Friday, 2 March 2012

Return Journey

Well if the journey to the Hamble was a cold one, the trip back was a windy one.  Despite my skipper saying that Sunday would be a better day, needs must and the crew climbed on board the Red Jet over to Southampton on Saturday 18th February to come & pick me up.

After eventually finding my keys, the harbour office didn't have them but the main dealer still did and a quick rekey of my new windows, I was prepared to cast off.  I had all my hull windows replaced but the inner sleeves needed to be ordered in as do the deck windows.  That could take a couple more weeks, so I was to return to Cowes to a new permanent mooring further up the Medina.

The wind was blowing around 25 knots from the west and once clear of the pontoon and out into the Hamble the wind increased further.  Shipping were the main traffic not many pleasure boats had ventured out.  Once in the Solent the wind increased further to around 35 knots and stronger in gusts, it was also against the tide.  Had it not been for the fact my crew had to concentrate on maintaining my posture against the wind, there could have been a few good photos of the tugs that were out with me, being covered in spray.  They were out to assist the turning of shipping against this wind.

The new pontoon is on the opposite side of the river from the last one and with my high sides, meant I would be blown off rather than blown on, which is fine but requires a slightly different approach.  Once tied up and tidied up my crew left me to survey my new home.  Sunday was a beautiful blue sky day and the Medina sure gets busy when it’s like this, especially as I’m right next to a large sailing school and there’s always people back & forth all day.

Wednesday, 1 February 2012

New Windows

The crossing over to the Hamble was not warm one for my southerner crew, but none the less the easterly wind brought with it a swell.  Despite there being only one other vessel in the Solent at that time, my crew managed to have to take evasive action and increase my pace to make sure we passed clearly in front of a towing tug.  The Yanmar engine happily responded with 7.5 knots at 3,000rpm.

My VHF has suffered a little with the dousing of water I took on board in the Irish Sea, so a crackly conversation with Hamble Point Marina eventually gave my skipper the information he needed to berth me port side and another chance to use the new dark blue warps recently purchased.  On the way in I over heard a conversation in which my skipper was pointing out the place where he'd run aground and spent 7 long hours waiting for the tide to return ! Thankfully once bitten twice shy seemed to prevail.

I have never seen so many boats in one place, there are literally thousands of masts all the way down this river and others without masts too.  In Inverkip there were a few of these motor cruisers, but there are hundreds down here of all sizes.

My crew returned with a chappy from my manufactures representative down here and they talked not only my hull port holes but my deck ones too.  Seems that they are all going to receive some attention, so I shall be like new again from that point of view.  Also luck has it that they require my central heating to be working and I think it has a bit of a chesty cough, so it may get the treatment it needs and be working properly again soon.

So I will let you know how I got on when I'm all done & dusted ready to keep my owners warm & toasty & more importantly dry & safe from what Mother Nature can throw at us !

Wednesday, 18 January 2012

2012

It's been a while since I have written, in fact 2012 has arrived.

What I have noticed since being in the Medina is how busy it is despite the fact that Christmas has been & gone.  The other major difference I've experienced is that I have only had one real frost on my decks, what a difference from this time last year, when there was many inches of snow all over me on top of ice and my then owner was good enough to keep me warm & dry with two radiators and a dehumidifier.

Whilst the pontoon I'm currently on doesn't have electrics, I don't seem to need it, I'm not cold.

My skipper has been liaising with the Hanse distributer in the Hamble and at the end of January I'm going to be tacken over there, where all my hull windows are to be replaced.  The temporary job he made in Falmouth is still on my port side and still keeps water ut as well as it did when it was first fitted.  In fact people are getting to know me as the boat with the wooden window !

I am expecting my crew next weekend to come and make sure all my batteries are ok and get me ready to go over.  Hopefully this will be the beginning of a busy year !

Monday, 7 November 2011

Sun-day

I'm sure it was around this time last year that I was all ice'd up, snow everywhere being visited for the first time by my new owners.  Yet here I am,  Sunday out in blue skies and sunshine with temperatures in double figures.

There is a low pressure system in France somewhere bringing in a northerly wind about F5-6 according to the weather models my skipper scours over, dropping to F4 later, according to the inshore weather forecast.  The Solent wasn't busy but then again you don't expect it to be this time of year do you or do you ?  I've not been here long enough yet, but I've watched a lot of craft moving back & forth, every day.

So I was restricted to one reef and the compass was heading in a westerly destination, my wind instruments failed to acknowledge anything so they were turned off.  Also the speed & trip sensor wasn't either but that probably had some life form or debris in it !  Still the GPS gave SOG so that was good enough for a pleasant run out.  The little list of jobs just gets longer !

With the tide behind me and just the reefed mainsail exposed  to the wind I set off to stretch my legs 7, 8 & 9 knots, the Solent had horses but no swell to speak of, this was easy.  I had a chap I'd not seen before on the helm and obviously it was new to him, after a while he got the hang of it and I was no longer pointing 30 either side of the intended course.  I passed a container vessel taking advantage of the reasonable conditions & coming into the Solent via the Needles, his wash was minimal against the wave pattern, although he was empty.

It must have been around lunchtime I suppose before the kettle went on and I had drawn level with Yarmouth, with tea drunk, I was brought about and headed against the last of the tide & a head wind.  So close hauled and mid channel amongst a number of yachts that were keeping out of the tide I jogged up to around 5 knots, which seemed excessively slow compared to my run here.  So my skipper hauled out 3/4's of the jib and soon I was well balanced and clocking 6.5 knots, easing past all around me.  With the tide now turned I was gathering pace again - full jib and the large ketch in front was getting closer, I could also sail higher than her.  8, 8.5 even 9 knots again and by the time Egypt Point was coming up the Ketch had to tack and conceded second best in my virtual race.

I didn't alter course and passed the Medina allowing the car ferry to pass to stern of me and also my skipper was aware that the high speed Red Jet catamaran was due to come out.  So by the time I'd dropped my sails and headed back to the Medina it was empty.  The chain link clunked across in front & I reduced power and let the wind & tide brig me in.  Turning back on to my remote pontoon, I gently came along side, pleased in the knowledge that full advantage had been taken of a beautiful sunny day.

Thursday, 20 October 2011

Buoy It's Busy

Hardly seems it - but a month has passed since I left Scotland to come down to Cowes.  The weather has been wonderful and I hope friends I left behind haven't had too much rain - ha. The back drop might not quite be the same but you can see the history of ship building that turned this town in to the mecca of the sailing world.  In fact I am opposite the only pre-WW1 hammerhead crane still in existence in the UK and it's almost home from home.  Built in 1912 in Renfrew,  Glasgow only a few miles from where I've just come, it was used to build warships of its time, in fact HMS Cavalier is currently in Chatham and the Polish destroyer ‘ORP Blyskawica’ is also preserved in Poland.


Boy is it busy, every day there are boats of all descriptions passing up & down the Medina River. The Red Funnel ferry's lands not far from me and I can see the quaint chain link ferry or floating bridge for want of another name.

Work has taken my skipper away at the moment but I know he's been going through secondary port calculations, why I don't know to be honest, may be thoughts of anchoring in Newtown or Wootton Creek without getting stuck. Newtown the old capital city of the Island is now a National Trust area so I'm told and remains unspoilt.  Not untouched as signs of the original timber harbour wall are still visible, although barely recognisable as one, more a revetment but without a purpose. Despite the number of visitors it must get through its narrow entrance during the summer, it is a remote piece of the island, we will probably not share it or many similar places now with visitors until after April when the masses return following their winter hibernation.  I have the ability to take advantage of crisp sunny weekends and already in a position to ease out into the Solent in search of that tranquil spot.

As always there is a list of 'things to do' for me, not quite as urgent as the replacement of my hull windows, but none the less be good to get done when the weather has made a stand or other commitments that prevent my crew from taking me out. The oil fired heating system has the wrong size ducts fitted, a factory fault at birth, that for some reason the factory has managed to shy away from.   The clamps on the bottom of the mast need to be re tightened. Seems a simple job but the running rigging needs to be relaxed so that the top plate can be pulled back down to the deck without twisting, the reason for water seeping in. I'm sure the VHF speaker at the rear is a matter of something between the two mike's has been turned off or gone out of sync with each other. Still a simple electrical test will show what's happened to both external speakers on my port side. I may even get an inverter, so that the 'mains' system can be used even when shore power is not connected, the eight batteries I have will have a good flow between them but I may have to have an upgrade to the alternator at some point to keep things topped up.

It's a never ending list fortunately unlike wooden boats, I haven't got to worry about my skin and have varnish and other coverings to keep me looking cared for, just a good wash & occasional polish. Although I do need the rigging in the coach roof exposed to ease my pulleys under the covers and of course wash out the years of crud that has accumulated in there.

It certainly getting colder at nights, but nothing compared to the winters I've been through, so I have lots to look at whilst my crew look to their diaries for an opportunity.  At least once a week if not more I get a visit to make sure I'm ok and a quick spruce up in side.




Friday, 7 October 2011

Good Old Hanse

As you may recall, during my trip down the east coast of Ireland to Falmouth, a small matter of a loss of a port hole sometime before 0100 happened.

How it happened will never be known, speculation amongst my skipper is that, like the replaced panels on my coach roof, that buckled in the sun.  The port side hull window, which also happened to be predominantly in the sun when it wasn't raining, may have also distorted.  Due to the smaller size of the window this distortion may have only been slight but enough to crack the glued seal allowing water to seep in.  This in turn froze during the harsh winters in Scotland acting further on the seal, opening it up some more.

Externally there were black streaks running down the hull, but this was not uncommon on all six of these windows, no other sign of impending failure at all.

So my skipper e-mailed Inspiration Marine (IM) the Hanse UK dealer in the Hamble, just over the Solent from where I am now. They have contacted the manufacturer who have instructed IM to inspect the remaining windows and if necessary take them out, clean up & re-glue with a more advanced modern material.

Hanse themselves have gone further & located a more traditional clamped window, which may be more of a safer solution for the windows in my master cabin as these tend to take the onslaught of mother nature more than any other.  I'm not sure what they look like and my skipper has requested images so he can see.

So soon I'll be off to Hamble Point Marina, where I'll be worked on for a few days and hopefully return the confidence of my owners that I shall not allow the dolphins to pinch the window again !

Photo's of my new works will be posted or alternatively look on http://www.myhanse.com/forum_topics.asp?FID=13  and look for JonB's entry

Sunday, 2 October 2011

A place they call Home

Wow the temperature is really different down here. It's October & not that far away it's nearly 30c a record for this time of year ! Still this morning there was good old fog but that soon burnt off and the warm air I felt as we approached the island was entering the hatches once more & drying my insides out.

The passage from Weymouth gave one more chance to do what I do best & sail. Having left the old town at 1030, replacing my water pump first. I sailed at 8knots on the rhumb line to the next way point, keeping me away from Lulworth firing range, at this rate I'd reach the Needles around 1700. After lunch I was tacked over only to find that the wind & the angle was not great, so the engine went back on, shame, it had been a good run.  Yet again though the windex played up and despite re-setting them to factory defaults it still didn't work properly. I can see another trip up the mast for my skipper, turning the vane slowly through two 360 degree motions to re-calibrate it.



Cowes was extremely busy, the warm weather had brought everyone out, no doubt a welcome injection of last minute income to the community. I passed all these lights & yachts I've not seen so many in one place, & taken up a river to find a place to stay. It got really shallow at one point but I swung round & came to on a remote pontoon, likely to be my home for a while.

So 787 nm, 250 lts of fuel, 13 days, 5 crew, 2 night passages, 1 crew change, I'm in Cowes

Now the adventures begin, just need to sort all the little jobs out first

Don't forget to revisit the blog to see photo's as they're added plus possibly more detail added to the routes