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Bees Knees « Aboard Dignity (Lagoon 420) Blog

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Maintenance, Maintenance, Maintenance

It seems to be never ending. A quick account of the last few days.

Friday was all batteries. After topping up my house batteries on Wednesday I they were now appearing to discharge from being fully discharged far too quickly. I’ve been concentrating so far on the possibility that adding water caused the problem. Hours blown on that and still not solved. Got to generate some new hypotheses for possible cause. I’m the first one to advise others not to get tunnel vision when advising others. There’s a possibility I’ve succumb to it myself. Don’t know. We also noticed some reduced performance on the charging of the drive banks. Looks like there’s a common issue out there and there’s a while batch of new battery chargers on their way to the Caribbean for the L420s with this issue. This will be good and bad. Always good to get equipment refreshed. Bad in that this may tie us to St Martin too close to Xmas. This will require us to fly the kids here rather than meet them there. Will know more tomorrow.

Friday evening we took a break by visiting Ann and Jim in Bees Knees for some excellent hospitality and to meet their friend Bonnie with whom Jim is currently writing a book. In cruisers fashion we all brought part of the dinner. The theme was our usual for Fridays. Curry. Delicious.

Yesterday was more battery activity with further support from CatCo (big thanks guys). With relief I learned any replacements are still warrantied. Further house battery investigations and activities included swishing the water around inside using my hydrometer in case there was a poor mix.

Rather more successfully I installed fins on our outboard. These help keep the bow down and improve the dinghies ability to plane with higher loads. It involved drilling through the metal which always ends up with the odd shard making it’s way into flesh. Nevertheless the results were great. Helen and I went to the supermarket yesterday and loaded up (including lots of beer for the boys) and the dinghy got out of the water fairly easily which we know it couldn’t do before. It needs some fine tuning as the dinghy now pulls to the left. Out of the water it’s obvious one of the fins have slipped. Just need to get it adjusted.

Helen has been equally busy preparing the boat. She’s made some curtains for the salon area which we hung yesterday. This deals with the low sun in the late afternoon quite effectively.

I’ve also been taking advice on the interference issues coming from my SSB. Consensus right now that my grounding is lousy. We’ve got a radio head (meant nicely) visiting this afternoon to take a look at the setup and advise. That will direct some of my activity next week.

This afternoon we’re going to have Des and Sue (from Desue) come aboard. They’ve finally come out of the marina after their genset repairs. This means they are back to being mobile as they could not lower their dinghy while in the marina. I’ll use the opportunity to discuss batteries, etc with Des who, like many round here, is an engineer.

Eddie swung by just now. He’s going to pop round tomorrow morning to discuss radar installation. This we need his help for even if I end up running lots of the wires before he does the difficult stuff. I’ll also talk to him (and probably all the others) about yet another issue I have. My VHF radio keeps dropping into low power complaining the voltage is too low. I have metered it’s power supply and it does drop through the floor when transmitting on high power. Could be I have poor cabling. The wires are quite thin but advice would be welcome before I start running thicker wires to the console area.

In between all this we get time to relax and read. Just not much yet.

Tomorrow we hope to make the decision about Xmas. Chances are we will be flying the kids here. I think, from their perspective, this will improve the vacation. St Martin will add a variety and provide them access to cheap local beer on land which they won’t get in Antigua. (They’ll get beer but I understand it’s not cheap)

That’s all for now. I have an idea about my batteries so I’m off to fiddle.

Good deeds, challenges, meet up and good byes

So back on the boat we were presented with the dilemma of replacing our fuel tank. Fortunately Jim from Bees Knees was available to lend a hand. He dinghied over to us, took me to collect the parents and then we went to the nearby Budget Marine to collect a tank. The new tank is a bit smaller than my last and cheaper looking. Oh well. Fortunately, it didn’t cost as much as I feared.

Yesterday we moved the boat back into the Lagoon through the 8:15 bridge opening. Helen and I then raced off to the Budget Marine in the south of the lagoon where we had to drop of our propane tank for the 9am refill deadline. We then went off to a few local stores to get stuff we needed. We took a lot longer than expected so understandable the parents were a little worried when we returned.

We noticed that Dignity had slipped on her anchor somewhat while we were away. Thankfully not too far as my parents had no idea how to deal with a runaway boat. We decided to reset the anchor. In doing so we discovered what had stopped the slippage. We had become fouled in a thick chain serving some unknown purpose on the floor of the lagoon. I got the job of diving down and attaching a line to the anchor so we could pull it up backwards. This worked perfectly. Reseting the anchor didn’t the first time as it would not hold. On the next attempt we found a nice patch of sand into which the anchor stuck fast. We marked this area with a waypoint so we could find it again.

Yesterday evening we moved the boat west so we could be near to the restaurant Turtle Bar where a cruiser get together was planned. We arrived in time for Happy Hour and met some old and new friends. It was nice to meet Mike the morning net controller who keeps us entertained. At the same bar we ate our final meal together which went down very well.

The place we had moved the boat to was also close to the airport. At 3pm today I took my parents to the airport and we said our goodbyes. It’s been great having them with us for 3 weeks and to share a little of our new life with them.

Getting back to the boat we shifted it back to our marked sandy patch so we could get connected again. We have paid for a service which only works around Marigot so we need to be up that end.

So it’s back to Helen and I being alone on the boat. We have two weeks to get ready for the boys. We still need to install the radar. I need to sort out some on board interference from the SSB. We also need to bulk buy everything we can reasonably get on St Martin as many things are cheaper here than down islands. Mostly this means beer and wine. In about a week we’ll head off to Antigua. This will be an overnight sail. If we can leave earlier we will and perhaps squeeze in Statia.

Projects (AIS & SSB)

Yesterday I managed to install the AIS unit I brought along. I found a decent place to mount the VHF antenna. Connections were straight forward but (I guess no surprises) it didn’t work first time. So began the task of upgrading the software on my chartplotter. This took a few iterations and although I’ve benefited from being up to date, there was no progress with the AIS. I then tried hooking the AIS to my PC. Fortunately I had a USB to serial adapter but no drivers nor, as it turns out, hyperterminal for Vista. With these minor issues addressed I was able to connect and see AIS strings being sent. Good. In theory I should have been able to connect the units at 38400 baud but I tried bringing it down to 4800. This worked. The AIS install still requires some tidying up which will need a few extra bits and pieces but it was nice to see the ship info on the chartplotter.

I also made some progress with the SSB install. With Helen’s helped we fished most of the distance between the tuner and the main unit. I’ve also run the anternna wire out to the transom compartment ready to be run outside to the antenna. Today I reckon we should be able to get things hooked up and begin testing. I hope to finally get my email over short wave going. The last time this was working was during our previous life in Berkeley Heights NJ.

During the day we took a break and met Des and Sue (from Desue) at a local hotel where there was an art exhibition. I mainly talked boat stuff with Des while the rest wondered around.

Last night we had Pat, Tom, Ann and Jim over again to say goodbye to Pat & Tom. They’re finally leaving today. We’ll probably see them around but this is (they reckon) their last one here before heading off for the Virgins. Perhaps we’ll again meet up down the islands.

A night to remember

Thanksgiving 2008 will be one to remember. Pat, Tom, Jim and Anne all showed up around 3pm with homemade food and wine. Pat and Tom brought a family recipe corn bread and green bean dish. Jim and Anne brought pumpkin pie and another desert they called gunge but tasted far from it. They also brought some sweat potatoes. We supplied the turkey (cooked in the new Magma grill) and mashed potato/stuffing combo. All the food was simply delicious. The company was better. The festivities went on until late in the night (cruiser time) with everyone retiring at 8:30pm. Yes – that is late for us water folks.

Today we’ve prepped for our forthcoming travels. We’ve done our shopping and I’ve checked out of customs. We’re now flying the yellow Q flag which means we can’t go ashore until we’ve checked in somewhere. Tomorrow we’re planning to leave at first light and head for St Kitts with a possible stop at Statia if we need to cut the trip short.

Tonight is curry night. We have some leftover turkey so it’s going to be turkey curry. No wine or beer tonight due to long trip tomorrow and we want to minimize possibility of misery on the journey.

Here are some pics of recent days.

Happy Thanksgiving

To all that celebrate Thanksgiving our wishes go out to you. Have a great time with your families.

We’re going to move back into the Lagoon under the 8:15 bridge opening then do some shopping. This afternoon we’re having Pat and Tom from s/v Lone Star and Jim and Anne from s/v Bees Knees over for a pot luck Thanksgiving dinner. Should be nice.

Tomorrow we’ll head back out of the Lagoon, do our final provisions for a while, check out at the port and prepare for a dawn departure on Saturday for St Kitts.