Wednesday, March 19, 2014

We Start a New Season


We arrived back to Frolic Jan 2 and started to get her ready for launching (see previous blog). We had a few repairs and additions to make. Carl replaced a handle on an escape hatch and then replaced our speed and depth instrument which was getting too dark to read. We had retractable transducers for the speed and depth and Carl had asked for those when he ordered the new instrument, but he only got a retractable speed log not a depth transducer. So Carl had to take out the old thru hull and replace it with the new depth transducer. Then we figured just to pull out the old cables with the new ones attached to pull them in place. Oh NO! That was too easy! The old cable would not move and disappeared under the saloon deck. A couple hours of frustration and we cut the cable and spent 4 hours fishing the new cable to the instrument and then finally mounting the new instrument. Day One.

Carl running the transducer cable to the display


The next day was engine work for Carl and bottom sanding for Leslie. Carl installed the raw water thru hulls, ran the fuel polishing systems, started and checked the engines, and installed the raw water impellers for both engines. Toward the end of the day he helped Leslie sand. Day Two.

Diane's cottage on the beach
Carl painting the hull
It was then time to paint the hull. We thinned and mixed 2 pounds of Cyanne pepper in with the paint. We got most of the hull done before we ran out of paint. Our friend Diane was arriving on the ferry so we cleaned up and met her and had dinner on the beach. Day Three.

We all went to the stores to provision. It was a long day of shopping and hauling, but ended with a dinner at the Coco Maya. It’s a great restaurant right on the beach with a fire pit and couches on the beach. The end of Day Four.

Coco Maya at night
Fifth Day,  Frolic goes in the water.  We made a last check of thru hulls and pumps and found the port manual pump’s V ring that holds it together broke. So we pumped the little water out with the automatic pump. Then as we tried to pump the starboard bilge with the automatic pump the pump ran, but no water came out. Inspection found the V ring on that pump broken! On course the run to the chandlery was fruitless so at noon we went in the water minus two bilge pumps We still had two working. All was well and after priming the engine’s raw water pump we were set to go.

Off we go to the water
A quick motor brought us to North Sound where we took a mooring and hanked on the jib and hoisted the main to test it as well as start putting up the deck lights.




Diane at Leverick Bay
Diane and the Jumbies

The next day we pulled into Leverick Resort dock for a few days and washed down the deck with fresh water, put up the rest of the lights and organized the boat. It was a great stay and we got to see friends as well as the Happy Ahrrr Show and enjoy the Friday night pig roast and the Jumbies Show. We also visited Saba Rock and helped in the 5 PM Tarpon Feed.
More Jumbies
The pig roast
 
 
 
 
 
Diane stayed with us for another week and we had great beam reach sails down the Francis Drake Passage to Maho Bay, sad to not see the resort any more, and on to St. Thomas and Brewers Bay with a lazy beam reach in tandem with another Lagoon 380.
Leverick Bay
Feeding the Tarpons at Saba Rock
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Sunset at Maho Bay
Dinner at Woody's in At. John
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Snorkeling at Maho
At Maho
 
Diane and Leslie at Honeymoon Beach
Carl and Leslie at the Dinghy Bar at
Honeymoon Beach
 
 
 

 
We visited Honeymoon beach for a great day of fun and ending the week with dinner at the Island View Guest House with a spectacular view of the harbor. 
View from the Island View
We are at Island View with Denis and
La Donna off another 380 Lagoon

 

We stopped at the Emerald Beach Resort for Lunch before Diane flew home to snow storms in Philly….ugh
Diane at Emerald Beach
Diane at the airport off to Philly







The next night we toasted Diane and saw a movie at Honeymoon Beach.
Movie night at Honeymoon Beach
Like the old drive ins
Come back soon Diane!



Wednesday, March 12, 2014

MAINTENANCE AND GETTING THE BOAT READY TO HAUL AND RELAUNCH


The saying is that the two best days of a sailor’s life is the day he buys a boat and the day he sells the boat.  Conversely the two worst days of a sailor’s life is the hauling and launching of the boat.  This blog is dedicated to some things we have learned to help make these processes less stressful.
Carl in the engine room
 
carl's engine room shoes

One important thing is that we do weekly maintenance of the engines and systems.  We plan on a day of the week, if we are making passage on that day we do it at first anchorage.  Our day is Sunday.  Our weekly maintenance includes checking the belts on the engines and alternators, check the oil, check transmission fluid, check the Racor filters, check bilges for water, spray WD-40 bolts and valves and manipulate the raw water thru hulls on the sail drives.  Carl wears throw away surgical booties in the engine room, no dirty footprints on deck! 
carl lubricartes all the locks
 
The next item is the dingy locks, we have 4 with matching keys as one need’s to lock gas tank and engine to the dingy and we have two locking cables, a 30 ft. and a 6ft. for locking to docks or trees, these are given a spray of WD-40.  This lesson was learned as in Antigua we needed to have the outboard repaired and the lock was frozen and bolt cutters had to be found.  We also now carry bolt cutters!  The main saloon lock we also WD-40.  The outside decks are cleaned with Greased Lightning, Bar Keepers Friend, and Mr. Clean Erasers.  Bar Keepers Friend comes in a cardboard can, not good on a boat if it gets wet it disintegrates so we put it in a cleaned plastic Parmesan Cheese container which we can sprinkle it from.  The rest of the week the deck gets a good rinse with water.  Once every six months the stainless is polished with Prism Polish and the fiberglass table and vertical surfaces are cleaned and Star Bright polished.  Maintenance on the interior includes washing down all the walls and overhead with vinegar, this helps against mold.  The heads get vinegar put in which cuts crystals and leaves the toilet bowl clean and white.  Once in a while we add veg. oil to head to lubricate the valves. The floors are vacuumed and swiffered to rid of sand and dust.  All thru-hulls are manipulated and returned to either open or closed position depending on their purpose.   Another metal cleaner we have on board is Never Dull which comes in a metal can which will rust so we remove and put into a plastic jar. 

maintenance supplies
Haul Out:
The boat is power washed when hauled
 
The day before the boat is hauled we change the oil and oil filters, we change the racor filters, the jib is taken off the roller furling.  We wash the boat with fresh water, fill and drain the holding tanks with fresh water.  The boat is power washed and chocked by the yard then strapped down with large ratchet straps attached to 6ft drilled in screws to the ground.  We put corks (think of all the wine you drink) in all the thru-hulls on the exterior of the boat as well as shutting all the thru-hulls from the inside.
Leslie with wine and corks in thru hulls while sanding
   The Bimini is removed and stored inside, the mainsail we leave tied in her sail cover.  During storage, the impellers in the raw water pumps are removed and the raw thru hulls are removed and soaked in vinegar to remove the scale inside them. We also change the sail drive oil and the outboard lower unit oil.  The engines are back flushed with a vinegar solution with a little Rule 50 pump into a 5 gal spackle bucket and the solution goes round and round for about an hour. The fuel polishing system is run for a hour or so.  We remove all the lines we can and soak them in fabric softener and fresh water then store inside.  We do the same to all the lines we can pull and reach that stay on the mast by putting as much as we can in the 5 gal. bucket with solution to soak.  We wrap tools in lightly oil soaked rags to reduce rust and keep parts moving. We pickle the water making system. 
all hatches have sun shades
 
We bought car sunshades and cut them to fit each hatch.  This helps to reduce sun damage to cushions and mattresses and actually keeps the cabins cooler when closed up.    By doing all this, and there are probably things I missed we are so used to doing this now, we save ourselves a lot of work and possible problems when we launch.  Our boat is usually left on the hard for 3to 4 months.  The last thing we do is hang Sun Pac, a mildewcide; we hang one in each pontoon, and one in the main saloon.  We also put Roach Puff in the corner of cabinets and under the sink.  All this discourages critters from taking up residence in our absence.
Frolic heads for the water


Launch: Basically we put all the pieces we have removed back in the engines, do a normal weekly maintenance and the engines are good to go.  We run the sheets     thru the cam cleats and replace any that look iffy.  Put on Bimini and sails etc.  The major part of launching is painting the bottom. This year we added two pounds of cayenne pepper to the bottom paint.  We will see how that works, as of two months we have no growth on the bottom.

New screens on foward hatch
Misc:  Most charter boats come with no screens.  We refitted all the hatches with Bomar screens that fit around the hatch.  They come with screens and sunshades.  Our Lagoon has two hatches in the main saloon that are vertical and off size so I made screens for them with toggle holders, makes them easy to undo to pass thru the windless remote.  The refrigeration on our boat is front opening, inefficient for 12 volt so I attached thick clear plastic to each shelf to close over the space between shelves, now when I open the door the cool stays in and I only open the cover on the shelf I need.  It keeps the power usage low and the food from spoiling.  We run all our systems on two solar panels. 

Just wanted to share some of the chore side of living on a boat, we still have the sun and fantastic water to jump into when things get hot.  Wish you were here!
Enjoying Sailing