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banaari

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Posts posted by banaari

  1. Fecking awesome. An organisation walking the walk where useless fecking governments can't be arsed.

    And one less poaching vessel in operation. Pity they won't face justice, but an acceptable outcome.

  2. to all the people on this site that keep referring to "insurance",  if any off you had bothered to read the herald item, regards this vessel. You would have read that the owners stated that the boat was UNINSURED.   

     

    This says distinctly otherwise:

    http://www.nzherald.co.nz/northern-advocate/news/article.cfm?c_id=1503450&objectid=11403767

     

    "Mr Holland said it was now up to the couple's insurance company to decide what happened to the yacht.  'They may bring it back or say the cost of repairs and bringing it back are more than it's covered for so we really don't know what's going to happen to her yet,' he said."

  3. Manoeuvred the love object into position over the ramp high tide Thursday evening in the remains of the daylight in order to dry out and let tame expert crawl over and pronounce judgement Friday. Misjudged the temperature and spent the second-most uncomfortable night ever on board shivering in an inadequate sleeping bag. Tame expert turned up on schedule and lived through my exposition of the known skeletons-in-closet list; I got my first whiff of the vinegary contents of a 100% genuine osmotic blister, and we have a tentative way forward. This is likely to involve removing the keels to get them rebuilt, turning the beastie over and getting an osmosis peel done... relaying the skin and then generally applying the love so conspicuously absent since she was originally launched.

    Am actually very relieved - tapping of screwdriver etc produced nice crisp clinking noises, despite my worries to the contrary the core is apparently still balsa and not chicken soup (yet). Is going to be a Most Excellent Winter.

  4. The moisture "from" the keelbolt was in fact coming _past_ the keelbolt from somewhere else, above the waterline and almost certainly a window. Nothing to do there.

    Weekend spent acquiring, assembling and filling shelves to create the Great Wall of Boat. Removed pretty much everything from the vessel so the poor bugger fingered to eyeball her this Friday and and draw me up The List can see what he needs to without my extensive debris field in the way.

    Unintended consequence: Two inches of anti-foul previously hidden below the waterline, horribly visible and revealing the hull to be in desperate need of a scrub.

    gwb_ii.jpg

  5. Finally got out to the boat yesterday, only to discover evidence of seepage from yet-another-keelbolt.

    Since the last one had no head left and popped out when gently tapped from underneath, I think this coming Saturday is spoken for.

    The sooner I can organise this winter's heavy engineering, the better...

  6. Highly enjoyable day yesterday drying the beast out at the bottom of the road to replace a leaking keelbolt. Extraordinarily pleased with self - multiple reconnaissance trips at various states of tide and some careful thought enabled me to position her precisely where intended first time; right on the edge of the usable gravelly mud but without blocking the ramp - although as it turns out I had the place to myself all day, bar a few dog-walkers. (Something to be said for the Far North...) Bolt done and dusted, nothing really to do but chill out with the iPod till the tide came back in... life's rough.

    IMAG1036_sm.jpg

  7. A Good Weekend on the water. Tested the latest iteration of the Skunk Works software... getting there. Then, with a view to swapping out a keel bolt this coming Friday, set about doing the necessary to let me dry the beastie out at the "ramp" at bottom of the road. Lots of fun with a stake that has "vampires!" written all over it, some chain and a couple of floats to create a temporary deployable mooring. More fun hanging off this contraption by the nose while vectoring the tail around with the outboard... God I love messing about in boats. Then wasted 90 minutes of my life watching Gravity, which is visually stunning, but has an utterly implausible and ridiculous plotline, even by Hollywood standards.

  8. .... sounds like he's personally sounded out some of the mudbanks lately.

    That's about the full and complete extent of my knowledge!! _IF_ your intentions in the Inlet include the Pickmere Channel and above, then it is most definitely tide-restricted... drawing 0.6 my current rule of thumb is 1/3 tide minimum and then proceed cautiously.

    But I'd be consulting the likes of Bimini Babe, Sealegs, etc.

  9. What it seems to be is someone's vanity project, driven by a small number of people arrogant enough to believe their (our) preferred recreational activity has some god-given right to displace other people's, apparently because it's "Sport" with a capital, sacred "S". Occasionally they throw in disingenuous crap about playgrounds for little kiddies, too.

  10. So far, not being involved in the Classic... continued with some very cool software (see Skunk Works thread...). Then ferried a pile of stuff out to the boat in anticipation of a day's testing tomorrow. At which point I noticed that the damp patch in the carpet observed last weekend hasn't dried up and therefore isn't just some transient spillage. Turns out one of the port keel bolts is weeping slightly. In the midst of my preparations for hari-kari or at least an unpleasantly expensive trip in a travelift, it has dawned on me that this is another situation where having twin keels might save some serious hassle. Casting around to work out which of our acquaintances has suitably flat drying height at the bottom of their garden and might be persuaded to stream an extension cord...

  11. Hope your not still there Banaari! :D

    Nope! Put the kettle on and waited.

    In retrospect, I _should_ have used the time to go walkabout and see if there wasn't deeper water nearby...

     

    We had a try of the new dodger on sunday... The handholds are a boon.

    Bloody nice-looking piece of kit. Well done!

  12. Currently aground in the Pickmere Channel! Decided to conduct a low speed probe at low tide and establish the actual depth limits... seems have found 'em. Deliberately picked an incoming tide so will be free shortly, but the learning here is not to trust the depth sounder in shallow water...

  13. Have you seen it recently? Its an apt description of the current state as they know their lease isn't being renewed, consequently, its getting more and more rundown.

    Cure to that is quite simple: Renew the lease :)

    And with 4 out of the 6 elected board members supporting the park, that just got more likely.

  14. Took the love object to Russell and back yesterday.

    A complete and utter mind trip, to the point where I've been more or less useless for any productive task today and have instead spent a lot of time watching the video.

    Mostly sunny with at worst a hazy overcast and light easterlies.

    High point was heading north from Russell across the bay on a close reach, light swell producing a gentle rolling action and the tillerpilot doing all the work... could have very happily dozed off... although I did sit up and take notice when the R Tucker Thompson hove into view...

    Didn't quite manage to lay the rock on the western side of Kent Passage and had to tack just as the wind died completely, leading to five minutes or so drifting in random directions... before getting clear, around Motupapa, and a wing-and-wing glide up the inlet.

    Think it might be time to 'fess up, I am emotionally involved with the vessel... completely hooked and am still wondering what the hell I was doing with my life beforehand...

     

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