, checked that it was the right voltage, got some new hose clips and went back to the oily mess in the engine bay.

No I couldn’t get the electrics to work, no I couldn’t get the old hoses to clamp onto the non barbed fittings on the new pump. So by then I was about done and went off to the hot pools over the hill for a long soak, got takeout Roganjosh and rice from the Indian restaurant along the way, no water in the galley makes cooking a chore.

Today.  Got the multimeter out, after several hours of messing around, found where the problem was.  It was automotive wire in a marine environment, there was corrosion for about 50mm in from the end of the wire, and of course with that clipped out the wire was too short.

Ran new wire, about 4metres of twin core, had to lift floorboard which meant moving two lockers, which meant moving the double bunk, then had to reach in under the galley bench to thread it through bulkheads and frames.
Got that working, tested it, then ventured back out to find some new hose that age had not made inflexible, and a pump with pipe fittings closer to the half inch hose fittings that make up all of the internal fresh water plumbing. Bear in mind that New Zealand saw the light way back in 1967 and converted to metric measurement so imperial measurement fittings are hard to find.

But I found a 12mm in line 750 litre an hour in line pump at the fourth place I called at, even found some 12mm pvc pipe and took a chance that if I put it into boiling water for 5 minutes it would stretch enough to make the difference.
I bought that plus the pump, damn the price, by then I just wanted the job done. Came back home to where the gale force winds blowing here at my dock had the ship bouncing around pretty energetically, bent myself up like a paper clip and got into the confined space to fit the new pump, wiring, hoses and clips.

It all works now.  The first thing I did with my now fully functional galley tap was to make a cup of tea.

It’s a good cup of tea, Twinings Irish Breakfast, made in a proper teapot, pre warmed, and brewed for three minutes.

I think I deserve it.








Howard Rice, under sail in the far south.

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The SV Navara came across a tiny yacht sailing in the Magdalena Channel in the far south of Chile, not a sight they'd expected to see so they took pics and posted this to their website.
Surrounded by mountains, the weather extremely unpredictable and biting cold, glaciers hanging in many of the valleys, snow on most of the mountaintops, its not the place where small boats go.  Unless of course its Howard Rice. He will tell you he's just an ordinary guy.  Hah!

Check out the larger story on below40south.com

I'm posting progress reports there which, along with catching up with all the work I didnt get done here in NZ while I was in Chile supporting Howards expedition has meant that I've not kept the blog going like I should, but thought that you'd like this.

Catchup time, again.

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Sunday 21 May.

Its been  a busy time of late, spending time with Denny, had a big adventure walking the Tongariro Crossing with a group she's part of.  Thats a big walk, my fitness tracker wristband showed 35000 steps for the day. Its a mighty climb up one side of the mountain, and a long decent down the other side. The scenery is amazing, the walk is very crowded though, there are often over 3000 people a day doing it so its hardly a wilderness walk. But its a good one, recommended. It was a good weekend.
We had a "little" adventure recently, we wanted to watch a particular boxing match and the SKY people wanted a lot of money to view it, and Denny being here that weekend suggested that we find a sports bar with TV showing it. After some enquiry we found one, used the money that would have been spent on the SKY viewing on a nice dinner and sat in front of the big screen and watched the match.
It was noisy in there, but the food was good, I had good company with me, and  “our” boxer won his fight. The outstanding thing about the evening was that someone had very kindly paid for our meal and drink.  Thank you Northern Union bar and restaurant.

Engineering work has taken up  a lot of my days, I do maintenance and repair on woodworking machinery in woodshops and school tech classrooms, and I'm in catchup mode there, it pays pretty well though so thats another catchup thats happening. Its usually fun, I had a job to do in a yacht interior specialist shop the other day and was watching while working, a young man putting together some intricate marquetry ( inlaid wood) on a big motor yachts saloon table. He's got a lot more patience than I have, anyone who says the old skills are disappearing hasn't seen this. Maybe those skills aren't as common but they're still around.

There has been a heap of maintenance to do on my old ship. Welcome to owning a 45 year old wooden boat,  she’s a constant project, and with an unusual amount of wet weather this year its been hard to keep up the sanding and painting so she’s looking a bit scruffy at the moment.
I’ve had issues with the paint on the hull, water getting behind it in patches and peeling some areas off.  I’d not completely sanded it back to wood last year, and although the paint I applied was the recommended system and was applied over a well sanded surface, the undercoat underneath seems to have failed in a couple of areas.
That plus a tiny, suspicious area on the side of the flying bridge turned out to be a major rot spot hiding under the paint, so that piece of wood has been cut out, the soft plywood ground away and sealed with low viscosity epoxy, and I’m about to fit a new piece in there.  The issue has been that the original piece had not been sealed where it stood on the cabin top to support the flying bridge side, and although it was mahogany it was possibly sapwood and has soaked up a lot of water, and rotted out.

I’ve done some rewiring of the lighting as well, and can recommend strip LED “warm daylight” lighting, it doesn’t look as nice as a “proper” light fitting, the LEDs just being stuck on in a strip, but the light that they give from 12 volt supply is really nice.  I’ve a 10 metre roll of them, and am gradually working through the ship to replace the tired old flouros, another benefit is that the LEDs don’t cause the phone or the radio to buzz plus they draw a lot less current. Recommended!

That fitness tracker was included with a Garmin GPS and depth sounder that was going on a very good deal from Burnsco, thats been fitted by the way although the transponder for the depth part has to wait until I can put the boat on the hard.  Its a magical little thing, has all the charts for NZ on it, and replaces two non functional depth sounders, one of which has to be as old as the ship, replaces all my charts ( I keep them though just in case) compass ( Same) and log, which the ship has never had. Technology is getting cheaper all the time.

I’ve got back to work on Long Steps again, fitted the next two stringers up, that’s two done out of four taped the inside seams of the lowest plank to the bottom, cut out and glassed the offcentercase sides, cut the end posts and begun building the ‘board.  I’ll have to scrounge up some lead to melt into the cavity in the tip of the core, that’s 11 kg, a small pour.  I enjoy doing this sort of thing.
I recall, being around 10 years old, making moulds from clay, drying them in the sun, melting lead on the hearth inside and pouring to make things.  I only got burned once, pain helps the learning process.
Its time for a lot of sandpapering, the framing and interior is being gradually sanded and coated, I’m using a very low viscosity epoxy from a supplier who no longer does that product, but its similar to “Everdure” but with a higher density, so two coats, scraped or sanded between, gives a glossy finish and the third ensures a really good coverage.
The ballast tank framing is in, the cockpit floor, at least the centerline piece has been cut from ½ in plywood and it’s a big space, I tried lying down on it with my head and shoulders in under the cuddy and it feels very cozy.

Back to paint.  SEI had a water based semi gloss enamel paint on her, with three different undercoats to see what worked and what didn’t.  She sits on the dock alongside “The Ship” so  often gets a lot of rainwater in her, the intention being to test the paint system to its limit with sun and water.
It didn’t work, 18 months and the paint was falling off in places ( undercoat number one) checking in some places, ( undercoat number two) and sort of doing ok where I’d used International Prekote.
On sanding a few patches I found that the Prekote had stood up well, but the water based enamel was not lasting.
She was past scruffy, I use her for rowing on the estuary and doing my trash collection run on the river, so she’s often scraping the bottom, ( oysters in mud) or pushed into the mangroves, hard on paint for sure.
She needed it, so she’s been sanded off on the outside and a new full gloss water based exterior rated paint applied. Vibrant blue this time!

Its softer than the solvent based enamels, but so far seems to be surviving ok.

When I find my camera case with the charger in it, I’ll get some pics.

John Welsford


I went north to Whangarei and visited Annie Hill the other day

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Annie is making progress on her floating home.

SIBLIM,  ( Small is beautiful, less is more) is coming along well, as always with projects like this its taking longer than expected but for a solo build learning the skills as she goes, SIBLIM is coming along well.

Although only 26 ft long, this boat has an amazing amount of space, there is a luxury sized bunk up forward with good standing space to the side, lots of storage, a head and wash space and more storage just aft of that and a lovely spacious main cabin back from that.

Being less than tall is a real help in the headroom requirement, but even for me  at a good handspan taller the spaces feel comfortable, and getting around inside this little ship wont be hard on my head should I contact the overhead.

The only area that is really finished, ( just some fittings to be bolted in) is the anchor deck, that’s the area just back from the bow where one stands to handle the ground tackle. Now, I’ve stood on a rounded, wet and slippery fiberglass foredeck deck while heaving a 25 lb anchor and a heap of chain up  and it wasn’t a nice place to work. But this area, with its wide Junk style stem, lowered deck level leaving good bulwarks each side and secure footing is a much safer place.
I like it.

Here are some pics of the interior and foredeck,  I’ll be back there again soon and will report as the cabin fitout goes ahead.



 The companionway to the head and forward cabin, plenty of space here. Thats Annie of course, ever the smiling one.

 Sumptious space in the "bedroom". 
 Now thats a foredeck that I'd be happy working on.
The view from forward through the main cabin to to cockpit, lots of work to do there as yet but progress is being made.  The dink on the back wall of the shed is my "Offcuts" design, the predecessor to "Scraps". 

Progress on Long Steps.

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My current building project.

Just a reminder of what she's intended for, this little ship is intended as a long range sail and oar adventure boat, capable of multi day coastal voyages in open waters. Water ballasted, with a SCAMP style "veranda", light and slippery enough to row if needed, and able to self recover single handed from a full rollover or capsize.
I am developing plans as I build, and they should not be long in becoming available.

Long Steps progress.

I’ve not done much boatbuilding of late, while it’s a calming and rewarding way to spend a few hours there are times when other things have to take priority so the partly planked hull has been just sitting for the past few months making me feel guilty every time I walked past.

But there has been progress, in order to produce a comprehensive build manual for what is a slightly unusual boat I decided to plank up one side so I could get good clear pics of the inside structure.  I’d planked her with two each side to stabilise the structure, to prevent the fitting of stringers and planks on the one side pulling her frames out of line, then planked up the port side to the gunwale.
Note that I’ve left the top two stringers off the starboard side so I can fit the “offcentercase” more easily. The ‘case is a big lump of a thing and its going to be a task to get it positioned and fitted anyway, better access will simplify the task.

 The "Sharp end".  Yes I know the under edges of the lapstrake planks are uneven, its my practice to flip the boat over and fair them with a rebate plane before filling, sanding and painting.

 Inside aft, if you look past those temporary braces you can see the "stand up at the helm" space and the lazarette where the mizzen mast box is.  There will also be a deck box for the main anchor and rode under the tiller which is to be hinged between the two holes at the top of that bulkhead, the tiller lines go through there.

 Stern, some trimming yet to be done but the rudder fittings have been dry fitted into reinforced bolt holes.
A view of the structure from the bow end, simple plywood frames and stringers, the stem is three layers of plywood and the middle layer extends as a spine which locates the frames all the way to the back of the "cabin" The little semicircles on the frames are plywood doublers that make it easier to screw the stringers into place.


My "home away from home",  a 2.5m long cockpit, lots of space, it would be a piece of cake to put filler pieces between the rowing seat support stringers on the inside of the seat fronts to form a double bunk if you wanted to take your sweetie cruising.
Mine, ( Sweetie that is) wants to come along in her kayak but she cant sleep in that so I've planned on a suitable space from first concept .
The "offcentercase" goes down the right hand side of the cockpit floor as you see it here.


have dry fitted the cockpit floor, that’s a nice big space and I’ve laid myself down and relaxed to see how it feels.  Plenty of space, it feels nice and secure, and the space under the SCAMP like “veranda” being a little bigger than Long Steps fat little relative is big enough to sit in comfort with room for the cookstove and galley tasks to be done in a sheltered space without having to erect the cockpit tent.

She’s looking good, at least from the port side, slippery, the beam being quite narrow at the waterline when she’s upright, the intention being to make her easy to row, but the center of buoyancy moves out very quickly as she heels so there is stabiity there to carry a good sized sail area. I’d rather sail than row, the latter being for the most part to enable me to row into a marina where the rules prevent sailing in.

A couple of minor setbacks, I had gone to the trouble of scarfing up a stack of stringers, rounding all the inner edges with a router and sanding them off nicely. But found that kiln dried Agathis Vitensis can be very brittle. ( I already knew that,  but thought that the easy curves in this boat would be gentle enough to get them around).

Bang! Twice! 

Not what I wanted to hear, but my habit of dry fitting things first meant that there was no glue to clean up when I took the broken pieces off,  I can use those bits elsewhere.
Hook up the trailer and off to a local sawmill that specialises in Cupressus Macrocarpa.  Thats Monterey Cypress in the USA where it comes from, and “Macrocarpa” here in NZ, bought a  big plank of the stuff, 50 x 250 x  4.2m and sent a few hours making up more stringers.

The other thing was that I’d been offered a heap of  the heads from leadhead roofing nails to help with the casting of the weight in the offcenterboard, I’d got involved in conversation and forgot to load them into my truck so had to scrounge around to find enough wheel balance weights to make up the difference.

I got that cast though, no problem. 


The "offcenterboard", thats the core and one side with the lead cast in place, the hardwood protective leading edge and tip ready to glue into place and the lifting tackle pulley in place.  There is another layer of plywood to glue onto the face that you can see there.

That pulley takes the 'board lift line which runs from the forward end of the dogleg shown in the pic of the case side below, around the pulley and back out the forward end, around a mast head halyard box and along the seat front with a big reduction tackle on that end.  The hardwood block that its bolted to is to make very sure that its secure, cant pull out no matter what the provocation is.
I dont like putting a multi part tackle inside the "case though, two parts like this is ok but more tends to get tangled and its not easy to get at, hence the big four part tackle being "outside".


One of the things I get asked is “how do I make a mould for the weight in the middle of my centerboard?  Or, “how do I stop the wood from catching fire when I pour the melt into the cavity?”.
The core of the offcenterboard in Long Steps is two layers of 12mm plywood,  I cut out the cavity, glued the outside piece of 6mm plywood to one side, and poured the  lead straight in. The other side 6mm piece was glued on after planing the lead down flush with a power plane ( take care doing this, use a “slicing action” rather than cutting square as it reduces the chance of a violent kickback).
When you are going to melt lead for  very simple casting like this, first of all make sure that the wood it is being poured into is dead dry . Any moisture will flash in to steam and boil through the molten lead causing splatter and a porous casting.
Second, don’t overheat the melt, get it just molten and pour as a continuous stream to avoid layering.  You’ll get some smoke but in my experience not much, and the minor amount of charring will be hidden inside the board where its of no consequence.

Heavy boots, heavy clothing, eye protection and a well ventilated space, stand upwind. Its fun but be safe.

 Here, the last layer of plywood is glued on, and I'm getting the pivot pin hole sorted.  I've drilled it well oversize, (Holesaw) and filled it with fibre reinforced epoxy, set the pin ( a chunk hacksawed off an old bent piece of stainless steel propshaft that came with a bent propellor I'd bought for the bronze, note that I've drilled and threaded the end of it so I can put a bolt in there to make it easier to grip should I want to pull it out) I've coated the pin with silicon car polish as a release agent so I could pull it out when the epoxy had set, and yes it came out without much of a fight.
The "case." 9mm plywood with two layers of 6 oz fiberglass on each side, put on before the case packers that you can see there were fitted. Those packers are fitted with glue, screws that overlap within the packers and will have through bolts in the high load areas.  They're made of Australian Jarrah hardwood, and you can bet that its hard! 
The "dogleg" at the top houses a 2/1 purchase which is increased by a 4/1 purchase along the seat front in the cockpit, thats a heavy 'board".


Next job, fit the double doublers,  drill for the pivot and reinforce the pivot pin holes in the "case, then I can fit it and get on with planking.

Essential Skills for the beginner boatbuilder course coming up, 23 and 24 September

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A reminder, this year, rather than run my boatbuilding skills course in my own overfull workshop, I've been given the run of the New Zealand Traditional Boatbuilding School workshop in Te Atatu north, west Auckland.  Its a nice space, well equipped, dedicated to boatbuilding in wood and I'm very much looking forward to running the course there.
Previous courses have been real fun, and the graduates have gone away with a whole lot of new skills, shortcuts, tricks and, very sharp tools.

Heres the link,

http://www.atbs.org.nz/courses/page5/page5.html


Here's what we'll be covering.

Essential Skills for the Beginner 
Essential skills for the beginner boat builder By John Welsford

This is a two day course and will cover a range of essential skills including:
  • Introduction to epoxy resin and glue systems
  • Gluing and Fibre glassing plywood
  • Sharpening common hand tools
  • Selection and use of power tools
  • Selection and setup of woodworking machinery
  • Reading plans and drawing components from scale drawings and much more...

Saturday 23rd September 10:00 am - 5:30pm
Sunday 24th September 09:00 am - 4:00 pm

Requirements:
  • A hand plane that you can practice setting up and sharpening A chisel for same
  • Closed toe footwear, old clothes and your lunch!

Cost $250 pp, includes morning and afternoon refreshments.


Please contact us if you are interested.





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