Update for May 2010
Well what can we say’? Nearly 6 months since we last wrote and I’m not sure what the hell we’ve been doing in all that time... Certainly we worked on Hannah far more than we had originally intended and did some work on other boats to keep our hand in but the time just slipped away and before we knew it we reached our departure time plus and slipped our moorings in early May. So here’s a quick run through on what’s happened.
Hannah.
A colour change as we found the cream latex paint we’d used on the coach
roof, whilst durable, turned black from the soot from the chimney and we
could never get it clean. Our great friend Cary had supplied us with some
paint he’d had left over from a job and we used that to tidy up the
boat. Plus we decided to try the Cetol teak stain and have been more than
happy with the result. All this took several weeks/months, as we needed to
work between weather systems. In fact at one point we nearly didn’t work
at all as, standing on a float alongside Hannah, I dropped an electric
hand-sander into the water. I could see it buzzing away under water and
hauled it up by the cord and grabbed hold of the unit to turn it
off............. You’re probably ahead of me on this one but the
resulting buzz I got made me glad it wasn’t the UK’s 240 volts I was
receiving. Luckily Bee was on hand to disconnect me before any damage was
done. Happily enough after we’d washed the unit out with fresh water and
dried it over the next few weeks it worked fine. We used the time to
remove booms, gaffs, and bowsprit and get them cleaned up and checked
over. The dinghy got the once
over too, a new mainsail cover made, lines replaced and some changes made
to how things run. Hauled out for 48 hours to clean up and paint the
bottom, helped Cary on various projects with his boat Red Bird, bit of
e-baying and kept up the home brewing. 2 weeks before we were due to leave
we bit the bullet and bought a second hand radar to help us get through
the fog of summer and once we can learn to interpret what we’re seeing
it’ll be very useful. Or so we’ve been told. 2 days before we’re
meant to pull out the vhf began to play up so we replaced that unit too as
we feel happier getting weather forecasts than going blind. And then in
the closing hours of our time in Portsmouth Bee was offered a vacuuming
job. Cary was removing some ports from a ferro boat that had involved huge
amounts of grinding with subsequent amounts of dust. Took Bee 5 hours of
dusty work to get the boat sorted but Cary and the owner were grateful. Earlier
this year Bee began to suffer from toothache and, being the stoic she is,
ignored it for several months. However when she voluntarily takes
Ibuprofen then it has to be serious. When she increased the dose then even
she agreed something had to be done. Cary rang a good friend who happens
to be a dentist and he agreed to see her the following day. Turns out the
tooth had 3 roots and the infection was too close to the gum so she needed
to see a specialist............the appointment was made and Bee went off
to see him. She’d been told that this sort of extraction required the
patient unconscious but her query to the dentist on the cost determined
that it could be done under local which was cheaper and minutes later the
job was done. As she says $285 versus $500 made it an easy decision! Soon
after this I managed to jam a splinter under a fingernail. It went in deep
enough to bury the end very close in and Bee and Donny had a ball clamping
my hand down in an effort to get it out. Donny installs a/c units and in
an effort to freeze the finger enough that I wouldn’t feel them poking
around under the nail with tweezers he squirted Freon gas at it. In the
end we checked the ‘net who suggested leaving it to work its own way out
rather than use tweezers/knives et al. We did and it does. One of
this winters jobs was to make a mains’l cover and we duly completed this
using a cheap local sewing machine. However a Dutch friend had found, and
sent up to us, an old manual Singer sewing machine. Cary introduced us to
a guy who had worked for Singer and he identified it as Model 27 built
somewhere between 1910 and 1920.................. He checked it over,
found a piece we needed from someone who restored the things, threaded it,
and gave us a demo on how it all worked. OK it doesn’t do anything other
than forward stitch but the sound it makes more than makes up for it. We
gave the electric one away to another cruising boat!
A VERY
tough time for us and Cary as we feel part of his family and emotions were
high as we hugged each other goodbye. He is a remarkable man from a
remarkable family and we are lucky to have found him. Hopefully when next
we meet he and Linda will be retired and living a life of riley in the
Keys. So Sat May 1 we motored away from what had been our home for the last 6 months and up the river. The sun shone, the breeze was fine, and rather than stop too soon and have time to dwell on the folks we’d left we chose to head across the bay and anchor at the concrete ships. The trip was uneventful, through up a couple of issues we needed to deal with, and we got there early enough to do so. The following day we had the choice of either going up the bay, through the Delaware Canal and back into the Atlantic or just heading off shore and making our way north. We chose the latter and made reasonable progress north. We’d intended stopping at Block Island, at the entrance to Buzzards Bay, but we finally reached there about 4 am one morning and with a stiff breeze blowing decided to keep going up the bay toward the Cape Cod Canal. As we closed the Canal we realised that we could probably hit it with enough time to get through and out the other end before the tide turned against us. The weather, which had been sunny coming up from the Chesapeake, had been foggy since we’d reached Block Island and continued through out the day. Into the Canal, where a couple of other sail boats joined us and before we knew it we were at the eastern end and in warm, bright sunshine. The breeze continued as we headed north toward Provincetown but an hour out it died away to a gentle, light wind and we shook the reefs out to maintain some speed. About 4 miles from the hook that protects the town the wind switched from the SW to the NW and within minutes was hitting 30 or 40 knots. Luckily we hadn’t got the genny up and had the engine running to try and get to the anchorage before it got dark. Hastily got the 2 reefs back in and we made excellent progress toward the shelter of the land where we got the stays’l up to help balance the boat. Prior to doing that we were very close to the shore and the weather helm kept pushing the bow up to windward and toward the beach but the engine kept us out of trouble. But it is a chancy thing to do because all your safety is with the engine continuing to run................ The
following day I checked the water level as I’d noticed, on the way up,
the radiator was low. Sure enough it was low again and we began to look
around for the cause. The obvious one would be the elbow from the heat
exchanger as one had corroded on us before but this time it was clean.
However as I began to check various pipes I touched the feed pipe to the
saloon heater and the pipe fell off the block and water poured out. The
connection piece had fractured, leaving threads inside the block and
we’d found our leak! Luckily we were able to get into town, find a tool
that I’d seen Donny use, and back the threads out of block and replace
it with a stopper. OK so we don’t have a saloon heater from the engine
but we do have an engine! We’ll
say nowt about the timing of this....
By
the following morning we were just 50 mile north of the headland but
thereafter we made good progress and by 4am on Wednesday we were off
Monhegan Island though the absence of adjacent lobster pots kind of threw
us. Up the Penobscot Bay we sailed, marvelling at the colours and knowing
that if the opportunity ever presented itself we’d think very seriously
about living here. Into Belfast Bay with still no pots in sight and even
more startling was the complete lack of boats on moorings in the harbour.
But we’ve never been this early and, in fact, have never been in Maine
in May before. As we dropped sail our favourite Harbour-master, Kathy
called us to “come on in”, and we pulled into the harbour and
alongside to be greeted by a whole bunch of friends including Pete and
Lucia, back from Qatar. An emotional time along this coast. Since
then we’ve gradually caught up with a bunch of people, begun a few
repair jobs (already!!) and getting ourselves ready for the next stage
which is to spend the summer cruising Labrador. We spent a morning getting
a load of wood from a yard in north Maine and will be on the move again by
the end of May. Actually the wood presented us with a real logistical
problem as to where to stow it. Visitors to the town became temporary
friends as they came onto the jetty to help move this mound of wood to the
boat and over the next few days we managed to get it on board and stowed
away. When we eventually meet up with Robin and Jac in the Bras D’Or
Lakes, Hannah will float several inches higher
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