This morning I designed a different way to
install the steps or ‘ladder rungs’ on the rat lines which suited the wood we
had to use. It will also be much
safer. The first three rungs are now
secured and are very successful and I could confidently test them with my own
weight. However, today is a ‘rain day’,
not just a few showers but pretty consistent rain with the odd clap of thunder
and only one really close lightning bolt.
Power went off but was more the fault of Jim’s computer charger which
seems to trip the GFI on the whole dock.
I have five more rungs to measure, cut and secure tomorrow, hopefully
the weather will cooperate. The new ones
with edges all rounded to protect the sails look so good against the old ones.
With the rain we then moved to inside jobs
and with creative plumbing techniques, I installed a check valve on the deck
drain so that we will no longer have to listen to the bilge pump like we did
last night. Last night’s storm had Lynda
and I on deck soaking wet as we removed the laundry before it blew away. I would have done it myself but Lynda doesn’t
like anyone touching her personal things.
Lynda took today ‘off’ and visited with friends and planned to go snorkelling. Boat maintenance is not her thing. She has missed her bus back tonight so phoned and said I could have the big bunk tonight!
As I cut the rat
line steps with a sabre saw, Jim went to see about batteries. The result was an afternoon visit, in pouring
rain, from a New Zelander named Alfie.
As Jim took a call on his cell phone, Alfie and I had a talk about Jim’s
electrical system. When Jim came back,
Alfie said as politely as possible “Jim, I have to give you a scolding about
your batteries”. Now I believe that Jim
will at least buy a starter battery and keep it separate. Alfie says we could exist on the four remaining
house batteries as long as we do not go too far and as long as we have a
separate starter battery. He will come
back in the morning with prices.
Integral to getting new batteries, explained Alfie, would be a
relatively cheap battery monitoring system.
The over-heating of the dying batteries which fried the supporting
boards beneath them should never happen with a proper monitoring system.
I explained to
Jim that at home I often like to do jobs for my friends and they feed me lunch
or dinner, that’s all I really need. But
they don’t charge me for the privilege of visiting their home. Point made and I have negotiated a new deal,
I am not paying to be a ‘Mechanic in Paradise’ which makes me feel a whole lot
better about what I am doing here. I really
believe that Jim had no idea how badly off his boat was, although I think he
should have seen some of the major issues.
He and Alice lived aboard here for two years and did no
maintenance. Some locals have said to
Lynda that Jim has “gone tropical” and
has lost touch with certain reality. I
think I have brought back some of that reality and he now has lists of things
he needs to do when he returns to the States also on April 1. Number one on that list is to see about a
perpetual cough he has.
Alice was
leaving as I arrived. Lynda is trying to
work her way around the world from boat to boat and she has already spent a
month trying to organize Jim and his stuff and also tried to clean the place
up. This was not what she expected when
she agreed to make this boat her next leg.
She will find some other way to move east. She is quite resourceful.
The photo I hope
to attach could best be called “Rum in the Rain”, a photo technique that Sylvia
uses. Two rums actually, with fresh
pineapple and ice. Drinks to celebrate
the work accomplished today.
Thanks all for your good wishes.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteGlad you are no longer paying to be a "mechanic in paradise" and that progress is being made towards getting the boat in shape. Hope you get a chance to do some actual sailing down there, after all this work. I will check on Mum again tomorrow to see how the 'lock-down' is going. Stay well and be safe. Love, Dave
ReplyDeleteHi Don,
ReplyDeleteWhile we were rallying among 10,000 people yesterday, Patti mentioned your blog to me, Jean and Terry. I still don't have the full story on how you ended up there, but I am fascinated by your blog! I can hardly believe what's going on down there, even with my minimal boat maintenance knowledge. I hope you don't mind if I share it with my Dad, who will cringe at all those battery-rat line-pump-sail-lines-etc conditions. You are such an amazing guy! Venturing out like that, being able to identify and fix so many problems, and still keep your sense of humour - this Jim guy must be thanking his lucky stars. Looking forward to hearing how you slowly bend him to your way of thinking!