SHIP'S LOG:
I passed the night fully expecting to have a more intimate contact with Capt. Ahab and the crew of the Pequod but the night passed without incident. Truth be told, I am not sure how as the wind was out of the east last night and was dead out of the west this morning and since the two boats swing differently, I am surprised that we didn't "trade paint!" Thankfully we did not and when I arose at 6:30 for morning coffee, "Capt'n Slappy" and the crew of the "Festering Boil" were already making an effort to get underway. Actually, I was a bit surprised as the weather for today was not especially nice or, I should say, it was not forecast to be especially nice by those Gypsy Fortunetellers in the employ of the federal government known as NOAA! The morning wasn't to be too bad . . . . a slight chance of rain, wind 5-10, but the afternoon was to be down right nasty . . . . wind out of the South West, 15 - 20, rain, heavy at times, possible thunderstorms, tornadoes, waterspouts????? down to 5mph in the evening.
Well, no rain this morning. Wind out of the south and out of the west and out of the southeast, perhaps gusting to 12, rain late in the afternoon, brief and relatively light showers, possible wind gust(occasionally) to 15, basically out of the west. Well, they did call for rain and we got some so they weren't completely wrong. The rest of the week is supposed to be nice.
There really was not much to do today aside from read. I was hoping to get ashore and do some shopping but the Publix is about three miles away and I didn't cotton to a walk in the rain. I got a hold of Jerry too late to borrow his second car. He was already on his way to work. You would think he would have the day off on a national holiday, n'cest pas? It will probbaly have to be tomorrow monring, along with laundry and a shower. It would be nice to have clean clothes and not smell like a goat, whatever goats smell like, when I meet Lucille.
Brad is still down with "La Gripe" so there was no work done on his boat today. Certainly tomorrow afternoon will see us finish string the cable for the radar and getting that up and running. It would be better if he had put the boat on the hard when he brought it from Key West. A little bit more expensive, but you get a lot more work done that way and BRIGADOON is in need of a lot of work, lots of it just delayed maintenance and cosmetic but some of it serious and necessary foir a safe journey, even from here to across the river.
Speaking of that, I was having a little trouble with the forward head. For some reason, the pump in the system was not pumping the bowl dry. Indeed, there was a little back-up from the holding tank into the bowl . . .not a pleasant development. I dismantled the hoses, pump and valves and found nothing wrong, at least nothing I could see. When I re-assembled it all, it worked. There must have been some leak somewhere that got fixed. Evidently something just needed tightening but damned if I know what or where it was. At this point, I am just glad it is "all better!"
I was just checking the "Trip Odometer" on the GPS and on this trip, I have come 1,291 miles, probably somewhere in the neighborhood of 1,091 alone(actually just me and Jesus). It is quite a little journey And in two months, I get to do it all over again!
No one has yet been out to check on the Nauticat 44. They either have tremendous confidence in the set of their anchor and in their anchor rode or they have abandoned their "dream." I don't think they have put it up for sale yet as a broker would certainly have been out to scope the the craft out. I certainly hope someone comes and checks it out before the inevitable "bad thing" happens. Boats will take incredible punishment, but routine maintenance is necessary for them to have a chance. This is getting way too long for someone not to have even come out to check on anchor rode chaffing.
Monday, January 17, 2011
Sunday, January 16, 2011
Edna Goes Off!
SHIP'S LOG:
I decided to do a little walking in Fort Pierce on the Lord's Day. I figured, since it was a nice day, it would be a peaceful one as well. I didn't count on "Edna" nor did the guy in the pickup truck.
I was standing on a corner in downtown Fort Pierce waiting to cross. Across the street at the light was a young man, mid to late 20's, in a Big Dodge Ram pickup truck that looked new or at least very well cared for. He was waiting at the red light when up from behind comes Edna in what was probably a Ford Focus. Edna looked, from across the street, to be in her 80's and as with all of us when we reach such an advanced age, her depth perception made have gotten a tad iffy. She cruised into the back bumper of the pickup at about 3 miles an hour, doing no damage to the pickup but staving in her grill and most of her front end. The drive of the pickup was out of the truck like a shot, went stomping back to the rear if the truck and examined the damages. Like I said, there wasn't any to the pickup. The this guy goes stomping back to the driver's side window of Edna's car and lets her have it. He is swearing a blue-streak at poor Edna. He went on for what seemed like 20 seconds when all of a sudden he jumps back and clasps his hands to his face and starts scream. He falls down on the pavement as Edna exits the car. She has a can of Mace or Pepper Spray in her hand and had evidently let the guy have right in the face as he leaned in the driver's side window. She "walks" over to him and as he is rolling around on the ground, she empties the entire can at his face. When it's empty, she lets him have it with her purse which is big and obviously heavy, with a lot of "hardware" on it. And she is whacking him, and he's rolling and screaming. He husband, who had been "riding shotgun", came "racing" as fast as he could - which wasn't all that fast - around the front of the car and all but tackled Edna. He was trying to hold her back and she was trying to get at the pickup driver on the ground with her purse when the cops arrived from just down the street. You don't mess with Edna!
I have to say that is the case with the "elderly" down here in Florida. It is like they have taken enough crap from "younger people" and they ain't going to take any more. You go into a Wind Dixie or a Publix markets, you really have to keep your head up. Old, ah . . . "Youthful challenged" individuals in their "scooters" and motorized wheelchairs are the terror of the store. They come whipping around corners and race up aisles. And God help you if you are in their way.
It could be an interesting night tonight. I have " a boater" right off my stern, I mean right off my stern . . . . .maybe 20-25 feet. The wind is supposed to be 5-10 from the east. We might bet a rain storm some time during the night and we are definitely in for a blow tomorrow in the afternoon. Hopefully "Capt. Edward Smith" back there ( Capt. Edward Smith, Captain of the TITANIC) will be gone before the blow. I wouldn't really want to drag down on him which could happen. I am not sure just why he picked this spot. There is only three of us here and there is plenty of room. Perhaps the whine from my wind generator will drive him away! Or maybe I should just hail him and say, " Hey Captain Nemo, you want to anchor that garbage scow you call a boat some place else!" Naw, I think I'll just nature take its course. Maybe I should sic "Edna" on him. And the secret word is "WHIPLASH!"
I decided to do a little walking in Fort Pierce on the Lord's Day. I figured, since it was a nice day, it would be a peaceful one as well. I didn't count on "Edna" nor did the guy in the pickup truck.
I was standing on a corner in downtown Fort Pierce waiting to cross. Across the street at the light was a young man, mid to late 20's, in a Big Dodge Ram pickup truck that looked new or at least very well cared for. He was waiting at the red light when up from behind comes Edna in what was probably a Ford Focus. Edna looked, from across the street, to be in her 80's and as with all of us when we reach such an advanced age, her depth perception made have gotten a tad iffy. She cruised into the back bumper of the pickup at about 3 miles an hour, doing no damage to the pickup but staving in her grill and most of her front end. The drive of the pickup was out of the truck like a shot, went stomping back to the rear if the truck and examined the damages. Like I said, there wasn't any to the pickup. The this guy goes stomping back to the driver's side window of Edna's car and lets her have it. He is swearing a blue-streak at poor Edna. He went on for what seemed like 20 seconds when all of a sudden he jumps back and clasps his hands to his face and starts scream. He falls down on the pavement as Edna exits the car. She has a can of Mace or Pepper Spray in her hand and had evidently let the guy have right in the face as he leaned in the driver's side window. She "walks" over to him and as he is rolling around on the ground, she empties the entire can at his face. When it's empty, she lets him have it with her purse which is big and obviously heavy, with a lot of "hardware" on it. And she is whacking him, and he's rolling and screaming. He husband, who had been "riding shotgun", came "racing" as fast as he could - which wasn't all that fast - around the front of the car and all but tackled Edna. He was trying to hold her back and she was trying to get at the pickup driver on the ground with her purse when the cops arrived from just down the street. You don't mess with Edna!
I have to say that is the case with the "elderly" down here in Florida. It is like they have taken enough crap from "younger people" and they ain't going to take any more. You go into a Wind Dixie or a Publix markets, you really have to keep your head up. Old, ah . . . "Youthful challenged" individuals in their "scooters" and motorized wheelchairs are the terror of the store. They come whipping around corners and race up aisles. And God help you if you are in their way.
It could be an interesting night tonight. I have " a boater" right off my stern, I mean right off my stern . . . . .maybe 20-25 feet. The wind is supposed to be 5-10 from the east. We might bet a rain storm some time during the night and we are definitely in for a blow tomorrow in the afternoon. Hopefully "Capt. Edward Smith" back there ( Capt. Edward Smith, Captain of the TITANIC) will be gone before the blow. I wouldn't really want to drag down on him which could happen. I am not sure just why he picked this spot. There is only three of us here and there is plenty of room. Perhaps the whine from my wind generator will drive him away! Or maybe I should just hail him and say, " Hey Captain Nemo, you want to anchor that garbage scow you call a boat some place else!" Naw, I think I'll just nature take its course. Maybe I should sic "Edna" on him. And the secret word is "WHIPLASH!"
Saturday, January 15, 2011
The First Sunburn Of Winter!
SHIP'S LOG:
Ah yes, that familiar sting as you put your shirt back on after having spent the day in the sun. The redness. The itch. The Sunburn!
I was working out on the deck for a couple of hours and in was in the 70's and today, probably just for today, there was no wind. And when I had finished with my appointed tasks, I slipped my shirt back on and feel the "welcome" sensation of a sunburn sting. AHHHHHH! Sure the last of the cold weather has gone for good . . .. . . . . .. . Then again, who knows. The weather patterns have been sufficiently weird enough to qualify for some heading in Ripley's Believe it or Not!
Brad never made it to his boat. He had a case of "la Gripe" or stomach flu, you know the kind..."Two Exits, No Waiting!" Hopefully he will be recovered by Monday when I can once again help him with is boat projects. Sunday is football watching time and I will find a spot somewhere to watch.
I did take some time to plot out a few courses for points further south. I'll check with Jerry with regards to what is available for anchoring in Stuart and Port St. Lucie. Jupiter looks pretty good further south and then I'll be in the the Palm Beaches. Then there is Fort Lauderdale and on to Miami. South of Fort Pierce, you really start running up against bridges. I am not talking about the kind you can sail under but the kind you have to ask nicely to open. Some open on request, some open at set times, and some will not open at sometimes and will open at others. i gather it can play hell with your schedule if you are dumb enough to try and keep one. Some cruisers really get stressed out down here. The goal is almost insight and the bridges and their peculiar opening schedules strive to keep them from their goal.
Strangely, here in the Fort Pierce anchorage, the Nauticat 44 still sits and no one has been out to it since I got here low these many days. It is a bad thing to leave a boat unattended on an anchor for as along as this was has been as there is too much that could go wrong. I am beginning to become concerned. I hate to say it, but having been scoped out by some locals, it would be an easy target for a burglary(yes, they do happen on boats!). I am not sure if it would qualify as piracy but who cares what you call it if you return to your boat and find stuff missing. It could ruin your whole day, not to mention your trip and the hassles with the insurance company and the police etc, etc, etc! I hope the owners show up soon, because if they don't somebody else surely will.
Ah yes, that familiar sting as you put your shirt back on after having spent the day in the sun. The redness. The itch. The Sunburn!
I was working out on the deck for a couple of hours and in was in the 70's and today, probably just for today, there was no wind. And when I had finished with my appointed tasks, I slipped my shirt back on and feel the "welcome" sensation of a sunburn sting. AHHHHHH! Sure the last of the cold weather has gone for good . . .. . . . . .. . Then again, who knows. The weather patterns have been sufficiently weird enough to qualify for some heading in Ripley's Believe it or Not!
Brad never made it to his boat. He had a case of "la Gripe" or stomach flu, you know the kind..."Two Exits, No Waiting!" Hopefully he will be recovered by Monday when I can once again help him with is boat projects. Sunday is football watching time and I will find a spot somewhere to watch.
I did take some time to plot out a few courses for points further south. I'll check with Jerry with regards to what is available for anchoring in Stuart and Port St. Lucie. Jupiter looks pretty good further south and then I'll be in the the Palm Beaches. Then there is Fort Lauderdale and on to Miami. South of Fort Pierce, you really start running up against bridges. I am not talking about the kind you can sail under but the kind you have to ask nicely to open. Some open on request, some open at set times, and some will not open at sometimes and will open at others. i gather it can play hell with your schedule if you are dumb enough to try and keep one. Some cruisers really get stressed out down here. The goal is almost insight and the bridges and their peculiar opening schedules strive to keep them from their goal.
Strangely, here in the Fort Pierce anchorage, the Nauticat 44 still sits and no one has been out to it since I got here low these many days. It is a bad thing to leave a boat unattended on an anchor for as along as this was has been as there is too much that could go wrong. I am beginning to become concerned. I hate to say it, but having been scoped out by some locals, it would be an easy target for a burglary(yes, they do happen on boats!). I am not sure if it would qualify as piracy but who cares what you call it if you return to your boat and find stuff missing. It could ruin your whole day, not to mention your trip and the hassles with the insurance company and the police etc, etc, etc! I hope the owners show up soon, because if they don't somebody else surely will.
Friday, January 14, 2011
The Fun Of Boat Ownership!
SHIP'S LOG:
I spent most of the day helping Brad ( he's anchored near by) trying to get the old radar cable out of his mast and putting the new one in. It hasn't been a success. We tried using the old cable as a messenger to carry the new cable from the mid point of the mast down to the bottom of the mast where it should exit. It didn't work. The cables got hung up just a couple of feet from success and then became detached. We lost the messenger and didn't have the new cable all the way down. Tomorrow we will try again. There is still an old FM/TV cable in the mast that used the same hole as the radar cable so it is possible that it will suffice as a new messenger. If not, it will be string and a weight. AS I mentioned to Brad, this is why they usually pull the mast when they are doing something like in this is a boat yard.
I actually took the time to do a little maintenance myself on ABISAHG, lubing up all the seacocks and blocks. Nothing major, just trying to get everything in working order. I even did a little bilge cleaning to make it nice and fresh smelling. There is no major stuff that currently needs doing but a whole host of little things that do, but which will probably be put off until they become sufficiently annoying to warrant the effort necessary to correct them.
The weather is beginning to warm, though Northern Florida is still freezing. Orlando has taken a big hit and I am sure that Mouseland is paying for it. It is still rather strange to hear NOAA giving detailed instructions about how to recognize frostbite and announcing that the biggest danger during cold snaps is house fires caused by improper use of space heaters.
Discovered today that Lucille is coming in NEXT WEDNESDAY. Well there are worse place to be than Fort Pierce.
I spent most of the day helping Brad ( he's anchored near by) trying to get the old radar cable out of his mast and putting the new one in. It hasn't been a success. We tried using the old cable as a messenger to carry the new cable from the mid point of the mast down to the bottom of the mast where it should exit. It didn't work. The cables got hung up just a couple of feet from success and then became detached. We lost the messenger and didn't have the new cable all the way down. Tomorrow we will try again. There is still an old FM/TV cable in the mast that used the same hole as the radar cable so it is possible that it will suffice as a new messenger. If not, it will be string and a weight. AS I mentioned to Brad, this is why they usually pull the mast when they are doing something like in this is a boat yard.
I actually took the time to do a little maintenance myself on ABISAHG, lubing up all the seacocks and blocks. Nothing major, just trying to get everything in working order. I even did a little bilge cleaning to make it nice and fresh smelling. There is no major stuff that currently needs doing but a whole host of little things that do, but which will probably be put off until they become sufficiently annoying to warrant the effort necessary to correct them.
The weather is beginning to warm, though Northern Florida is still freezing. Orlando has taken a big hit and I am sure that Mouseland is paying for it. It is still rather strange to hear NOAA giving detailed instructions about how to recognize frostbite and announcing that the biggest danger during cold snaps is house fires caused by improper use of space heaters.
Discovered today that Lucille is coming in NEXT WEDNESDAY. Well there are worse place to be than Fort Pierce.
Thursday, January 13, 2011
29 Degrees! ! ! ! ! ! ! !
SHIP'S LOG:
Who can you sue over this weather? Somebody has got to be responsible. Who is it? 29 degrees and they even got snow flurries some place north in Florida this morning. Snow? In Florida? Something is definitely wrong here. And the temp in Fort Pierce topped out at 59 for the high today. I am sure there is an appropriate Anglo-Saxon expletive that can be used but let's just say it is damn cold.
And then there is the wind. That don't help at all. Wind chill makes the temp feel even lower. And that wind was a lot more than NOAA forecast, sufficient enough that I had to haul and reset the anchor this afternoon. I trust NOAA about as much as I trust my depth sounder.
Speaking of the depth sounder, I think I finally got it working correctly. Being in one place for a while, I have been checking the depth not only with the depth sounder but also with a led line. The difference was usually about 5 feet or so. Getting tired of this and wanting to give Towboat/US a break, I called the Garmin people and asked what the problem was. I told them that I had put a minus 5.5foot keel offset into the system as indicated in the owners manual. The response was, "Oh, the manual is wrong. It is supposed to be a positive not a negative number." Boy, you just can't trust some people.
There was a fire somewhere today in a marsh. The north wind blew the smoke over the anchorage and it really created a smokey haze. Perhaps the best thing was that the wind, more than NOAA called for, blew the smoke away as quickly as it brought it. Now, if only the wind would go away, taking the cold with it. Not tonight though, at least according to NOAA, though it may only get down to the low 40's. Then again it is NOAA saying this.
Haven't heard if Lucille made it in from the left coast or whether she is hung up because of all of the delays caused by the recent snow. Hopefully she got in safe and sound and she and Jerry and me will break bread together soon. I really want to meet her but I also want to get to where the air is at least as warm as the water!
Who can you sue over this weather? Somebody has got to be responsible. Who is it? 29 degrees and they even got snow flurries some place north in Florida this morning. Snow? In Florida? Something is definitely wrong here. And the temp in Fort Pierce topped out at 59 for the high today. I am sure there is an appropriate Anglo-Saxon expletive that can be used but let's just say it is damn cold.
And then there is the wind. That don't help at all. Wind chill makes the temp feel even lower. And that wind was a lot more than NOAA forecast, sufficient enough that I had to haul and reset the anchor this afternoon. I trust NOAA about as much as I trust my depth sounder.
Speaking of the depth sounder, I think I finally got it working correctly. Being in one place for a while, I have been checking the depth not only with the depth sounder but also with a led line. The difference was usually about 5 feet or so. Getting tired of this and wanting to give Towboat/US a break, I called the Garmin people and asked what the problem was. I told them that I had put a minus 5.5foot keel offset into the system as indicated in the owners manual. The response was, "Oh, the manual is wrong. It is supposed to be a positive not a negative number." Boy, you just can't trust some people.
There was a fire somewhere today in a marsh. The north wind blew the smoke over the anchorage and it really created a smokey haze. Perhaps the best thing was that the wind, more than NOAA called for, blew the smoke away as quickly as it brought it. Now, if only the wind would go away, taking the cold with it. Not tonight though, at least according to NOAA, though it may only get down to the low 40's. Then again it is NOAA saying this.
Haven't heard if Lucille made it in from the left coast or whether she is hung up because of all of the delays caused by the recent snow. Hopefully she got in safe and sound and she and Jerry and me will break bread together soon. I really want to meet her but I also want to get to where the air is at least as warm as the water!
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
Tonight It Will Be Cold Eough To Freeze The Balls Off A Brass Monkey!
SHIP'S LOG:
In case any of you think that is some kind of obscene statement, let me assure you that it is very nautical. It is a saying the comes from the British Navy - wooden Ships & Iron men. During the days of sail and canons, the British Navy used iron for their canon ball shot. These cannonballs were stacked in a pyramid configuration on a brass tray called "The Monkey." Due to the fact that brass and iron have different properties, they expand and contract at different rates at different temperatures. When it was cold enough, "The Brass Monkey" would contract more quickly than the iron canon balls and would cause the pile to fall apart spilling the canon balls all over the deck. Hence, when it got cold enough for this to happen, the very proper British Naval Seamen would accurately not that "it was cold enough to freeze the balls off a Brass Monkey." Don't believe me, then look it up.
That aside, it is going to be cold enough tonight down here in sunny Florida to do the deed. NOAA, that bastion of weather accuracy is call for temperatures at Fort Pierce to dip into the low 30's, perhaps even into the high 20's. I had really thought I had left all that behind. Now I have to dig out the cold weather stuff again and wrap up for sleeping tonight. That won't be so bad, it's tomorrow morning that I am not looking forward to facing.
Speaking of the toilet, I thought that I had a leak in the forward head flushing system. I dismantled everything around the pump and thought I had found the gasket in the pump leaking. However, after cleaning the pump, it pumped just fine and did not leak, at least not that I could see or feel. I am happy for that as dismantling that pump to put in a new gasket would have been a foul smelling though easy task, so long as I could keep breakfast from coming up!
It has been rather windy today, right out of the north which probably accounts for the dropping temperatures, that and the fact that there ain't a could in the sky. There will be some serious radiational cooling tonight!
Brad stopped by and we made plans to finish installing his radar tomorrow. Since it is boat, he gets to climb the mast. I'll just be pulling wires which is fine with me. I have enough difficulty going up my mast let alone one on a strange boat. It is nice though to help someone out like this. I can learn a lot through the process which will undoubtedly come in handy some time in the future, but hopefully not on this trip.
Itchy foot is setting in and that means as soon as I can, after dinner with Jerry and Lucille, I will haul anchor and start heading South again. As I mentioned, I won't be going far but the fact that I want to keep going is a good sign. I thought there for awhile that I had completely lost the
travelin' jones," but it is back and I am interested "in seeing what is over the horizon." I realize that I have only about two more months down here before I have to start back and I want to get to where I can div e over the side and not be afraid of hypothermia setting in. Right now, the water temp here in Fort Pierce is 65 degrees which doesn't sound all that bad . . . so long as you are not in it.
In case any of you think that is some kind of obscene statement, let me assure you that it is very nautical. It is a saying the comes from the British Navy - wooden Ships & Iron men. During the days of sail and canons, the British Navy used iron for their canon ball shot. These cannonballs were stacked in a pyramid configuration on a brass tray called "The Monkey." Due to the fact that brass and iron have different properties, they expand and contract at different rates at different temperatures. When it was cold enough, "The Brass Monkey" would contract more quickly than the iron canon balls and would cause the pile to fall apart spilling the canon balls all over the deck. Hence, when it got cold enough for this to happen, the very proper British Naval Seamen would accurately not that "it was cold enough to freeze the balls off a Brass Monkey." Don't believe me, then look it up.
That aside, it is going to be cold enough tonight down here in sunny Florida to do the deed. NOAA, that bastion of weather accuracy is call for temperatures at Fort Pierce to dip into the low 30's, perhaps even into the high 20's. I had really thought I had left all that behind. Now I have to dig out the cold weather stuff again and wrap up for sleeping tonight. That won't be so bad, it's tomorrow morning that I am not looking forward to facing.
Speaking of the toilet, I thought that I had a leak in the forward head flushing system. I dismantled everything around the pump and thought I had found the gasket in the pump leaking. However, after cleaning the pump, it pumped just fine and did not leak, at least not that I could see or feel. I am happy for that as dismantling that pump to put in a new gasket would have been a foul smelling though easy task, so long as I could keep breakfast from coming up!
It has been rather windy today, right out of the north which probably accounts for the dropping temperatures, that and the fact that there ain't a could in the sky. There will be some serious radiational cooling tonight!
Brad stopped by and we made plans to finish installing his radar tomorrow. Since it is boat, he gets to climb the mast. I'll just be pulling wires which is fine with me. I have enough difficulty going up my mast let alone one on a strange boat. It is nice though to help someone out like this. I can learn a lot through the process which will undoubtedly come in handy some time in the future, but hopefully not on this trip.
Itchy foot is setting in and that means as soon as I can, after dinner with Jerry and Lucille, I will haul anchor and start heading South again. As I mentioned, I won't be going far but the fact that I want to keep going is a good sign. I thought there for awhile that I had completely lost the
travelin' jones," but it is back and I am interested "in seeing what is over the horizon." I realize that I have only about two more months down here before I have to start back and I want to get to where I can div e over the side and not be afraid of hypothermia setting in. Right now, the water temp here in Fort Pierce is 65 degrees which doesn't sound all that bad . . . so long as you are not in it.
Tuesday, January 11, 2011
Where'd The World Go?
SHIP'S LOG:
When I got up this morning at the usual time, about 6:15am, it seemed darker than usual. In fact, I looked at my watch to check the time. The time was right and while dawn was still an hour away, it should have been lighter. I made coffee and went up to the cockpit and couldn't see a thing. We had FOG! And I mean a real Sherlock Holmes-London-Pea Souper!Looking forward I could just make out the bow of ABISHAG and then only because I followed the furled Genny down to the bow. It was, as many before have said, like being inside a light bulb, and in this case, a rather small light bulb. I expected it to burn off rather quickly but it stayed for lunch, dripping water everywhere, making everything cool and clammy and damp. Probably wouldn't have bothered a Mainiac(a resident of Maine) but I haven't been in a fog on a boat in quite a long time. It is a very strange sensation, feeling very alone and still knowing that one of the Carnival Cruise Liners could be bearing down on you and you would never know it until it ran you down. The only saving grace is that no Carnival Cruise Liner could get into where I was anchored but that wouldn't stop the local crazies. At least one went by in what sounded like a runabout doing what sounded like top speed. The boat would have been too small for radar( not that it wouldn't fit but that it would have been considered unnecessary bu the owner). I have no idea where he was going or if he got there, but he went by me like a shot. I doubt he even knew I was there.
Fog left after lunch and Brad Smith, owner of the Freya 41 anchored near by, came by and asked for help taking down his old radar dome. with nothing planed for the day, it was a good way to spend the afternoon. The job was easy and only had the typical snags that accompany most such projects, like of the four bolts that held the unit in place, one ( the last one) had a rounded head so that trying to unloosen the nut just spun the bolt. It to a bit of finagling with some vice grips and a fair amount of Anglo-Saxon expletives before the task was complete. Brad has a large Pyrenees dog - think Newfoundland - who is friendly to the extreme. It is not the type of dog I would recommend for living on board as it probably eats more than Brad does and as Brad noted "tends to leave large piles on deck. . . " which he did to show his judgement on the job we had performed.
There is another boat just beyond Brad's. It is a Nauticat 44, a large motorsailer. It is a really comfortable boat for people who are more interested in comfort than speed in getting to where they are going. It looks pretty much set up for cruising, with bikes and solar panels and extra fuel and water canisters tied to the rails, but no one has been on it since I got here. Brad said they showed up about four days before I did. Six people got off, queried him as to the best place to land their dinghy, and headed off to the spot he indicated never to return. They didn't even show up after last Thursdays exceptional weather to check and see that everything was alright. Their anchor could have dragged putting them in danger of grounding. Their anchor rode could have been at the point of chaffing through. There could have been a leak hose or and electrical problem, a hundred little things could have gone wrong. But no one has been by to check the boat. It is possible that what we are witnessing here is the end of a dream. Perhaps they wanted to go cruising and after a taste, some, perhaps all, decided it wasn't for them. And no they have packed up and left. I hope that's not the case but it is a possibility and I gather it happens more than people know. I'll have to ask Jerry to check the local papers and see if a Nauticat 44 is being offered for sale "at a discounted price."
When I got up this morning at the usual time, about 6:15am, it seemed darker than usual. In fact, I looked at my watch to check the time. The time was right and while dawn was still an hour away, it should have been lighter. I made coffee and went up to the cockpit and couldn't see a thing. We had FOG! And I mean a real Sherlock Holmes-London-Pea Souper!Looking forward I could just make out the bow of ABISHAG and then only because I followed the furled Genny down to the bow. It was, as many before have said, like being inside a light bulb, and in this case, a rather small light bulb. I expected it to burn off rather quickly but it stayed for lunch, dripping water everywhere, making everything cool and clammy and damp. Probably wouldn't have bothered a Mainiac(a resident of Maine) but I haven't been in a fog on a boat in quite a long time. It is a very strange sensation, feeling very alone and still knowing that one of the Carnival Cruise Liners could be bearing down on you and you would never know it until it ran you down. The only saving grace is that no Carnival Cruise Liner could get into where I was anchored but that wouldn't stop the local crazies. At least one went by in what sounded like a runabout doing what sounded like top speed. The boat would have been too small for radar( not that it wouldn't fit but that it would have been considered unnecessary bu the owner). I have no idea where he was going or if he got there, but he went by me like a shot. I doubt he even knew I was there.
Fog left after lunch and Brad Smith, owner of the Freya 41 anchored near by, came by and asked for help taking down his old radar dome. with nothing planed for the day, it was a good way to spend the afternoon. The job was easy and only had the typical snags that accompany most such projects, like of the four bolts that held the unit in place, one ( the last one) had a rounded head so that trying to unloosen the nut just spun the bolt. It to a bit of finagling with some vice grips and a fair amount of Anglo-Saxon expletives before the task was complete. Brad has a large Pyrenees dog - think Newfoundland - who is friendly to the extreme. It is not the type of dog I would recommend for living on board as it probably eats more than Brad does and as Brad noted "tends to leave large piles on deck. . . " which he did to show his judgement on the job we had performed.
There is another boat just beyond Brad's. It is a Nauticat 44, a large motorsailer. It is a really comfortable boat for people who are more interested in comfort than speed in getting to where they are going. It looks pretty much set up for cruising, with bikes and solar panels and extra fuel and water canisters tied to the rails, but no one has been on it since I got here. Brad said they showed up about four days before I did. Six people got off, queried him as to the best place to land their dinghy, and headed off to the spot he indicated never to return. They didn't even show up after last Thursdays exceptional weather to check and see that everything was alright. Their anchor could have dragged putting them in danger of grounding. Their anchor rode could have been at the point of chaffing through. There could have been a leak hose or and electrical problem, a hundred little things could have gone wrong. But no one has been by to check the boat. It is possible that what we are witnessing here is the end of a dream. Perhaps they wanted to go cruising and after a taste, some, perhaps all, decided it wasn't for them. And no they have packed up and left. I hope that's not the case but it is a possibility and I gather it happens more than people know. I'll have to ask Jerry to check the local papers and see if a Nauticat 44 is being offered for sale "at a discounted price."
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)