We have been in Hampton Virginia at the Salt Ponds Marina for about five weeks now. It seems like all we have done is boat chores. It is almost like we went back to work. So far this is what we have accomplished:
Refinished all the exterior wood. We had to take some down to bare wood and reapply the Cetol Natural Teak finish. Other parts we just cleaned and recoated. We now have four coats on all of the wood surfaces.
Oiled the interior wood. The interior of the boat is mostly teak wood. Over time it dries out so we had to apply teak oil. It looks much better now. Just like new.
Replaced six house batteries. Our Lifeline AGM batteries were almost nine years old. We got plenty of use out of them but it was time to change them because they were not holding the charge. We replaced with six new Lifeline AGM group 27 100 amp hour batteries. Those suckers are heavy so we used the spare main halyard and a winch to lift them out onto the dock. We took the old ones to a auto parts store and they will dispose of them.
The light bulbs in both cockpit lazerettes were burned out so they got replaced.
The lug cover on the alternator had melted during our overheating do to the corrosion on the lug. We replaced the rubber cover. While I was doing this I accidentally touch one of the battery leads to a ground and it blew a 150 amp fuse. It took me two hours to find where the fuse was, behind the house battery switch, which had to be unscrewed and removed to see it.
My SSB radio was not transmitting as well as I would have liked so I added additional ground plane.
My anchor roller, which is made of a hard rubber, was split open. I ordered a new one and installed it.
My main anchor chain has painted marks so I can gauge how much chain is put out. The paint was coming off so we repainted it.
The fan in the head gave up so it was replaced.
I replaced the topping lift on the whisker pole with a larger line. The previous line was too small for proper handling.
We made a support to mount to the port forward stanchions in order to strap fuel jugs to. When we go over to the Bahamas we will carry additional gasoline and diesel fuel.
My Garmin chart platter accepts SD cards that have additional chart information and photos. I had two of them, one for the Florida and Bahamas area and one for Georgia to New Jersey. The Florida/Bahamas SD card was not working properly. I sent them both back to Garmin and will receive free updates for both.
Our list of work items is slowly getting whittled down. Next week we are taking off from boat life and spending the week in a beachfront house on the Outer Banks of North Carolina. When we get back we will be taking the boat up to Zimmerman Marine in Cardinal Virginia, about 24 miles north to get help with a hydraulic leak on my W-H auto pilot. I know the service manager there and have a lot of confidence that they can find the leak.
We did take a few days off from work when the temperature outside was really hot. It has reached 100 degrees with the THI up around 108. We went to tour some of the historical sites in the area. We have been to Historic Jamestowne, where the first colonists landed in 1607 and to Yorktown and the Yorktown battlefield where George Washington and the American and French armies defeated the British which was the end of colonialism. In the weeks to come we will be returning to the retirement life and be doing more touring. Although living on a boat and cruising is just fixing boat things in exotic places.
Thursday, July 8, 2010
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2 comments:
Hi Jeff & Sandy, I'm so sorry to read about troubles with W-H Autopilot. I remember recommending it to you. So farm we've had no problems of any kind with ours. Around other boaters, a common topic of conversation is how to keep their Autohelms running. Then, I feel smug.
Sometimes, you just pay your dues to the cruising life through boat work or boat $, don't you. Our big, recent one was to replace our dinghy and outboard.
Ron, S/V Wight Skye
Hi Jeff - Just wanted to say HELLO and hope all is well with you. Started to look at some of the beautiful pictures and reading some of your adventures.
Safe journey and best wishes,
Terry Tcheng
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