Monday, 9 May 2016

useful mooring tip no 1


Working with the mooring this week I was reminded of a really good tip from a chap with whom we did some training at the end of last year...


















...which is that keeping a bottle of hand sanitiser next to the companion way let's you keep your hands reasonably hygienic, after you've been handling mooring rodes in murky harbour waters.
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Hadn't struck me before, but what a good idea.

Friday, 6 May 2016

Unmaintainable Winching Object

But it's not unidentified though...


 ...it's a Gibb 28STA single speed self tailer, in need of some love.
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I suspect that these are the original sheet winches and they still work very well. Starboard side has a little problem which might well be cured by a bit of maintenance, but when you strip it down...










...this is as far as one gets.  Usually there is a socket or a machine screw or something at the bottom of the socket, the removal of which allows the whole thing to be carefully dismantled.
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If you know the secret to a Gibb 28STA, please, post comment and let us know ?

Thursday, 5 May 2016

Awaiting Flaking

On Monday I took off our large genoa - also known as the "Trireme Sail", on account of its ability to propel us forward at close to ramming speed whilst almost totally obscuring any poor unfortunate water users who happen to be in its lee. As I had thoughtfully prepared the slot in the foil with silicon spray when the sail was bent on, it whistled down and ended up in large heap around my feet.  I was only a small way successful in flaking it into the sail bag, which then filled the back seat of the car. Luckily a kindly friend allowed me some early morning access to one of the community rooms at nearby St Mary's to sort it out properly.

The 'Trireme' sail laid out flat, awaiting proper packing
Its much bigger on the ground than even I had expected and I've been sailing the darned thing for 3 years ! Comforting though it is to have a sail which can perform so well - and it is jolly well cut - it has an impressive ability to get us into trouble also.

Before I left the boat, I replaced the sail with our number one jib. I was equally surprised by how small this now seemed. The idea was that it would be easier to handle shorthanded but am now a bit concerned that it will be too small - I wonder if I sold the wrong sail when I had a clear out...

Monday, 25 April 2016

Half a century of Westerly !

Wow - the Westerly brand is 50 years old !




















At 43 years old, Annabella is one of the earlier boats and is still sailing as well as ever. Because of the quality of the original boat building she has easily absorbed updates and newer technology which complement her original sea worthy qualities.

Thursday, 31 March 2016

Lights and shapes at night

Whilst on our mooring on Saturday night this boat came down up the channel and was showing these lights:



















At the time the weather was a bit excitable, so I was interested to see who was operating at that time on a stormy Satruday night !
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Would you know what it was doing without reaching for a book or a set of flash cards ?
To clarify the photo a bit, the white light on the left is a fixed light on the shore side and the lower, brighter white light turned out to be obscuring another red light above it. 
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Seeing lights in context, at night, makes them so much easier to understand and then recall later.

Saturday, 26 March 2016

Equinoctal Springs

On our mooring, and the glass is dropping like a stone.

Going off tomorrow...

Thursday, 24 March 2016

Calor gas prices - piracy on the high street ?

One of the two Calor bottles on Annabella is empty.
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I called in at out "local" camping and caravan store last night to pick up a refill and just before the assistant rang it through asked the price. Wow - nearly £40! Yes, looked again and checked - not a mistake!
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Well, I remember the same refill last year as around £20, so we didn't do that, Price checked the alternative store this morning - the same refill is half the price - and we will be shopping there obviously.
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I know this isn't a very salty post, but I do think it's wrong. Many people will be unfortunate enough to be taking their family caravaning this holiday weekend, and to compound their woes someone will slip through double price gas hidden in a long list of other stuff. If they do notice they may well be too disillusioned to question it. It's exploitative and unfair. :-(
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For reasons of good taste I can't be bothered to illustrate this post with a picture of a gas canister...

Monday, 21 March 2016

How effective is epoxy/copper type antifoul ?

So we're just about ready to go back in the water and one of the last jobs to do is to refresh the copper anti-foul.

In the normal run of things I wouldn't have thought of using copper anti-foul but it came with the boat for various reasons when we bought her, so we have stuck with it.

Generally it has performed very well. On our piled mooring in Pwllheli the river dumps a generous amount of peaty nutrition from the mountains and then the sea washes benthos passed four times each day.- our neighbour on the mooring - who uses 'traditional' self-eroding anti-foul - moans loudly about the amount of fouling he acquires over the season. If I can I am at the annual haul out and each year so far there has been only a light beard of weed in the first 4 inches, and the remainder has been more or less clear - obviously they are all eating next door ! I wonder too if it is a bit more sustainable - relatively little of the copper seems to go compared to 'traditional' self eroding anti-foul paint and I am assuming that the principle is that it is an unpleasant platform to cling to, so discourages the little fellas, who move on. To the next boat, obviously.

There is some up keep. Each year there are some small flowers of rust grinning through from the cast substrate of the steel keel. Generally I have ground these back to shiny metal with a semi-rigid disc in an angle grinder, but this year tried an abrasive mop in a drill - which was rather less scary / dangerous. This was a good time to wear a good quality respirator - a lesson learnt the hard way from the 1st year, when I felt quite unwell for a couple of days after...

Annual patching to the copper antifoul - the new is showing pink against the background of the green existing coating

To reinstate we use a patching kit from the manufacturers which is about £50 and always arrives very promptly. The materials has to be carefully batched out for the 4 coats required and again, it is important to wear gloves and keep one's fingers out of one's mouth or away from food and drink. Application is by a mini-roller and, I always think, one of the hardest jobs of the re-commissiong process as it involves either stooping uncomfortably low or kneeling on the shingle in the yard. There has always - so far - been just enough mix to get around.

Annabella will be in the water again soon and we'll be using underwater imaging to check on the level of fouling throughout the year.

Thursday, 4 February 2016

Keep microbeads out of the ocean

If you're angry about the ubiquitous and utterly useless microbeads that are flowing into our oceans you may like to sign the petition organised by the  campaigning organisation Greenpeace at
https://secure.greenpeace.org.uk/page/s/ban-microbeads?source=fp&subsource=fp33secsmicrobeadsvid1
Why not sign up ?