"Yeah, I heard he got that hot new thing..."
-Will Smith
As I tear into Donorboat, I have made an effort to recycle anything that might be even remotely usable on the new boat. Trim, bulkheads, hardware, it's all saved unless it is already trashed or can't be unscrewed, unbolted or cut free. One item beyond reclamation, though, is the electrical panel. Too cracked, too small, too crude, just...too.
So, I've figured that I was going to be looking at kicking out a couple hundred dollars for a decent 8-10 switch panel- one item that is on our Boat Show shopping list this year. It isn't a top priority, since actual hull construction has to commence before wiring even appears over the punch-list horizon, but if a good deal comes along, then...
Last week, I saw an ad on kijiji, and $15 later, brought this home:
All the switches seem to work, there's no obvious signs of damage to the circuitry, so one night soon I'm going to poke and probe with my multimeter and see if I can get her to light up.
It probably won't be nearly as fun, or as dirty, as that sounds.
If it doesn't work, I'm only out $15. If it does work, I've got bragging rights.
Oh, and that "Beneteau" logo? Nothing that a strip of electrical tape can't fix.
Thanks for taking the time to check us out. Please feel free to "Talk the Dock!" Link us, follow us, or just tell your friends.
The adventures of the merry band of misfits who call Dock Six in Port Dover their summer home. Boat repair, boat maintenance, boat building, boat cruises, boat philosophy, boat recipes and just plain boats are the focus, fueled by good food, good friends and cheap booze. Welcome!
Sunday, 25 December 2011
For my Brother. Merry Christmas!
"When I stop to think back on everything..."
-Dark New Day
You want it, you got it, bro.
More "The River" scribbles. The page has been updated, and the excerpt bookended with a couple more chapters. Let me know if you'd like to read more.
Merry Christmas.
-Dark New Day
You want it, you got it, bro.
More "The River" scribbles. The page has been updated, and the excerpt bookended with a couple more chapters. Let me know if you'd like to read more.
Merry Christmas.
Saturday, 24 December 2011
Me and Mrs. Jones, a Decade On.
"Holding hands, making all kinds of plans..."
-Billy Paul
SWMBO and I celebrate our tenth anniversary today. Every day I am amazed that she continues to tolerate me- my barrel of luck is larger than most.
Thanks for a wonderful decade, sweety, I love you.
After a flurry of activity in the skunkworks earlier, I am taking the rest of the day off after writing this memo:
Note to self-
Hanging C-clamps from the overhead pipes is a great to get them out of the way, yet still have them close to hand. With 7' of headroom in the skunkworks, and with a personal airdraft of 5'6", there is lots of clearance.
Forgetting you have C-clamps hanging 7' overhead while carrying 78" long pieces of moulding vertically is an effective way of bouncing a C -clamp off your head.
CONTINUING to carry said lumber after the first clamp drops on your head is not recommended...
If there are 5 more still hanging. For the moment.
I got every damn one. And every one got me.
I am going to lay down now.
Thanks for taking the time to check us out. Please feel free to "Talk the Dock!" Link us, follow us, or just tell your friends.
-Billy Paul
SWMBO and I celebrate our tenth anniversary today. Every day I am amazed that she continues to tolerate me- my barrel of luck is larger than most.
Thanks for a wonderful decade, sweety, I love you.
After a flurry of activity in the skunkworks earlier, I am taking the rest of the day off after writing this memo:
Note to self-
Hanging C-clamps from the overhead pipes is a great to get them out of the way, yet still have them close to hand. With 7' of headroom in the skunkworks, and with a personal airdraft of 5'6", there is lots of clearance.
Forgetting you have C-clamps hanging 7' overhead while carrying 78" long pieces of moulding vertically is an effective way of bouncing a C -clamp off your head.
CONTINUING to carry said lumber after the first clamp drops on your head is not recommended...
If there are 5 more still hanging. For the moment.
I got every damn one. And every one got me.
I am going to lay down now.
Thanks for taking the time to check us out. Please feel free to "Talk the Dock!" Link us, follow us, or just tell your friends.
Wednesday, 14 December 2011
Holiday Diversions
"Here's your miracle...."
-Kenny Loggins
Look, you can only watch the same reruns of Storage Wars so many times.
(Not to go off on a tangerine, but, is it just me, or does Brandi look like a low-rent version of Jennifer Aniston, circa 2003?)
Here's a great way to waste a few minutes in between turkey sandwiches this festive season:
Yacht Rock (click on it- it's a link), the best musical comedy series on the web, is now in HD. All 12 episodes, covering the rise and fall of that incenstuous smooth Southern California rock sound. See how Michael McDonald and Kenny Loggins sang on damn near every song released by every SoCal band... except The Eagles and Van Halen. It even helps explain the inexplicable- Christopher Cross.
You're welcome.
If you get a chance, check out the blog of Fortuitous, whose skipper, Chip, may be the president of the Yacht Rock Fan Club. He belongs on the Dock.
http://sailingfortuitous.com/
Thanks for taking the time to check us out. Please feel free to "Talk the Dock!" Link us, follow us, or just tell your friends.
-Kenny Loggins
Look, you can only watch the same reruns of Storage Wars so many times.
(Not to go off on a tangerine, but, is it just me, or does Brandi look like a low-rent version of Jennifer Aniston, circa 2003?)
Here's a great way to waste a few minutes in between turkey sandwiches this festive season:
Yacht Rock (click on it- it's a link), the best musical comedy series on the web, is now in HD. All 12 episodes, covering the rise and fall of that incenstuous smooth Southern California rock sound. See how Michael McDonald and Kenny Loggins sang on damn near every song released by every SoCal band... except The Eagles and Van Halen. It even helps explain the inexplicable- Christopher Cross.
You're welcome.
If you get a chance, check out the blog of Fortuitous, whose skipper, Chip, may be the president of the Yacht Rock Fan Club. He belongs on the Dock.
http://sailingfortuitous.com/
Thanks for taking the time to check us out. Please feel free to "Talk the Dock!" Link us, follow us, or just tell your friends.
Tuesday, 13 December 2011
One Month to The Toronto International Boat Show
"If only there was a better way to go..."
-Trooper
.... Ah, but there is.
The TIBS is a January staple for SWMBO and I. It's great to get away from the post-Christmas blahs and wander around acres of boats and gear without having to wear a coat and wade through snow and slush. There is always lots to look at, occasionally some good deals on gear, and lots of swag.
http://www.torontoboatshow.com/
The Sailing Sunderland Siblings will be in the house, and Duma the Wonderdawg will be back.
We make a weekend out of it, which really makes the show more enjoyable, because the clock isn't ticking.
Right now there are some good deals on hotel rooms during the show:
http://www.torontoboatshow.com/show-info/accommodations/
SWMBO and I stay at the Harbour Castle. Beautiful view of the Lake, cheap parking right next door, and a shuttle bus to the show each day so you don't need a coat.
Buy your tickets online and save 3 clams.
http://www.torontoboatshow.com/tickets/
Anyone interested in a Dock Six pub night at the show?
Thanks for taking the time to check us out. Please feel free to "Talk the Dock!" Link us, follow us, or just tell your friends.
-Trooper
.... Ah, but there is.
The TIBS is a January staple for SWMBO and I. It's great to get away from the post-Christmas blahs and wander around acres of boats and gear without having to wear a coat and wade through snow and slush. There is always lots to look at, occasionally some good deals on gear, and lots of swag.
http://www.torontoboatshow.com/
The Sailing Sunderland Siblings will be in the house, and Duma the Wonderdawg will be back.
We make a weekend out of it, which really makes the show more enjoyable, because the clock isn't ticking.
Right now there are some good deals on hotel rooms during the show:
http://www.torontoboatshow.com/show-info/accommodations/
SWMBO and I stay at the Harbour Castle. Beautiful view of the Lake, cheap parking right next door, and a shuttle bus to the show each day so you don't need a coat.
Buy your tickets online and save 3 clams.
http://www.torontoboatshow.com/tickets/
Anyone interested in a Dock Six pub night at the show?
Thanks for taking the time to check us out. Please feel free to "Talk the Dock!" Link us, follow us, or just tell your friends.
Saturday, 10 December 2011
Two-Burner Festive Favourites: The Cure for the Schmoopies
"Just kickin' down the cobblestones..."
-Simon and Garfunkel
The crew on Ceol Mor has graciously allowed me to borrow one of their recipes. This is perfect for winter snacking, holidayhors doov, hors derv, appetizers, or just lunch.
"Here's what you need: 2 apples, a big hunk of good brie, fresh baguette, fresh pressed apple cider, nutmeg, allspice and butter. Margarine is an abomination, use the good stuff.
Peel and core the apples, then slice into rings. Put apples in a pan and cover with cider(about a cup or so) add 1/2 tablespoon each of nutmeg and allspice and simmer until the apples are soft. Drain the apples. Save the liquid to make some wonderful cider and whisky cocktail to you know, take off the chill) Slice the baguette, slap the apples and a big hunk of brie on it. Butter that puppy up and toast them in a hot pan until the bread is golden brown and the brie is a warm, gooey mass of unavailable in Mexico loveliness. This sandwich goes better with cold weather.
NOW you can look at your friends photos of their boat anchored in a gorgeously warm location and not feel quite so schmoopy. And yes, I just acted as if I was telling you some marvelously complex epicurean secret and not just how we make grilled cheese sandwiches in cold weather. Enjoy."
C'mon, do these kids look schmoopy? I think not.
Thanks for taking the time to check us out. Please feel free to "Talk the Dock!" Link us, follow us or just tell your friends.
-Simon and Garfunkel
The crew on Ceol Mor has graciously allowed me to borrow one of their recipes. This is perfect for winter snacking, holiday
"Here's what you need: 2 apples, a big hunk of good brie, fresh baguette, fresh pressed apple cider, nutmeg, allspice and butter. Margarine is an abomination, use the good stuff.
Peel and core the apples, then slice into rings. Put apples in a pan and cover with cider(about a cup or so) add 1/2 tablespoon each of nutmeg and allspice and simmer until the apples are soft. Drain the apples. Save the liquid to make some wonderful cider and whisky cocktail to you know, take off the chill) Slice the baguette, slap the apples and a big hunk of brie on it. Butter that puppy up and toast them in a hot pan until the bread is golden brown and the brie is a warm, gooey mass of unavailable in Mexico loveliness. This sandwich goes better with cold weather.
NOW you can look at your friends photos of their boat anchored in a gorgeously warm location and not feel quite so schmoopy. And yes, I just acted as if I was telling you some marvelously complex epicurean secret and not just how we make grilled cheese sandwiches in cold weather. Enjoy."
C'mon, do these kids look schmoopy? I think not.
Thanks for taking the time to check us out. Please feel free to "Talk the Dock!" Link us, follow us or just tell your friends.
Catamaran Character Compromise Conundrum
"She's a combination- Anita Ekberg, Mamie Van Doren..."
-Rough Trade
In my dreams, I draw a Venn diagram where the intersection of "Brian's design skills" and "Brian's boatbuilding skills" is a nice big fat ellipse of "Beautiful catamaran, a design tour de force, comfortable, seakindly, swift and a joy to sail."
In my nightmares there are screams, snickers, some vomiting and only a few feet of mast above the surface.
As always, reality will hover somewhere in the big void in the middle.
With some input from the WLYDO I am redesigning the redesign of my latest redesigned redesign.
Here's the challenge- controlling the compromises.
If money, time, skill and space were infinite, I could, and likely would build something like this:
Alas, money, time, space and skill are NOT infinite; in my case, more often infinitesimal. My workspace is small, my budget is small, and my self-imposed schedule for this build is small.
SWMBO and I keep refining our needs and wants as regards this new boat, clarifying what is a non-compromise point and what aspects are open to new ideas.
Needs:
A head with elbowroom.
A galley with an oven.
A master berth big enough for two.
A cockpit two can stretch out in.
Enough cabin space for two to lounge with two dogs out of the weather.
Easy passage forward.
Hard bimini.
Wheel steering.
5'10" + headroom. At least in the hulls.
Dock Six size 25'-ish LOA max.
Reasonably handsome.
500-600 hours build time to sailability.
Sails as well as, or better than, Whiskeyjack.
Wants:
Shower, or provisions for shower to be added.
Hot water.
Autopilot.
Spinnaker.
Accomodations for 4.
80 watts of solar power.
Stunning magazine cover beauty.
No slamming, 12 knot cruise, excellent performance to windward.
Fears:
This.
It may very well be a perfectly fine sailing boat, but with the slabsided construction and the colour scheme, it looks like it should be commanded by Rommel.
The challenge of the designs I have crafted to date is the curves. The bendy- swoopy roofline and cabin sides and the curve of the hull all add up to one thing- hours and hours of fairing. Formom those unfamiliar with the jargon, "fairing " is the black art of filling all the dents, dings, gouges, bruises, pits, joints, imperfections and other unsightlies to create a smooth flowing shape which is both pleasing to the eye and travels easily through the water.
This is one big advantage to fiberglass as a commercial boatbuilding material, fewer man-hours invested in finish. Once you get your mold perfect, every piece that comes out needs minimal clean-up and fairing.
Another advantage of fiberglass is that it is much easier to form complex shapes. Working with plywood and dimensional lumber, one CAN make the nice bendy- swoopy shapes seen on this fiberglass catamaran:
(Image courtesy of yachtworld.com)
... by cutting the lumber into strips and moulding it into shape, then planing and filling and sanding and fairing and...
... it will be a very beautiful boat that will take the rest of my life to build.
So, how do we end up with a boat that won't be a floating embarrassment?
Accept that we (er, I,) don't have the skillset and the patience and the budget required to build a bendy, swoopy, fiberglassy looking boat out of wood. Further accept that we (er, I,) do not have the budget, space and time to build in fiberglass.
But that doesn't mean I have to build a floating Panzer.
Let's celebrate and showcase the material instead of trying to make it something it's not.
I'm content with the dory hulls. Seems like a good hullform for this purpose, and relatively straightforward to construct. It is everything above and between the hulls that I am constantly rethinking.
Looking for design inspiration, I found this:
(images courtesy of Woodwind Yachts www.woodwindyachts.com)
Yes, I know it is not a catamaran, humour me for a second, willya?
Ignore the hull and look at the house. Clean, handsome, looks like it might still be handsome if widened to 10-12' in width. Simple curves, simple ports. Maybe break up the big expanse of overhead with a pair of butterfly hatches, outboard and aft of the mast on port and starboard.
Finish the transoms and the rudders bright. Yeah, it means more maintenance, but not much. Besides, when was the last time you saw a catamaran with a varnished rear end?
Round and oval ports instead of more complex sliding windows for ventilation.
Rather than attempt to slit my wrists on the cutting edge of design, I'm gonna embrace my inner curmudgeon and go retro.
A TRADITIONAL catamaran, rather than the traditional contemporary catamaran.
THIS, I can build.
I'll post some drawings soon. Meanwhile, it's back to stripping DonorBoat. The clock is now ticking, but that's another post.
Thanks for taking the time to check us out. Please feel free to "Talk the Dock!" Link us, follow us or just tell your friends.
-Rough Trade
In my dreams, I draw a Venn diagram where the intersection of "Brian's design skills" and "Brian's boatbuilding skills" is a nice big fat ellipse of "Beautiful catamaran, a design tour de force, comfortable, seakindly, swift and a joy to sail."
In my nightmares there are screams, snickers, some vomiting and only a few feet of mast above the surface.
As always, reality will hover somewhere in the big void in the middle.
With some input from the WLYDO I am redesigning the redesign of my latest redesigned redesign.
Here's the challenge- controlling the compromises.
If money, time, skill and space were infinite, I could, and likely would build something like this:
Alas, money, time, space and skill are NOT infinite; in my case, more often infinitesimal. My workspace is small, my budget is small, and my self-imposed schedule for this build is small.
SWMBO and I keep refining our needs and wants as regards this new boat, clarifying what is a non-compromise point and what aspects are open to new ideas.
Needs:
A head with elbowroom.
A galley with an oven.
A master berth big enough for two.
A cockpit two can stretch out in.
Enough cabin space for two to lounge with two dogs out of the weather.
Easy passage forward.
Hard bimini.
Wheel steering.
5'10" + headroom. At least in the hulls.
Dock Six size 25'-ish LOA max.
Reasonably handsome.
500-600 hours build time to sailability.
Sails as well as, or better than, Whiskeyjack.
Wants:
Shower, or provisions for shower to be added.
Hot water.
Autopilot.
Spinnaker.
Accomodations for 4.
80 watts of solar power.
Stunning magazine cover beauty.
No slamming, 12 knot cruise, excellent performance to windward.
Fears:
This.
It may very well be a perfectly fine sailing boat, but with the slabsided construction and the colour scheme, it looks like it should be commanded by Rommel.
The challenge of the designs I have crafted to date is the curves. The bendy- swoopy roofline and cabin sides and the curve of the hull all add up to one thing- hours and hours of fairing. For
This is one big advantage to fiberglass as a commercial boatbuilding material, fewer man-hours invested in finish. Once you get your mold perfect, every piece that comes out needs minimal clean-up and fairing.
Another advantage of fiberglass is that it is much easier to form complex shapes. Working with plywood and dimensional lumber, one CAN make the nice bendy- swoopy shapes seen on this fiberglass catamaran:
(Image courtesy of yachtworld.com)
... by cutting the lumber into strips and moulding it into shape, then planing and filling and sanding and fairing and...
... it will be a very beautiful boat that will take the rest of my life to build.
So, how do we end up with a boat that won't be a floating embarrassment?
Accept that we (er, I,) don't have the skillset and the patience and the budget required to build a bendy, swoopy, fiberglassy looking boat out of wood. Further accept that we (er, I,) do not have the budget, space and time to build in fiberglass.
But that doesn't mean I have to build a floating Panzer.
Let's celebrate and showcase the material instead of trying to make it something it's not.
I'm content with the dory hulls. Seems like a good hullform for this purpose, and relatively straightforward to construct. It is everything above and between the hulls that I am constantly rethinking.
Looking for design inspiration, I found this:
(images courtesy of Woodwind Yachts www.woodwindyachts.com)
Yes, I know it is not a catamaran, humour me for a second, willya?
Ignore the hull and look at the house. Clean, handsome, looks like it might still be handsome if widened to 10-12' in width. Simple curves, simple ports. Maybe break up the big expanse of overhead with a pair of butterfly hatches, outboard and aft of the mast on port and starboard.
Finish the transoms and the rudders bright. Yeah, it means more maintenance, but not much. Besides, when was the last time you saw a catamaran with a varnished rear end?
Round and oval ports instead of more complex sliding windows for ventilation.
Rather than attempt to slit my wrists on the cutting edge of design, I'm gonna embrace my inner curmudgeon and go retro.
A TRADITIONAL catamaran, rather than the traditional contemporary catamaran.
THIS, I can build.
I'll post some drawings soon. Meanwhile, it's back to stripping DonorBoat. The clock is now ticking, but that's another post.
Thanks for taking the time to check us out. Please feel free to "Talk the Dock!" Link us, follow us or just tell your friends.
Wednesday, 7 December 2011
Shameless Self -Promotion
"I just wanted you to know..."
-Billy Joel
I am, most emphatically, NOT a Christmas person.
I don't like shopping.
I don't like the mall.
I don't like the crowds,
Or the carols,
Or the lack of parking,
No, not at all.
The trinkets,
The baubles,
The four-figure budget.
Black Friday at Wal-Mart?
Oh, hell no, fudge that!
SWMBO draws the line at cutting cheques and dispensing cash,
So for some on my list, I do something rash.
I make my own presents for under the tree,
Some wood, some stain, a beer...or three.
I build boatshelves in two sizes,
Big....
... and small...
... "Big" sits in the corner, "Small" hangs on the wall.
The boatshelves get compliments, some think they are grand,
So I have decided to see if there is demand,
Out here in the wide world of discerning consumers,
From Generation Why? to "Get off My Damn Lawn!" Boomers.
For, you my blog readers, I'll make them to order,
And ship anywhere, even south of the border.
Your choice of finish and number of shelves,
Built with my own two hands,
No help from no steenkin' elves.
"Enough with the rhyming!" you say, "and all that jive,"
"How much do I gotta pay?"
Just Canadian, Ninety-Five,
Will get you size small,
While only $140 will get you a tall.
Plus the cost of shipping to wherever you reside,
Or I'll deliver, no charge, if less than a two hour ride.
Ontario followers order by Friday, and you will receive,
Your big or small boatshelf,
By Christmas Eve.
Send me an email or comment if you'd like one for you,
Hell, get one for mom, and your cousin, and for dad,
Buy a few!
It'll help keep me in beer and epoxy,
And wood and all that,
Other stuff I require,
To build our new cat.
-Billy Joel
I am, most emphatically, NOT a Christmas person.
I don't like shopping.
I don't like the mall.
I don't like the crowds,
Or the carols,
Or the lack of parking,
No, not at all.
The trinkets,
The baubles,
The four-figure budget.
Black Friday at Wal-Mart?
Oh, hell no, fudge that!
SWMBO draws the line at cutting cheques and dispensing cash,
So for some on my list, I do something rash.
I make my own presents for under the tree,
Some wood, some stain, a beer...or three.
I build boatshelves in two sizes,
Big....
... and small...
... "Big" sits in the corner, "Small" hangs on the wall.
The boatshelves get compliments, some think they are grand,
So I have decided to see if there is demand,
Out here in the wide world of discerning consumers,
From Generation Why? to "Get off My Damn Lawn!" Boomers.
For, you my blog readers, I'll make them to order,
And ship anywhere, even south of the border.
Your choice of finish and number of shelves,
Built with my own two hands,
No help from no steenkin' elves.
"Enough with the rhyming!" you say, "and all that jive,"
"How much do I gotta pay?"
Just Canadian, Ninety-Five,
Will get you size small,
While only $140 will get you a tall.
Plus the cost of shipping to wherever you reside,
Or I'll deliver, no charge, if less than a two hour ride.
Ontario followers order by Friday, and you will receive,
Your big or small boatshelf,
By Christmas Eve.
Send me an email or comment if you'd like one for you,
Hell, get one for mom, and your cousin, and for dad,
Buy a few!
It'll help keep me in beer and epoxy,
And wood and all that,
Other stuff I require,
To build our new cat.
Monday, 5 December 2011
Low-Buck Tools: Mitre Saw Stand Upgrades
" I won't cry, no, I won't shed a tear..."
-Ben E. King
Building a bigger boat means building up my tool inventory, and in some cases, building the tools.
So while it rains outside, making DonorBoat stripping an unattractive proposition, I decide to improve the functionality of my mitre saw, Low-Buck style.
Mitre saws are handy tools for boat projects. Measure twice, lay the wood on the table, pull the trigger, pull the saw down, wood gets cut, done. Easy peasy.
But mitre saws have limitations. One of the drawbacks to the typical 8-10" mitre saw is the small table size- any stock longer than 12" is longer than the table is wide, so extensions or supports are needed, which can lead to frustrating attempts to get work stands or sawhorses or stacks of books adjusted to just the right height to support the work. Been there, done that, got the unintentionally beveled offcuts to show for it.
The saw in question is an old Delta 10" saw, which travels on a repurposed rolling crate cabinet, which used to support my old radial arm saw, which was after it was used as a shipping crate for...something.
I wanted to add table and fence extensions to both sides of the saw, allowing stock up to 8' in length to be supported. In the interest of space conservation, I also wanted the extensions to be stowable when not in use. I did some quick sketching and figuring and measuring...
... and then gave up and as usual, winged it.
Requisite headscratching and pensive posing out of the way, I dug into the stack o' scrap which hides in the deepest darkest corner of the skunkworks deep beneath stately Jones manor and pulled out the disassembled carcass of an IKEA cabinet. For those of you playing along at home, the damaged and dismembered donor for this project was a Robin three drawer dresser. RIP Robin.
And then I did indeed proceed to rip Robin, and crosscut Robin, and generally reduce Robin to a small pile of lumber of approximately the correct shape and size.
For those of you without the preferred Scandinavian flatpack donor scrap, one may substitute the 3/4" -1" plywood of their choice- a 4' x 4' piece will do.
I found a couple of old piano hinges, grabbed a fistful of screws and a bottle of glue and got busy. An hour later...
The wings fold back, and are secured against flapping with a hook and eye catch on each side. When deployed, they are held true with bolts screwed into tee-nuts installed in the walls of the cabinet. No wobble, no sag, no droop...
naw, sometimes it's too easy.
First order of business on the new saw wings was to dissect more of Robin to build a new fence for my radial arm saw.
I kinda like the matching colour motif.
Total time invested between initial brainfart and "mission accomplished" beer: 2 hours.
Total cost: $0 (Even if you had to buy a piano hinge, screws, tee-nuts, bolts and the necessary wood brand spankin' new, you'd be hard pressed to spend more than $40 on this project.)
Next up- a Low-Buck adjustable fence stop for the new fancy fences.
Thanks for taking the time to check us out. Please feel free to "Talk the Dock!" Link us, follow us, or just tell your friends.
-Ben E. King
Building a bigger boat means building up my tool inventory, and in some cases, building the tools.
So while it rains outside, making DonorBoat stripping an unattractive proposition, I decide to improve the functionality of my mitre saw, Low-Buck style.
Mitre saws are handy tools for boat projects. Measure twice, lay the wood on the table, pull the trigger, pull the saw down, wood gets cut, done. Easy peasy.
But mitre saws have limitations. One of the drawbacks to the typical 8-10" mitre saw is the small table size- any stock longer than 12" is longer than the table is wide, so extensions or supports are needed, which can lead to frustrating attempts to get work stands or sawhorses or stacks of books adjusted to just the right height to support the work. Been there, done that, got the unintentionally beveled offcuts to show for it.
The saw in question is an old Delta 10" saw, which travels on a repurposed rolling crate cabinet, which used to support my old radial arm saw, which was after it was used as a shipping crate for...something.
I wanted to add table and fence extensions to both sides of the saw, allowing stock up to 8' in length to be supported. In the interest of space conservation, I also wanted the extensions to be stowable when not in use. I did some quick sketching and figuring and measuring...
... and then gave up and as usual, winged it.
Requisite headscratching and pensive posing out of the way, I dug into the stack o' scrap which hides in the deepest darkest corner of the skunkworks deep beneath stately Jones manor and pulled out the disassembled carcass of an IKEA cabinet. For those of you playing along at home, the damaged and dismembered donor for this project was a Robin three drawer dresser. RIP Robin.
And then I did indeed proceed to rip Robin, and crosscut Robin, and generally reduce Robin to a small pile of lumber of approximately the correct shape and size.
For those of you without the preferred Scandinavian flatpack donor scrap, one may substitute the 3/4" -1" plywood of their choice- a 4' x 4' piece will do.
I found a couple of old piano hinges, grabbed a fistful of screws and a bottle of glue and got busy. An hour later...
The wings fold back, and are secured against flapping with a hook and eye catch on each side. When deployed, they are held true with bolts screwed into tee-nuts installed in the walls of the cabinet. No wobble, no sag, no droop...
naw, sometimes it's too easy.
First order of business on the new saw wings was to dissect more of Robin to build a new fence for my radial arm saw.
I kinda like the matching colour motif.
Total time invested between initial brainfart and "mission accomplished" beer: 2 hours.
Total cost: $0 (Even if you had to buy a piano hinge, screws, tee-nuts, bolts and the necessary wood brand spankin' new, you'd be hard pressed to spend more than $40 on this project.)
Next up- a Low-Buck adjustable fence stop for the new fancy fences.
Thanks for taking the time to check us out. Please feel free to "Talk the Dock!" Link us, follow us, or just tell your friends.
Monday, 28 November 2011
Tying Up Loose Ends, Volume 7: Bill's Back.
"Your dreams were your ticket out..."
-John Sebastian
Bill and wind seem to go together.
Last time we saw Bill was also the first time we saw Bill, right here:
http://docksixchronicles.blogspot.com/2011/04/change-of-command.html
He was on the scene when we had our big blow in April, and he brought wind with him when he returned in September to pick up Suntack's cradle.
Last time I saw Bill he was leaving the marina, headed for home. I got a chance to crack a beer or two with him when he returned, and he gave me the trip report.
April is a tough month to transit the Great Lakes. It's usually ex-wife weather- cold, bitter and unpredictably nasty. This year was no exception. It was raining when Bill left, and it didn't stop raining until he was within sight of home...
Nine days later.
The only chart Bill had when he departed the marina was the Welland Canal chart I loaned him. He figured he'd pick up a Lake Ontario chart along the way.
Apparently Lake Ontario chandleries don't stock charts this early in the season, because Bill couldn't find one for sale when he exited the canal. As Bill tells it, he navigated by using the only navigational aid he could find:
A road map.
I shit you not.
He lived to tell the tale, and spent the season refitting and sailing and refitting and painting and refitting and high-diving from the top of the mast when his bosun's chair overstressed a rotten halyard and ...
This man may have a bigger cup of luck than most.
This was a quick touch-and-go run for Bill- drive down to the marina on Wednesday, pick up the cradle, drive back on Thursday. Thursday morning however dawned with a fresh breeze and sun, and it didn't take much arm-twisting to convince Bill to go for a sail. I was on the clock, but I figured I could play hooky for a couple of hours, and I had my phone with me, in case the office needed to get in touch with me. By the time we got the main sail uncovered and the docklines untied, the weather was getting ... interesting.
The wind was out of the Northeast, pushing the clouds away, but also creating some weird sea conditions on the lake. There was little wave action but the wind was 20 knots with gusts to 30. We cruised along the beach under power, grinning and reading the wind and just as we were about to raise the main...
... my phone rings.
Great. C'mon, really?
Turn around and head back to the Dock, as the wind is freshening. Bill's got the helm. With each gust, Whiskeyjack laid over and hardened up at about 20 degrees.
With no sails. Bare poles.
Just for giggles we shut down the Yanmar and kept an eye on the chart plotter. We were still sailing along at 2 knots, just on the dodger and bimini!
We didn't get any canvas up but we still came home with another story to tell. Thanks for bringing the wind, Bill!
Next time, I leave my phone at home.
Thanks for taking the time to check us out. Please feel free to "Talk the Dock." Link us, follow us or just tell your friends.
-John Sebastian
Bill and wind seem to go together.
Last time we saw Bill was also the first time we saw Bill, right here:
http://docksixchronicles.blogspot.com/2011/04/change-of-command.html
He was on the scene when we had our big blow in April, and he brought wind with him when he returned in September to pick up Suntack's cradle.
Last time I saw Bill he was leaving the marina, headed for home. I got a chance to crack a beer or two with him when he returned, and he gave me the trip report.
April is a tough month to transit the Great Lakes. It's usually ex-wife weather- cold, bitter and unpredictably nasty. This year was no exception. It was raining when Bill left, and it didn't stop raining until he was within sight of home...
Nine days later.
The only chart Bill had when he departed the marina was the Welland Canal chart I loaned him. He figured he'd pick up a Lake Ontario chart along the way.
Apparently Lake Ontario chandleries don't stock charts this early in the season, because Bill couldn't find one for sale when he exited the canal. As Bill tells it, he navigated by using the only navigational aid he could find:
A road map.
I shit you not.
He lived to tell the tale, and spent the season refitting and sailing and refitting and painting and refitting and high-diving from the top of the mast when his bosun's chair overstressed a rotten halyard and ...
This man may have a bigger cup of luck than most.
This was a quick touch-and-go run for Bill- drive down to the marina on Wednesday, pick up the cradle, drive back on Thursday. Thursday morning however dawned with a fresh breeze and sun, and it didn't take much arm-twisting to convince Bill to go for a sail. I was on the clock, but I figured I could play hooky for a couple of hours, and I had my phone with me, in case the office needed to get in touch with me. By the time we got the main sail uncovered and the docklines untied, the weather was getting ... interesting.
The wind was out of the Northeast, pushing the clouds away, but also creating some weird sea conditions on the lake. There was little wave action but the wind was 20 knots with gusts to 30. We cruised along the beach under power, grinning and reading the wind and just as we were about to raise the main...
... my phone rings.
Great. C'mon, really?
Turn around and head back to the Dock, as the wind is freshening. Bill's got the helm. With each gust, Whiskeyjack laid over and hardened up at about 20 degrees.
With no sails. Bare poles.
Just for giggles we shut down the Yanmar and kept an eye on the chart plotter. We were still sailing along at 2 knots, just on the dodger and bimini!
We didn't get any canvas up but we still came home with another story to tell. Thanks for bringing the wind, Bill!
Next time, I leave my phone at home.
Thanks for taking the time to check us out. Please feel free to "Talk the Dock." Link us, follow us or just tell your friends.
Tuesday, 22 November 2011
Commenting Fixed!!!
"The word 'excuse' has many names..."
-Wilco
After months of perplexity, apathy and just general fear and loathing of anything cybertechy related, I decided to tackle the Comment issue. Faithful readers have been telling me that they were no longer able to post a comment, and I assumed it was a Blogger problem, so Icompletely sort of ignored the issue. This morning I decided I would face my fear head-on, and try to fix it. Loyal readers, I do this for you. I am nothing, if not customer service oriented.
Heart pounding, I popped the hood on the blog to see what I could see.
Yes, I AM STILL an idiot.
http://docksixchronicles.blogspot.com/2011/05/yes-i-am-idiot.html
I clicked an unclicked preference, and BAM! Commenting enabled for everyone!
YEAHHHH!!!!!
-Wilco
After months of perplexity, apathy and just general fear and loathing of anything cybertechy related, I decided to tackle the Comment issue. Faithful readers have been telling me that they were no longer able to post a comment, and I assumed it was a Blogger problem, so I
Heart pounding, I popped the hood on the blog to see what I could see.
Yes, I AM STILL an idiot.
http://docksixchronicles.blogspot.com/2011/05/yes-i-am-idiot.html
I clicked an unclicked preference, and BAM! Commenting enabled for everyone!
YEAHHHH!!!!!
Wheels for Keels- A Bittersweet Swap
"I don't write songs about girls anymore, I have to write songs about women."
-The Pursuit of Happiness
In February of 2002, I acquired an old VW Thing, the 47th VW I had owned. It was a project, in need of an engine, some bodywork (a tree had fallen on it), paint and reassembly. My plan at the time was to do a quick and dirty rebuild and get it on the road by the summer. Shouldn't take more than 6 months, tops, I figured.
Last week it finally left the garage. On the back of somebody else's trailer.
It wasn't as hard to see the car go as I thought it would be. In fact, as I watched the trailer and it's cargo head out of the driveway, the hardest part was coming to grips with the fact that I was now, officially an old fart.
I could ignore the receding hairline.
I could ignore the greying beard.
I could ignore the expanding waistline.
I could ignore the fact that I listen to talk radio.
I could no longer ignore the fact that I preferred standing and sitting while working with wood and fiberglass in a warm house to lying on my back on a cold floor in a cold garage clutching cold tools, under two tons of old rust trying to remove a cold , seized, 40 year old bolt, nut or screw that is going to snap right...about...* ...now. I prefer the scent of fresh cut cedar and mahogany to the stink of PB Blaster and overheated gear oil. I prefer the growl of a table saw cutting ply to the sound of a cut off wheel shrieking through sheetmetal. I prefer to shake sawdust out of my hair to trying to excavate rust and filings out of my ears.
Hey! You kids! Get off my damn lawn!
While I was disappointed in myself for not finishing what I had started with this project, I was eager to move on. It was time.
Cleaning out the garage was the last hurdle to clear before I could start the catamaran build. Now, with the garage empty, I could begin to refill it.
Monday, the donor boat was delivered to Stately Jones Manor. Time to strip it down, and get to getting.
Thanks for taking the time to check us out. Please feel free to "Talk the Dock!" Link us, follow us, or just tell your friends.
Monday, 21 November 2011
Low-Buck Tools: Outboard Motor Work Stand
"Season is calling..."
-REM
When it's too cold to float a boat, it's the right time to get your boat ready to float. The only upside to a long cold winter is that the more work you do when the snow flies, the less work you have to do when the sun shines. One of my projects this winter is to revive an old outboard, so I need a work stand. I thought about buying a rolling O/B carrier, but rejected the option for a couple of reasons-
1. Lack of stability. it's a whole lot less frustrating to reef on a seized bolt when you don't have to worry about your work rolling out from under you.
2. Lack of work surface. An O/B cart has no place to lay tools, parts, rags, your beer, etc.
3. Lack of spare funds. The more money I spend on stuff that is not going on a boat, the less money I have to spend on stuff that goes on a boat. And Christmas is coming.
So, as usual, I gotta build what I need. I'm cool with that because it means I have to repurpose a bunch of scrap lumber, so I sort of get to clean up part of my cluttered workshop.
Win/win.
Becausethousands dozens three chronic Chronicles readers have asked me to post step- by- step instructions of the "low-buck" projects, I will do that very thing with this episode, for those who want to play along at home.
Step 1: Plan your work, so you can work your plan. Draw up the dimensions of what you need to accomplish, maybe sketch out a vague idea of what it should look like. Note the high quality drawing utensils
Step 2: Get wood. If you're a woodworker/boatbuilder/home handyman type, chances are you have a whole mess of offcuts, or as, they are known at Stately Jones Manor, mistakes. Gather up a bunch of likely suspects. Because I was going to be building a stand to hold a 50 lb motor, I wanted something fairly beefy, so I dug up an old pressure treated 4 x4 left over from a fence project, a couple of gnarly 2x4s last used during a painting project, a 2 x6 of unknown origin, a length of 1 x 2, and some leftover melamine shelf board
Step 3: Measure twice, cut once. Swear, remeasure, cut again. Using your drawing as a guide, cut your wood to measure.
Step 4: Drink a beer. Now that the power tools stage of the program is over, you realize that this is dusty work, and a cold beer would come in handy. This also give you a chance to contemplate how you are going to put this all together.
Step 5: Nail 'er, screw 'er, give it to 'er! Fasten your uprights to the horizontal lowers, fasten feet blocks to the lowers, install some spreaders, and gussets, add on a work top.
Step 6: Try it out. Seems to work.
Total build time: 2 hours.
Total cost: $0
It ain't pretty, it ain't elegant, but it does what it is supposed to do. I suppose a coat of paint would not go amiss, but while it might make it look more polished, it isn't going to make it work any better. I didn't trim the angle on the melamine gussets because I figured I might add a shelf there later, if it appears it may come in handy.
Or a beer holder.
Thanks for taking the time to check us out. Please feel free to "Talk the Dock!" Link us, follow us or just tell your friends.
-REM
When it's too cold to float a boat, it's the right time to get your boat ready to float. The only upside to a long cold winter is that the more work you do when the snow flies, the less work you have to do when the sun shines. One of my projects this winter is to revive an old outboard, so I need a work stand. I thought about buying a rolling O/B carrier, but rejected the option for a couple of reasons-
1. Lack of stability. it's a whole lot less frustrating to reef on a seized bolt when you don't have to worry about your work rolling out from under you.
2. Lack of work surface. An O/B cart has no place to lay tools, parts, rags, your beer, etc.
3. Lack of spare funds. The more money I spend on stuff that is not going on a boat, the less money I have to spend on stuff that goes on a boat. And Christmas is coming.
So, as usual, I gotta build what I need. I'm cool with that because it means I have to repurpose a bunch of scrap lumber, so I sort of get to clean up part of my cluttered workshop.
Win/win.
Because
Step 1: Plan your work, so you can work your plan. Draw up the dimensions of what you need to accomplish, maybe sketch out a vague idea of what it should look like. Note the high quality drawing utensils
Step 2: Get wood. If you're a woodworker/boatbuilder/home handyman type, chances are you have a whole mess of offcuts, or as, they are known at Stately Jones Manor, mistakes. Gather up a bunch of likely suspects. Because I was going to be building a stand to hold a 50 lb motor, I wanted something fairly beefy, so I dug up an old pressure treated 4 x4 left over from a fence project, a couple of gnarly 2x4s last used during a painting project, a 2 x6 of unknown origin, a length of 1 x 2, and some leftover melamine shelf board
Step 3: Measure twice, cut once. Swear, remeasure, cut again. Using your drawing as a guide, cut your wood to measure.
Step 4: Drink a beer. Now that the power tools stage of the program is over, you realize that this is dusty work, and a cold beer would come in handy. This also give you a chance to contemplate how you are going to put this all together.
Step 5: Nail 'er, screw 'er, give it to 'er! Fasten your uprights to the horizontal lowers, fasten feet blocks to the lowers, install some spreaders, and gussets, add on a work top.
Step 6: Try it out. Seems to work.
Total build time: 2 hours.
Total cost: $0
It ain't pretty, it ain't elegant, but it does what it is supposed to do. I suppose a coat of paint would not go amiss, but while it might make it look more polished, it isn't going to make it work any better. I didn't trim the angle on the melamine gussets because I figured I might add a shelf there later, if it appears it may come in handy.
Or a beer holder.
Thanks for taking the time to check us out. Please feel free to "Talk the Dock!" Link us, follow us or just tell your friends.
Sunday, 13 November 2011
Tying Up Loose Ends, Volume Six: The Afterword on the Aftermath
"Never let nothin' stand in my way..."
-Billy Ocean
Remember the big wind back in April?
http://docksixchronicles.blogspot.com/2011/04/big-wind-big-trouble.html
http://docksixchronicles.blogspot.com/2011/04/aftermath.html
Some boats came back, and some boats didn't.
Toboggan, seen above, was back in the water this season with a new mast.
Mochtrath...
...was in the water this season, and is now resting on a beefed up trailer.
Isyhia wasn't so lucky- she was a write-off:
She's like a desperate cougar in a bar at last call- at first glance she looks okay...
At a casual second glance she looks like she just needs some cosmetics to return her to her former glory
But close up, in the cruel light of day, one realizes that she could wreck a marriage and a credit rating with no reward.
Thanks for taking the time to check us out. Please feel free to "Talk the Dock!" Link us, follow us or just tell your friends.
-Billy Ocean
Remember the big wind back in April?
http://docksixchronicles.blogspot.com/2011/04/big-wind-big-trouble.html
http://docksixchronicles.blogspot.com/2011/04/aftermath.html
Some boats came back, and some boats didn't.
Toboggan, seen above, was back in the water this season with a new mast.
Mochtrath...
...was in the water this season, and is now resting on a beefed up trailer.
Isyhia wasn't so lucky- she was a write-off:
She's like a desperate cougar in a bar at last call- at first glance she looks okay...
At a casual second glance she looks like she just needs some cosmetics to return her to her former glory
But close up, in the cruel light of day, one realizes that she could wreck a marriage and a credit rating with no reward.
Thanks for taking the time to check us out. Please feel free to "Talk the Dock!" Link us, follow us or just tell your friends.
How cool is this?
"Lido missed the boat that day he left the shack..."
-Boz Scaggs
A generation (or so) ago, naval architecure was alive with great designs and great designers- Bill Crealock, Bill Garden, Olin Stephens, Cuthbertson & Cassian, Ted Brewer, Ted Hood, and at the unconventional end of the scale Phil Bolger and Artthur Piver, producing designs to be emulated, imitated, improved upon and admired for decades to come.
All were legends in their own time, and, occasionally, in their own mind. There are far fewer designers today, even fewer who evince the same reaction, and fewest leave the same solid body of work behind.
An exception that proves the rule is Pacific Northwest -based naval architect Robert Perry. For over 40 years Perry has turned out some of the best-regarded fast sailing cruiser designs available, boats that have stood the test of time:
and my favourite, the Far Harbour 39, a ship designed to be shipped:
http://www.containeryachts.com/
I'm not gonna waste any more of your time blowing smoke up Bob's ass- for those who are interested , you can find out more info here:
http://www.perryboat.com/page/bio
Bottom line is, this dude is one of the last of the real deals when it comes to designing floaty stuff.
I have been lucky enough to come across Bob's radar screen, thanks to the interweb. Before I get to the meat of this post, a little background is probably in order:
As I make my bones, in my own ham-handed way, designing, building, and refitting boats, I am reminded of the "Four Stages of Learning Any New Skill<" as it was described to me a few years ago:
1. Unconscious Incompetence- Don't know what to do. Don't know how to do it.
2. Conscious Incompetence- Know what to do. Don't know how to do it.
3. Conscious Competence- Know what to do. Know how to do it. Have to focus and concentrate to do it.
4. Unconscious Competence- Know what to do. Do it automatically.
I hover between stages 1 and 3 with occasional delusional flashes of stage 4, with a confidence level anywhere between 27 and 128%, which means that sometimes a second, or third or fourth, opinion is wise.
This is where the WLYDO comes in.
WLYDO (pronounced "Lee-do." The W is silent. I don't care what anybody else says.) is the "World's Largest Yacht Design Office", a loose group of naval architects, wannabe architects, boatbuilders, sailors and critics who meet on-line in the Cruising Anarchy forum to present designs for criticism and/or improvement,and/or to criticize/improve proffered designs. As I refine my catamaran design, the input of the WYLDO has been invaluable. The support and advice has kept the wheels from coming off this wreck so far, and has been much appreciated.
Apparently, I'm not the only one who has benefited from the power of the WYLDO. Last week , Mr. Perry blogged about the efforts of this rogues gallery:
http://perryboat.sail2live.com/
Halfway down the page, check out the picture of the skunkworks deep below Stately Jones Manor. How cool is that?
Thanks, Bob.
And thanks to all of you for checking us out. Please feel free to "Talk the Dock!" Link us, follow us or just tell your friends.
-Boz Scaggs
A generation (or so) ago, naval architecure was alive with great designs and great designers- Bill Crealock, Bill Garden, Olin Stephens, Cuthbertson & Cassian, Ted Brewer, Ted Hood, and at the unconventional end of the scale Phil Bolger and Artthur Piver, producing designs to be emulated, imitated, improved upon and admired for decades to come.
All were legends in their own time, and, occasionally, in their own mind. There are far fewer designers today, even fewer who evince the same reaction, and fewest leave the same solid body of work behind.
An exception that proves the rule is Pacific Northwest -based naval architect Robert Perry. For over 40 years Perry has turned out some of the best-regarded fast sailing cruiser designs available, boats that have stood the test of time:
and my favourite, the Far Harbour 39, a ship designed to be shipped:
http://www.containeryachts.com/
I'm not gonna waste any more of your time blowing smoke up Bob's ass- for those who are interested , you can find out more info here:
http://www.perryboat.com/page/bio
Bottom line is, this dude is one of the last of the real deals when it comes to designing floaty stuff.
I have been lucky enough to come across Bob's radar screen, thanks to the interweb. Before I get to the meat of this post, a little background is probably in order:
As I make my bones, in my own ham-handed way, designing, building, and refitting boats, I am reminded of the "Four Stages of Learning Any New Skill<" as it was described to me a few years ago:
1. Unconscious Incompetence- Don't know what to do. Don't know how to do it.
2. Conscious Incompetence- Know what to do. Don't know how to do it.
3. Conscious Competence- Know what to do. Know how to do it. Have to focus and concentrate to do it.
4. Unconscious Competence- Know what to do. Do it automatically.
I hover between stages 1 and 3 with occasional delusional flashes of stage 4, with a confidence level anywhere between 27 and 128%, which means that sometimes a second, or third or fourth, opinion is wise.
This is where the WLYDO comes in.
WLYDO (pronounced "Lee-do." The W is silent. I don't care what anybody else says.) is the "World's Largest Yacht Design Office", a loose group of naval architects, wannabe architects, boatbuilders, sailors and critics who meet on-line in the Cruising Anarchy forum to present designs for criticism and/or improvement,and/or to criticize/improve proffered designs. As I refine my catamaran design, the input of the WYLDO has been invaluable. The support and advice has kept the wheels from coming off this wreck so far, and has been much appreciated.
Apparently, I'm not the only one who has benefited from the power of the WYLDO. Last week , Mr. Perry blogged about the efforts of this rogues gallery:
http://perryboat.sail2live.com/
Halfway down the page, check out the picture of the skunkworks deep below Stately Jones Manor. How cool is that?
Thanks, Bob.
And thanks to all of you for checking us out. Please feel free to "Talk the Dock!" Link us, follow us or just tell your friends.
Sunday, 6 November 2011
Tying Up Loose Ends, Volume Five: Freedom's Flight
"You're right where I wanna be..."
-Michael McDonald
Way back, I introduced you to Ed and Chris, about to embark on the cruising life aboard their Endeavour, Freedom.
http://docksixchronicles.blogspot.com/2011/07/shameless-plug-for-some-cool-vids.html
I was expecting to see them stop by at some point this season on their way south, but Mother Nature had other plans.
Remember Hurricane Irene? Y'know, the storm that was sorta anti-climactic for the NY/NJ coast? Turns out, it wasn't so benign upstate.
From a geographical, if not meteorological standpoint, the outcome was triple weird, folks. Check this out:
Irene generated a stalled front over upstate New York and Vermont, causing bucketloads of rain to fall for hours, leading to widespread catastrophic flooding, so while NYC was largely spared, the landlocked state of Vermont declared a state of emergency, and upstate New York, specifically the Erie Canal, got seriously whacked with the catastrophe stick.
Image thanks to Columbiamissourian.com
Image thanks to glcclub.com
Game over for the Erie Canal this season, and unless some fundage becomes available to repair the damaged locks, next season looks in doubt also.
"Yeah, so?" some of you snort, "How does a closed canal in New York affect us up here?"
Like this- the Erie Canal is the nautical pleasurecraft superhighway to the ICW. The Great Lakes connect to the Canal, the Canal connects to the Hudson, the Hudson connects to Long Island Sound, Long Island Sound is like a cloverleaf- turn left, you head to New England and points north, turn right and you're travelling south with the snowbirds on the IntraCoastal Waterway, all the way to Miami.
No canal, no Miami. or Bahamas. Or whatever.
Some cruisers decided to truck their boats south, some decided to hope for the best, (rumour has it the canal will open on a limited basis on American Thanksgiving, but that is getting really late in the season for the month+ trip south to the Bahamas), and others, including Ed and Chris, decided to go west to go south.
Freedom simply headed north, up the St. Clair River through Lake Huron, down Lake Michigan to Chicago where her mast was pulled and dropped on a truck, then Freedom became a powerboat, cruising down the canals, eventually to the Mississippi.
Okay, maybe "simply" is slightly inaccurate.
Anyadjective, the crew of Freedom has been blogging their adventures, and it has been a great read. I encourage you to check it out. I get the feeling it is going to be a great lifeline during the long cold winter ahead.
http://freedom-sailing.blogspot.com/
(Hey, if I keep kissing ass like this, you think they'll invite me aboard when they hit the Bahamas?)
Thanks for taking the time to check us out. Please feel free to "Talk the Dock!" Link us, follow us, or just tell your friends.
-Michael McDonald
Way back, I introduced you to Ed and Chris, about to embark on the cruising life aboard their Endeavour, Freedom.
http://docksixchronicles.blogspot.com/2011/07/shameless-plug-for-some-cool-vids.html
I was expecting to see them stop by at some point this season on their way south, but Mother Nature had other plans.
Remember Hurricane Irene? Y'know, the storm that was sorta anti-climactic for the NY/NJ coast? Turns out, it wasn't so benign upstate.
From a geographical, if not meteorological standpoint, the outcome was triple weird, folks. Check this out:
Irene generated a stalled front over upstate New York and Vermont, causing bucketloads of rain to fall for hours, leading to widespread catastrophic flooding, so while NYC was largely spared, the landlocked state of Vermont declared a state of emergency, and upstate New York, specifically the Erie Canal, got seriously whacked with the catastrophe stick.
Image thanks to Columbiamissourian.com
Image thanks to glcclub.com
Game over for the Erie Canal this season, and unless some fundage becomes available to repair the damaged locks, next season looks in doubt also.
"Yeah, so?" some of you snort, "How does a closed canal in New York affect us up here?"
Like this- the Erie Canal is the nautical pleasurecraft superhighway to the ICW. The Great Lakes connect to the Canal, the Canal connects to the Hudson, the Hudson connects to Long Island Sound, Long Island Sound is like a cloverleaf- turn left, you head to New England and points north, turn right and you're travelling south with the snowbirds on the IntraCoastal Waterway, all the way to Miami.
No canal, no Miami. or Bahamas. Or whatever.
Some cruisers decided to truck their boats south, some decided to hope for the best, (rumour has it the canal will open on a limited basis on American Thanksgiving, but that is getting really late in the season for the month+ trip south to the Bahamas), and others, including Ed and Chris, decided to go west to go south.
Freedom simply headed north, up the St. Clair River through Lake Huron, down Lake Michigan to Chicago where her mast was pulled and dropped on a truck, then Freedom became a powerboat, cruising down the canals, eventually to the Mississippi.
Okay, maybe "simply" is slightly inaccurate.
Anyadjective, the crew of Freedom has been blogging their adventures, and it has been a great read. I encourage you to check it out. I get the feeling it is going to be a great lifeline during the long cold winter ahead.
http://freedom-sailing.blogspot.com/
(Hey, if I keep kissing ass like this, you think they'll invite me aboard when they hit the Bahamas?)
Thanks for taking the time to check us out. Please feel free to "Talk the Dock!" Link us, follow us, or just tell your friends.
No-Burner Tastiness: Best. Donut. Ever.
"Oh, my God!"
-Amanda Marshall
Arguably, the one unifying force in this country is not political, but gastronomic, a power that has repelled and conquered foreign interlopers, an entity known and loved nationwide that has created a culture and added to the national lexicon, a benevolent behemoth so ubiquitous that everyone know's it best by it's nickname:
"Timmy's"
Tim Horton's Donuts is one of the great Canadian success stories, with thousands of stores across the country and around the world, serving up the lion's share of take-out coffee and pastry in this country. Krispy Kreme, Dunkin Donuts, Starbucks and dozens of regional chains and thousands of independent coffee and donut joints fight tooth and nail for the scraps left over. According to Wikipedia, Tim Horton's commands a whopping 76% of the pastry sales in Canada, and 62% of the coffee sales.
Starbuck's is number 2... at 7%.
Timmy's ain't real worried.
One of the secrets to Tim Horton's success is the chain's consistency- Uniforms, coffee blend, store design, menus and recipes are all proprietary and sourced from a small handful of suppliers. You can expect an "everything" bagel or "chocolate dip" donut to taste the same in Victoria, BC and Sydney, NS.
Or Afghanistan. Tim's went to war alongside our troops, opening an outlet at the coalition base at Kandahar, staffed by Tim's employees, not contractors or military staff. These folks don't play when it comes to maintaining quality and consistency.
But, there is some leeway, and Tim's has a history of listening to, and responding to, the wishes of the franchisees.
Which brings us to the Dock's local Timmy's in Port Dover.
It's different.
It starts outside. Traditionally, Tim Horton's stores are of the "Brown Brick Box" school of retail architecture. When the Port Dover Timmy's moved to a new location a little more than a decade ago, the franchise owners decided to do something different:
This is the prototype "Downeast" design Timmy's store, a design that has since been repeated in the maritime provinces, and throughout New England. A nautical theme is carried throughout the interior decor, with rope edged counter tops and a pedestal complete with ship's wheel and compass binnacle in the center of the store.
The menu is a little different as well. Here, you can get the world's best donut, if you know how to order:
(At this time, drumroll would be appropriate. Feel free to generate your own facsimile.)
Ready?
A Bacon-topped Maple Donut.
Unadorned, a Tim's Maple Dip donut is damn near donut perfection. A soft, airy, yeasty donut dressed with perfect maple frosting. Donut frosting sounds simple, but so many donut joints and bakeries can't seem to get it right. Timing is everything. If the donut is too cool when frosted, the frosting is simply cold-welded to the donut chassis. It looks fine, but one bite causes the frosting to flake, fragment and freefall to the floor. Too warm and the frosting is a fizzled drizzle, dripping, drooling and generally doing it's damnedest to depart the donut.
On the frosting tip, Timmy's rolls straight up Goldilocks-style; not too hot, not too cold, just right.
Add a handful of strips of bacon and the simple pleasure becomes sublime. I gotta see it again:
Ooooooooooooohhhhhhhhhhhhh......
If there is any justice in the world, this would be a regular menu item. Call it a "Dock Six."
( Hell, if a donut called a "Dutchie" can catch on, then this is a no-brainer.)
Try one today!
Better yet, spread the word. It's not like the world can't use another great donut.
Thanks for taking the time to check us out. Please feel free to "Talk the Dock!" Link us, follow us, or just tell your friends.
-Amanda Marshall
Arguably, the one unifying force in this country is not political, but gastronomic, a power that has repelled and conquered foreign interlopers, an entity known and loved nationwide that has created a culture and added to the national lexicon, a benevolent behemoth so ubiquitous that everyone know's it best by it's nickname:
"Timmy's"
Tim Horton's Donuts is one of the great Canadian success stories, with thousands of stores across the country and around the world, serving up the lion's share of take-out coffee and pastry in this country. Krispy Kreme, Dunkin Donuts, Starbucks and dozens of regional chains and thousands of independent coffee and donut joints fight tooth and nail for the scraps left over. According to Wikipedia, Tim Horton's commands a whopping 76% of the pastry sales in Canada, and 62% of the coffee sales.
Starbuck's is number 2... at 7%.
Timmy's ain't real worried.
One of the secrets to Tim Horton's success is the chain's consistency- Uniforms, coffee blend, store design, menus and recipes are all proprietary and sourced from a small handful of suppliers. You can expect an "everything" bagel or "chocolate dip" donut to taste the same in Victoria, BC and Sydney, NS.
Or Afghanistan. Tim's went to war alongside our troops, opening an outlet at the coalition base at Kandahar, staffed by Tim's employees, not contractors or military staff. These folks don't play when it comes to maintaining quality and consistency.
But, there is some leeway, and Tim's has a history of listening to, and responding to, the wishes of the franchisees.
Which brings us to the Dock's local Timmy's in Port Dover.
It's different.
It starts outside. Traditionally, Tim Horton's stores are of the "Brown Brick Box" school of retail architecture. When the Port Dover Timmy's moved to a new location a little more than a decade ago, the franchise owners decided to do something different:
This is the prototype "Downeast" design Timmy's store, a design that has since been repeated in the maritime provinces, and throughout New England. A nautical theme is carried throughout the interior decor, with rope edged counter tops and a pedestal complete with ship's wheel and compass binnacle in the center of the store.
The menu is a little different as well. Here, you can get the world's best donut, if you know how to order:
(At this time, drumroll would be appropriate. Feel free to generate your own facsimile.)
Ready?
A Bacon-topped Maple Donut.
Unadorned, a Tim's Maple Dip donut is damn near donut perfection. A soft, airy, yeasty donut dressed with perfect maple frosting. Donut frosting sounds simple, but so many donut joints and bakeries can't seem to get it right. Timing is everything. If the donut is too cool when frosted, the frosting is simply cold-welded to the donut chassis. It looks fine, but one bite causes the frosting to flake, fragment and freefall to the floor. Too warm and the frosting is a fizzled drizzle, dripping, drooling and generally doing it's damnedest to depart the donut.
On the frosting tip, Timmy's rolls straight up Goldilocks-style; not too hot, not too cold, just right.
Add a handful of strips of bacon and the simple pleasure becomes sublime. I gotta see it again:
Ooooooooooooohhhhhhhhhhhhh......
If there is any justice in the world, this would be a regular menu item. Call it a "Dock Six."
( Hell, if a donut called a "Dutchie" can catch on, then this is a no-brainer.)
Try one today!
Better yet, spread the word. It's not like the world can't use another great donut.
Thanks for taking the time to check us out. Please feel free to "Talk the Dock!" Link us, follow us, or just tell your friends.
Tying Up Loose Ends, Volume Four: Another Guy Fly-By
"Hark, now hear the sailors' cry..."
-Van Morrison
Sunday, October 30, 2011.
Air Temperature: 7C
Water Temperature: 12C
Waves: 1-2 metres.
Strong Wind Warning Issued.
Hit it.
The Dock closes for the season tomorrow, but it's looking damned close to empty today.
We've got to get Whiskeyjack off the dock and up the river to the yard, then prepped for haul out. Then we have to load Quack on the top of Lady Liberty for the trip home. Then we have to strip all of the fenders off the dock
But, there's still time for one last sail.
There's always time to sail!
Bookending the season, eager greenhorn Guy was back to build seatime. The silly bas fine gentleman sent us an email a couple of weeks back offering to help with haul-out! After a split-second of thoughtful consideration, I took him up on his ill-considered offer.
(What, did any of you really think I was gonna say "no, that's okay, thanks."? An extra warm body to help strike canvas, fold sails and hump gear to the car is not to be refused. Especially when said warm body brings wine.)
As usual, Guy brought great sailing weather along with him. Once clear of the marina, we motored west along the shoreline to give our cold diesel a chance to warm up, then we rolled out half our genny and were off with the wind. We're beautfully balanced, with the wheel needing little in the way of inputs, pretty much sailing herself.
We're crashing, we're splashing, Guy and I are grinning, and SWMBO and Finn decide to head below for a nap!
A nap!??!
Turns out a couple of somebodies were a little chilly.
On a day like today, foulies make the difference between a great sail and a miserable sail. After warming up in the v-berth, SWMBO returned to the cockpit in her bibs with another sweater and scarf under her jacket.
Finn, however was still unhappy.
SWMBO rummaged below and found a solution. She returned to the cockpit with a polar fleece sweatshirt. A couple of turns on the sleeves, and voila, a warmer dog.
Who is still not happy.
"You're kidding, right? I have to wear this?!? Couldn't you at least find a shirt in any other colour?"
"I look ridiculous!"
"Okay, it's warm, and cozy and ... zzzzzzzzzzz."
As the distance between shore and Whiskeyjack widened, the swells lengthened and shortened, and the ride smoothed out, while the sun played hide and seek amongst the clouds.
As we were heading out toward the end of the Point, the fish tugs were coming in returning to port, replete with a cloud of moochers circling overhead.
As the afternoon peaked, we reluctantly did the math, calculating the necessary intersection of estimated return speed, approximate sunset time,amount of time necessary to strip the boat for haulout, to the nearest half hour to correspond with the lift bridge opening schedule.
In other words, we guessed when we should head back.
Hey, I'm a lover, not a mathematician.
The sun was just over our shoulder as we approached the river mouth, still under sail. It was also 4:53. We had 7 minutes to travel 3/4ths of a mile. Whiskeyjack is a cruiser, not a racer, with a top speed under power of about 6 miles per hour, or one mile ever 10 minutes. The math was not in our favour. To further complicate the equation, remember the swells we had left behind? We were back in them, and the entry into the river was going to be, er, interesting.
Photos below were taken the previous weekend, which was a hell of a lot less hectic.
We could have held off and waited for the next opening, but it would mean entering the river at dusk, (it gets darker earlier on the Bay, thanks to the bluffs to the west blocking the setting sun), then docking and off-loading in the dark.
What the hell, let's push it.
The crack crew flew into action. SWMBO got on the radio to let the bridgekeeper know we were coming, while I cranked up the engine and Guy prepped halyards and sheets to furl the genoa. We throttled up and made the run into the river.
Here's the score:
1/2 mile from the bridge,
4:56,
Bridgekeeper firm on opening on time at 5:00.
Then we caught a break: At full throttle, we surfed into the river on the back of a swell, which pushed our speed over ground north of 7 knots. Wheeeee!!!!!!!! I was grinning, Guy was grinning, onlookers on the pier were pointing, Finn was unimpressed. As we pass the commercial harbour, we can hear the bridge warning bell ringing. At straight up 5:00, the bridge began to rise.
At 5:02, we passed under the flapping wings of the bridge.
Minutes later we were tied up to the boatyard dock, shutting down, packing up, and cracking beer and Merlot to toast an excellent close to an excellent season.
Thanks for taking the time to check us out. Please feel free to "Talk the Dock!" Link us, follow us, or just tell your friends.
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