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Wednesday in the yard

We’re starting to get busy though, in hindsight, perhaps not busy enough.

In the early morning I spent some time researching travel options for Sam. In the end, the best flight I could find was via Fiji of all places. That’s now booked. He leaves Sunday, April 22nd and arrives around midday on the following Tuesday. We have promised to buy him a new laptop. Spent some time researching that with some input from John in the UK. Got some ideas but not yet bought the kit.

Helen spent a lot of time throughout the day cleaning the outside of the boat. There are a lot of tiny fungal spots all over the surface of the boat. This all needs bleaching to kill off. Round 1 is done but it looks like a second round of bleaching and washing will be required.

I spent the morning dismantling the old nav station labelling all the wires as I went and securing them so they didn’t disappear into the void behind. I also replaced the broken exterior speaker.

Looking ahead I have booked a service for our life raft. That’s down in Auckland and there is a waiting list of about 3 weeks. We are now on the list and need to drop the life raft off next week. I’m also trying to arrange a service for our chart plotter as
the cooling fan is noisy and the unit overheats if the display brightness is on full. I was given an email by the local Garmin support but have yet to get a response to the request I sent. Right now I have an external fan wired in which provides some cooling from behind.

After lunch I was picked up by the car hire company and taken to their depot. For NZ$40 we’ve got quite a large, air conditioned automatic which feels like a sedan to drive. With 140,000km on the clock it’s not spanking new but it does the job.

Once in the car I visited a recommended car radio specialist to try and sort out some sort of bracket to hold in the new radio I have. While there I spoke to him about how I might install it given that it was not going to be put in a car. I got some advice re wiring which I hoped would be useful.

While out I also picked up some ‘dye penetrant‘ which I’m going to use to inspect the load bearing stainless steel around the boat. We have noticed a small crack on one of the bimini supports so we really should do the works and check it all out while we’re in a position where repairs can be made.

Back on the boat I cut the connections to our old radio and crimped on the connections to the new one. In hindsight I wish I’d simply twisted on the power connections and tested first. With the way I have currently wired the unit, I can’t turn it off. There is a button labelled off but if I press it and hold it down, the unit goes into demo mode. I also made a mistake with how I wired the brake sensor (which disables the video functions). Obviously, in a car, watching video while driving is a tad dangerous so the unit has a brake sensor that enables the video when grounded. However, it turns out the video is only enabled if the brake sensor is grounded *after* the unit is switched on. That means I need to wire in a relay to delay the grounding.

My final task of the day was to fit new blinds over the two read berths. The starboard blind broke last year. Ours is ok but the starboard forward shower is totally broken and seized up. We get the new one and the shower will get our old one. Helen wants me to do a more complicated switcheroo involving the blinds over the forward starboard bunk. All that area is full of junk at the moment and I can’t get there so I’ve done as much as I can of this project for now.

At this point I left resolving the two radio issues until the next day as I was feeling a bit tired. So I pulled out a new toy I’d ordered from the US and brought to us in the UK by Ben. It was an XBox 360 with the Kinect motion sensor. The latter enables one to interact with certain games using body movements and gestures. Despite all the clutter and restricted floor space (our bed is currently in the main cabin keeping the bunks clear) I managed to get it going. Both Helen and I spent a fair amount of time ducking, dodging and jumping. We both worked up a bit of a sweat and it was fun. And that is the idea of it. Sometimes, when we don’t get off the boat, we don’t get a lot of exercise. Maybe this a way to do it.

I actually felt a bit guilty postponing the radio work for a bit of fun but after writing this blog I think I had a busy enough day.

When I was out and about, I ran into (not literally) David from Sidewinder. Turns out they’re on the hard just down the road. We should be able to meet up with them this Sunday as there’s going to be a presentation here in Norsand in the evening by some folks who have been sailing the Pacific on traditional catamarans.

We were also contacted by Elana who we first met, with partner Dave, in Antigua while watching Obama’s inauguration. That seems a very long time ago. Turns out they’re here in New Zealand and the upshot is we’re meeting in town this evening. Should be nice to catch up.

On the subject of bumping into people, the day we arrived at the yard we bumped into Dave and Alison from Kalida. They’re here in the yard somewhere. We never did get to meet them in Fiji so we’ll just have to make up somehow.

In the evening Helen and I went on our first provisioning run. While we have the car we need to get all the heavy stuff onto the boat as it will get a lot harder later. This included everything Helen could find on special offer plus a trolley load of wine. With respect to the latter we are essentially loading up to last from March to December. Even with Helen’s reduced weekly target of 4 bottles a week that’s still quite a few boxes. We’re now about 20% done on that front.

After provisioning we picked up some noodles in town and made our way back to the boat. We loaded the food aboard but left the wine in the car. We finished the day sampling one of our wines, eating our noodles and watching an old Bruce Lee movie. Helen didn’t make it until the end.

This morning I woke up about an hour and a half after yesterday so I’ll count that as progress. Helen, having woken for a while, is back asleep. It’s still dark outside even after writing all this.

You may have noticed no mention of the French technicians. That’s because there was nothing to say. I do have communications the strongly suggest they’ll be here today. One thing I’ll need to do is have them work out a new splash date and get this arranged. With a three day delay to the start of work I doubt we’ll hit the original target.

Back to work

We didn’t get a great deal more done on Monday – it was simply a struggle to stay awake. We didn’t do too bad. We tried bottle of wine I’d picked up at the supermarket. I must have been jet lagged as it was low alcohol and terrible.

We both had a pretty decent sleep but I woke before 4am. The good side of waking early is it allowed me to get on with the paperwork I’d been putting off. A bunch of letters and loads of forms later I was done. Yay.

The rest of the day was spent unpacking our stuff and planning the boat work ahead of us. I’ve put together a list of things to do which grew throughout the day as we thought of new things and/or ran into parts we’d bought before which needed a project line to get them done. We also spent some time visualizing and planning the nav station rearrangement. This is not complete but we are building up some ideas. We also arranged for a hire car to be picked up Wednesday. Being in the yard for a couple of weeks with no transport is a daunting prospect.

In the afternoon we took a walk into town principally to mail the paperwork generated in the morning but also for Helen to go price comparing and to do a little extra shopping. In the end we were out and about for about 3 hours and feeling a little tired for the effort. The really nice thing was that it is tee-shirt weather. Good to be back in the warmth.

The French techs have yet to show to start work on the sex change (diesel conversion). Although work was very officially supposed to start on Monday it turns out the techs didn’t leave France until Monday. Perhaps we’ll see them today (Wednesday). I’m feeling a little robbed as we gave up the last two days being with the family to be here in time for the planned start of work. But then. the kids probably enjoyed a bit of time away from their parents in London. The yard were a bit late finishing the bottom painting for the boat so at least we had time to get this done before the rest of the work starts.

This morning it’s 3am and we’re both up. And that’s after successfully staying awake until nearly 9pm last night. So a bit of a backwards step there.

Back on the boat

The kids all seemed to have enjoyed their long night out clubbing in London. They were reasonably quiet sneaking back into the apartment just after 5am. By pre arrangement we woke them all up at 10am so we could sort ourselves out and vacate by 11am. We then had a late breakfast all together.

Then it was the hard bit. We’d already said goodbye to John the previous day. Now it was time to say goodbye to Ben, Sam & Amy. I’ve said it before but this is the tough end of our wonderful life. The price we pay for our adventures is the time away from family. It’s hard to say goodbye.

We took the London Underground back to Betty’s. It was a bit complicated as there were a lot of lines out of action due to weekend maintenance. Fortunately we still caught a fast train into Chesham which kept us sane.

We stayed a few hours with Betty sorting out our final packing before Betty and Paul took us to the airport (more goodbyes, this time to Emily & David).

At the airport a new set of trials began. At the check in we ran into two problems. The first we were overweight. We thought we could have two bags each with each weighing up to 20kg. Turns out we could check in any number of bags with a total personal limit of 20kg. We were 17kg over with an excess fee of nearly £20 per kilo. Ouch. They did recommend putting as much as we could into our hand luggage and did give us an extra 3 kilo each.

While Helen got busy redistributing mass I dealt with our second problem which was to do with having only one way tickets into New Zealand. The airline didn’t recognise our boat documentation demonstrating we’d sailed into New Zealand and were going to sail out again. It ended up being resolved by calling New Zealand immigration and explaining everything. They then gave the airline the blessing.

We rechecked our main bags and were given the all clear (I think they were being over generous). We couldn’t get our boarding passes there (due to the second problem) and had to go back to another desk to get our passes.

Lugging our now extremely heavy hand luggage we cleared through security. Although that didn’t turn out so easy as my computer back now stuffed full of extra cables, antennae, AIS boxes and a hard drive had to be manually searched. The side line for the manual search took well over 30 minutes to get to my bag. We’d arrived early so we’d have had to wait somewhere. Just hadn’t planned on hanging around security.

We got through eventually and were soon on our flight to Seoul. On this flight we ended up with four center seats between the two of us. The middle armrests wouldn’t rise. Helen had enough room to lie down but I didn’t really. Helen got a fair amount of sleep and I got some.

At Seoul we had to get off the plane and go to gate 28. Gate 28 was where we got off. Only we had to lug our extremely heavy hand luggage down through the terminal, through some more security checks, up a floor and back to the gate, a floor higher than earlier. We were soon back on the same plane, almost back in the same seats for the trip to Auckland. Sleeping was next to impossible for us on this flight so we arrived feeling a little worse for wear.

To cut the rest of the story short, we got back to the boat ok via a provisioning stop in Whangarei. Our parts for the conversion have arrived but the techs haven’t. My house battery water (I’m down to 4 batteries at the moment) has boiled off too much so this needs to be resolved quickly.

For now the game for today is to get the essential paperwork done and simply try and stay awake until early evening.

Excess Latitude

Our brief stay at the Impangele B&B was a real pleasure. Our host Walter looked after us well cooking a great dinner in the evening accompanied by great wine from a fine selection. We spent the evening chatting and shared a second bottle finally polishing off some port on the house. In the morning he cooked up a delicious breakfast before a couple of the dogs took Helen and I for a walk around the lake/bird sanctuary outside.

For anyone visiting Johannesburg or, like us, simply passing through we thoroughly recommend the place.

Our trip to the airport was mildly eventful as my GPS had no knowledge of the blocked roads that had turned that residential area into a large compound with just a few ways in and out. Neither did my GPS know about some road alterations on the freeway which resulted in us being unable to get off when we wanted. We had plenty of time in hand and we made it to the airport in very good time.

Keeping our costs down we flew with Saudi Arabia Airways via (a 5 hour stop in) Jeddah which was another cultural experience for us. Helen very quickly felt under dressed amongst the majority of women on the plane who all seemed to have nice eyes. She rectified this by putting on her leggings planned for later when we arrived in the Uk.

The flights were both around 6 hours each give or take so it wasn’t too bad. No alcohol of course on the plane nor in Jeddah airport which wasn’t much to speak of and, quite surprisingly, cold from excessive use of air conditioning. We both managed a couple of hours sleep on the second flight.

Helen’s sister met us at the airport and took us to her home in Chesham. That was a welcome relief for us as we were quite tired and not adjusting well to the cold. We weren’t overly busy during the day but we did make and have an appointment with Barclays Bank here to open an account. We’re fed up of excessive fees on our overseas withdrawals and Barclays here in the Uk (as Bank of America in the US) are part of the Global ATM Alliance. By using a Barclays ATM card we’ll have lower fees in the countries we’ll be visiting next year. That would be nice. Interestingly Bank of America has a few more restrictions over the countries we’ll be visiting so the Uk banks is better for us. Quite coincidentally, in the news in the Uk that morning was notice that some banks, including Barclays, will be lowering their overseas transaction costs. No details of this had flowed down to the branches yet but it can only be good news for us.

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In the evening we had a take away curry from our favourite restaurant here in Chesham, our old home town. Very delicious. We’d been looking forward to this and weren’t disappointed. I also had to get involved in some calls to New Zealand as the parts of our sex-change for the boat are ready to be shipped and it looks like things were left until the very last minute to work out logistics. I hope we have no delays as a result of this.

This morning we’re up and about later than normal but it’s pitch black outside. It’s winter of course but we’re also in latitudes not experienced for a long time, particularly this time of year. It feels quite weird. Not sure I like this winter lark but I’m sure we’ll get used to it.

Passing through

Landed in Sydney. Now waiting for flight to Johannesburg.