Another day has been spent on Hawkeye getting her ready to sail. Shibby has been coming down with me helping me install the engine and while waiting for me to need her assistance she has been cleaning down all the salt encrusted walls and cupboards. Today she started in the fore-berth and worked her way back from there. All was going well until she opened up this can of worms,
It looks bad but believe me it's much worse. It looks like someone has deposited a vindaloo it there and left it for lent. Actually though, a lot of the grime is from the salt water combined with a few hot days and sitting stagnant . Was hell to clean off. It took her nearly an hour to make it sparkle. She'll remember her gloves next time.
One thing we have noticed it that every little cut that we get, seems to get infected from the salt laying around the boat we're doing our best to get it all cleaned but there is stuff everywhere. I have boxes of sail repair gear, electrical repair gear, tools, lifting equipment and parts that are need to put the engine in place. Were getting there though. Every muscle is sore from having to be a contortionist in such a tiny and cramped place. just putting the bolts in the flange for the drive coupling has me upside down with my legs over the navigation table. Crawling into the aft berths is like squeezing through a crowded shopping centre doors on a boxing day sale.
One more weekend and she will be able to come off the mooring and we can go for a sail and nut out the problems with the sail rigging,
Saturday, 4 March 2017
Wednesday, 1 March 2017
Well We've done it!
But I look at it this way. I have a boat with new ropes, reconditioned engine, freshly de-fouled, sanded and painted hull (below waterline) 3 sets of sails including a storm sail and four reef main for $12,000. I bought it without Shibby even taking a look at her. I walked on deck and knew she would love it (and she did!)
The Boats name is Hawkeye She is painted in a terrible yellow colour kind of suited to a life boat type colour. You cant miss her. We will change the colour but keep the name. Hawkeye is a 40 foot Steel hull of Group finot design (1982) with and aft cockpit. Her home of origin is the USA "San Francisco" She is a Bermudan Cutter with the head sail on a furler. She sank because the previous owner left a seacock open and went home for the weekend and a fitting under the sink broke and filled her hull with water. The bilge pumps kept up for a while until the batteries ran out of power and she eventually sank on her mooring with only a couple of meters of mast hanging out of the water. The salvage team bought her back up and let her dry out.
At the moment Hawkeye stinks of a combination of salt, diesel and rotten food. The first day on her was taken up with Shibby cleaning the salt encrusted walls and cupboards out and me changing halyards and pulling out the totally seized engine from it's home. The water tanks were filled with food waste, God knows why but they were. The fuel tanks have water in them so there is an extensive cleaning program to be performed there also. At least one thing about her being underwater all the cockroaches are dead, I have found a fair few corpses and egg sacks. We still have a long way to go
with the living areas of the boat but that is part of the journey. I also got stuck up the mast for a bit because Shibby let the rope tail go back around the winch she was hoisting me up the mast with and I had to use another halyard to help her untangle the mess so that I could get back down. Pissing down with rain I might add. But we both declared we had a great day.
From here on in it was pretty much easy going. We lifted the new engine out of the boat onto Hawkeye using her boom (so glad I replaced the halyards) and put the old engine back into our boat. I made a few measurements and we headed home only to find we had a stuck starter motor on the boat and had to give it a tap with a hammer to get it to work. WHAT A DAY!
I am sleeping easier now Knowing that Hawkeye has a new bilge pump, a lot of battery power and the seacocks are closed
Just want to thank Shibby's son and his Girlfriend for helping up put the new engine in. You guys rock!
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