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Tuesday, June 26, 2012

A Beehive of Activity

Service Manager Marc and Technician Scott in the aft locker

Bottom Painting Underway

Originally Posted at www.svsweetescape.com

If you have ever had a house built or participated in any major building project you know that contractors are like everyone else - they tend to procrastinate.  They seem to enjoy flirting with deadlines until the last minute and then all hell breaks loose and there is a beehive of activity and the project is completed at the deadline.

So it has been with Sweet Escape.  She was hauled at Racine Riverside on the 13th and the boat sat for almost two weeks before much of anything was done.  We had set a deadline of July 1st to have the boat back in the water so in order to meet that deadline Riverside has kicked up the activity level the past week.

Today, Tuesday we arrived at the boat at 2:00 P.M. to find Technician Scott aboard installing the new chartplotter, wiring our WiFi device and installing a cockpit stereo we are adding.  Painter Mike was busy adding the third coat of epoxy barrier coat after having removed the old bottom.  There will be one additional coat of the epoxy and then three coats of bottom paint will be applied.

Service Manager Marc Elsmo tells us that our batteries are in and will be installed in the next couple of days.  Technician Ryan will also complete our dripless shaft seal and replace a leaking seal in the transmission cooler along with the offending fuel solenoid.

We expect the boat to be back floating by Tuesday of next week.

Monday, June 18, 2012

On the Hard

New Name Added

Originally Posted at www.svsweetescape.com

Sweet Escape is back on the hard at Racine Riverside Marine.  She was hauled out on June 13th to complete a long list of upgrades and maintenance in preparation for our cruise later this summer.

If you will recall, the boat was put in the water in April for our sea trial and has been in ever since save for a brief haul out necessary to replace a cracked seacock.  We did not have a chance to do any topsides exterior cleaning as is the norm after a winter lay up and boy did it show.  This was one dirty girl.  

The list of upgrades includes the complete replacement of the bottom -  this involves the removal of all the old bottom paint down to the gelcoat and the application of several barrier coats along with multiple coats of new bottom paint.  

Other upgrades include the installation of a new Raymarine chart plotter, AIS, a masthead digital TV antenna, and Spurs line cutters.  We will also replace the traditional stuffing box with a dripless type that will keep the saltwater and the microorganisms that live in it out of our bilge and the replacement/expansion of our house battery bank.  We currently have two 12 volt 4D house batteries with a total capacity of about 400 amp hours.  To reach the level of self sufficiency we are seeking to achieve we need to raise this capacity to up over 1200 amp hours which will involve installing eight six volt batteries wired in series and in parallel.

On the maintenance side of the ledger is the return (finally) of our tank level monitor, an investigation of some oil seepage from the transmission and the repair of the notorious fuel delivery solenoid that abruptly put the brakes on a day sail two weeks ago.  

We are also having the diesel fuel tank scrubbed.  Diesel fuel is prone to bio-organic contamination.  There are microorganisms that live in diesel fuel and when they die they create a black tar like substance that settles on the bottom of the tank.  When the boat is sailed in conditions where there is a lot of movement due to wind and waves the fuel is sloshed around inside the tank which results in this contamination becoming suspended in the fuel.  This can lead to plugged fuel filters and eventual fuel starvation of the engine, shutting it down often when you need it most.

We also intend to replace our forward head and are using this opportunity to finally add the new name to her hull as well as the aforementioned badly needed cleaning and waxing.

By Friday, Riverside had removed more than half of the old bottom.  We need the boat back in the water and ready to go by the first week of July.  We intend to do a quick sail across Lake Michigan with daughter Erin and her boyfriend Ryan, leaving on a Friday and returning on Sunday.   This will be a good opportunity to sea trial Sweet Escape following these upgrades.

We will post additional photos on our Albums page.

Saturday, June 9, 2012

We Can't Get Right



Do you remember that scene from National Lampoon’s European Vacation where Chevy Chase was stuck in a roundabout in London and kept going around in circles for an entire day?  Big Ben! Parliament!

Since we have been sailing out of Racine - we’re on our second year now, we have wanted to take a day and just sail for as long as we want without weather, darkness or work getting in the way.  We started out with grand plans of going to Chicago or at least Milwaukee but for various combinations of the aforementioned and other reasons it just hasn’t worked out. Consequently,  we have been limited to sailing from Racine to Wind Point and parts in between.

So it was that on Friday Judy was off, Brian used some remaining compensatory time from work and with a beautiful weather forecast we set out to “just sail”.  The plan was modest, we would leave Racine and sail to Kenosha where we would do a “touch and go” before sailing back.  An easy beam reach of just over 20 miles and about 3 to 4 hours depending on the winds.

We left Racine at about 10:30 AM with nothing else on our plate for the day.  The weather was beautiful with southwest winds at 14 to 18 knots and temperatures near 80 degrees.  We motored out of the Root River into Lake Michigan where we found the lake that turquoise color that it sometimes assumes on sunny summer days.  Caribbean like, but not quite as warm. 

We decided to motor further out into the lake to give ourselves some room before turning into the wind to raise the sails due to the offshore breeze.  We motored around the west end of the Racine Reef and then about a mile out into the lake.  Judy then turned Sweet Escape into the wind, cut back on the power, engaged the auto pilot and we raised the main and the jib, got everything trimmed properly and then fell off to the south towards Kenosha.

Brian then put the engine in neutral and pushed the kill switch.  The engine did not die.  He pushed it again - still running in idle.  He then fiddled with the ignition switch thinking that it must have gotten turned off thereby deactivating the kill switch.  Nope, the ignition switch was in the on position.  Turn the switch off and back on - the engine still won’t die.

What to do?  Down below into the engine space to kill the engine with the on-engine kill switch.  No luck.  The Yanmar diesel continues to run, despite our best efforts to shut it down.

Back to the cockpit and a discussion about what to do next.  We decide to return to our slip.  Obviously we have a problem that we do not understand and not wanting to risk finally getting the engine shut down and then being unable to start it or worse, some kind of electronic gremlin in the system that could cause further damage or start a fire, we elect to throw our blissful day of sailing overboard - yet again.

Back at the slip, after docking, Sweet Escape continues idling as Brian makes contact with Service Manager Marc from Racine Riverside Marine.  He dispatched a mechanic who determines that the fuel delivery solenoid has come off the engine and fallen down and become almost inaccessible.  He was able to just reach and manually work the solenoid with a long screw driver and the engine finally quit.

One more item to add to our growing list for haul out work to begin on Monday when Sweet Escape comes out of the water.

Judy’s last day at work will be June 15th.  Brian’s last day is June 29th.  After that, we hope to have more time to sail including a planned family trip across Lake Michigan in early July. 

Until then though, we just can’t get right.

Monday, May 28, 2012

Memorable Memorial Day




Originally Posted at www.svsweetescape.com

Wisconsin continues to warm up.  It has helped that this weekend’s winds were from the southwest instead of coming off the great big cold lake.  We had three weekend goals:

  1. 1)Sail.
  2. 2)Empty our holding tank and fill our fuel tank.
  3. 3)Replace our anchor and rode.

Working together putting on the new shiny anchor and chain went surprisingly well.  The windlass worked great.  We did not drop things in the water or punch a hole in the boat with the 60 pound anchor.

Sailing went well too.  The winds started to pick up and while we were wishing we could have stayed out longer, we needed to get to the fuel dock before it closed.

It was a good thing we came in when we did because the winds continued to increase speed and blow from the south.

As that was happening we were trying to pull along side the fuel dock at Racine Reefpoint Marina.  This dock runs east and west and you pull up to the north side of it for fuel and to pump out.  This was a dock that we had pulled up to in the past without any problems but this time a strong south wind wanted to and was mostly succeeding in blowing us off the dock.  

As we pulled up to the dock Judy threw the bow line to the attendant.  He then secured the bow but before he could get back to receive the stern line from Brian the stern had blown completely off the dock and the boat was now sitting bow to.  Brian was able to use reverse and pivot off the bow line enough to bring the stern back close enough to the dock to get a stern line to the attendant.  He and several other people had to then drag our stern in by hand against the 18 knot wind.  Ugly.  On the bright side we had no trouble getting away from the dock after we finished getting our fuel and pump out.

The moral of the story is that boaters and cruisers help each other.   No harsh words or stupid comments - just help.  Soon these people were telling stories about what happened to them this time or that.  They even stood around until we made it away from the dock, ostensibly to be available in case we needed more help but we think actually just for the entertainment value of it all.

Saturday, May 26, 2012

Changing our Ground Tackle



Originally Posted at www.svsweetescape.com

We plan to anchor out - a lot.  There are a number of reasons why.  Chief among them is money.  Renting a slip for Sweet Escape can cost as much as $100 per night depending on where you are.  Dropping the hook in an idyllic and serene anchorage is free and in our judgment far preferable to the frenetic marina environment with neighbors on both sides and nosey people walking along the dock looking in our windows and cockpit.

You might say that we’re slightly anti-social and you would probably be right.  It’s not that we don’t like people, it’s just that we value our privacy.  It may have something to do with what we have both been doing for a living for the past thirty plus years.

In any event, we are configuring Sweet Escape to be a self sufficient cruising platform that can stay away from the dock for weeks at a time.  The first step in that process was the addition of our diesel generator.  Today we completed step two - changing the existing 45 pound Delta anchor and 200 foot combination chain and rope rode to a 60 pound Manson Supreme anchor with 300 feet of all chain rode.

After a lot of research on the subject we selected the Manson Supremeanchor for it’s ingenious design and superior holding power.  As with anything else, from time to time there are products that arrive in the marine marketplace that become “the” hot product.  Right now with respect to anchors, that product is the Manson Supreme.  The design of this anchor is very similar to another brand of anchor known as the Rochna and had Rochna not run into steel quality issues after moving their production to China, we could have just as easily gone that route, but since the anchor is probably the single most critical piece of safety equipment on board, we chose the New Zealand built Manson Supreme, and upsized from the suggested 45 pound model to the 60 pounder.

The next decision that had to be made concerned the rode.  For those readers who are not familiar with boating terms, rode is the line that connects the anchor to the boat.  It is usually chain or rope or a combination of the two.  In our case, Sweet Escape came equipped with a combination 200 foot rode where the first 50 feet was chain and the remaining 150 was nylon rope.  First, we felt that 200 feet was going to be inadequate for the type of cruising we intend to do.  Secondly we did not like the idea of our twelve ton boat swinging at the end of a single nylon rope for an extended length of time and finally we did not like the looks of the rope to chain splice.  More on that later.

We made the decision to purchase 300 feet of all chain rode.  300 feet will provide sufficient scope in most anchoring situations and the chain will provide strength and additional holding.  There was some anxiety over the size and type of chain.  Ordering this much chain and getting it from the store to the boat was going to be a major undertaking for us and for the people we bought it from.  It was critical that the chain be the correct size and type for our windlass. After much agonizing and research that included taking the windlass apart in order to determine which gypsy we have, we ordered the anchor and 300 feet of 5/16 inch high test G40 galvanized anchor chain from West Marine.  We had both items shipped to their store in Racine about five blocks from our slip at Pugh Marina.  This enabled us to avoid paying for shipping which given the weight involved would have been significant.

The anchor arrived last week and Brian picked it up on Saturday the 19th.  That day something called the Color Run was going on in Downtown Racine.  As a result the city prohibited parking on Main Street around - you guessed it - West Marine.  So, he was forced to park three blocks away and walk to the store which is no huge deal except that on the way back to the car he would be carrying a 60 pound awkward steel anchor that is all points and sharp edges - “think do it yourself vasectomy.”  

But not to worry.  The boys at West Marine allowed him to borrow a shopping cart from the store.  This was not just any shopping cart but a mini version that would have been perfect for a homeless dwarf.  The big Manson really did not fit in the shopping cart but it was either that or risk serious injury by attempting to carry it.  So it was that Brian could be seen pushing a mini shopping cart containing an impossibly large boat anchor along the streets of Racine Wisconsin on a pleasant Saturday afternoon in May.

That was last Saturday.  Today, we picked up our 300 feet of chain.  The chain arrived in a small cardboard barrel that weighed in at 330 pounds.  Using a dolly, our SUV and forklifts on both ends we were able to move the chain to our slip this afternoon.

The first step was to remove the old anchor and rode from our chain locker.  While doing this the rope to chain splice jammed in our windlass, tripping the breaker and validating our concerns and our decision to go with all chain.  With a little effort we were able to get the splice out of the windlass and empty our chain locker.  

Occasionally due to wind and weather conditions it becomes necessary to use two anchors.  Sweet Escape actually has two bow rollers for this purpose.  We will figure out a way to use the old ground tackle possibly attached to a lightweight aluminum anchor as our backup.  Anyone want to buy a 45 pound Delta?  Let us know.

After some cleaning by Judy, using our windlass we began loading the chain into the locker.  After most of the chain was loaded (and there was an impressive amount of chain), the big moment arrived - it was time to attach the new anchor and raise it onto it’s new home on our bow roller.  Thankfully, It fits great with only a couple minor adjustments that will have to be made before we leave in August such as drilling a hole in the anchor to accommodate a locking pin.

With this system, we are confident that we will stay put in most any anchoring situation.  The key to a good nights sleep is knowing that your boat will be in the same place when you wake up that it was when you went to sleep.

We have placed additional photos in our gallery.

Monday, May 14, 2012

Mother's Day



Originally Posted at www.svsweetescape.com

Usually it is very hard to work on a holiday, but his year wasn’t so bad. Maybe because I know it is one of my last holidays to work,  Or maybe because the weather has finally turned and it is becoming warmer, or maybe because I was showered with gifts again (thanks guys) , or maybe it was because I was able to work with our oldest daughter Jenny which is always great.  

Unfortunately Jenny had to work on her mother’s day too.  So that left Grandpa (after a busy, hectic week, Brian’s job get extremely busy with warmer weather) with the number one babysitting spot.  We all made it through the day and night.  

One of the nicest gifts I received on this mother’s day (besides those from Brian and the girls) was when I called Dora, my 79 year old mother.  She has been letting me know for some time that this cruising idea might be a little crazy.  During our phone call she said that after thinking it over she has come to the conclusion that it might not be a bad ideal after all.  She told me that she was happy that I realize that there is more to life than just work. 

After experiencing the loss of her husband and my father Tony when she was only 45 years old - I guess she would know better than most. 

THANKS MOM

Saturday, May 5, 2012

Sailing, Seacocks and the Bridge

Brian at the helm with Maryann at right

Sailing!

Grandson Cameron on the bow of Sweet Escape
Originally Posted at www.svsweetescape.com

On Sunday April 29th our surveyor Marian Lambrecht from Schuss Marine in Chicago met us at Sweet Escape.  

You may recall from an earlier post that we had hired her to accompany us out for the first sailing session so that she could help us become acquainted with the rig and other systems on board.  

Weather that day left a little to be desired.  We had 15 knot winds blowing from just north of east.  This set up a challenging docking/undocking scenario as our slip is north/south and the dock was on the upwind side.  Because of the east winds, temperatures were in the mid 40’s - but it was time to do some sailing.

We motored down the channel with Brian at the helm headed for Lake Michigan.  Out on the lake we encountered 2-3 foot seas.  We unfurled the mainsail and discovered that the main had not been fully raised within the mast when the sail had been put on.  This caused the top of the main to bunch up inside the mast and made it difficult to unfurl.

To correct this, Brian used the main halyard to raise the sail the rest of the way.  Once the sail was all the way up the mast we were able to get it all the way out.  Brian was impressed at the size of this sail.  It was huge, bigger than any mainsail we’d ever sailed under before on our boat or anyone else's.  The furling system seems pretty straight forward and we should not need much practice to become good at using it because it just isn’t that difficult.

One of the really nice things about in mast furling is the ease of reefing.  It is simply a matter of furling whatever amount of sail you need to reduce and it can be done quickly and there is no need to leave the cockpit to do it.

On the other hand, in mast furling can also be touchy.  It is important to keep significant tension on the outhaul as you’re furling the sail or it will will bend in on itself and get jammed on the furler.  This would not be good.  Sunday, when it was time to come in, Judy and Marian were able to furl the main with no trouble.

Once the main was out we unfurled the jib.  Hunter uses a weird rig known as the B&R rig.  It is a fractional rig with no backstay and kind of works like a tripod.  Like on all sloop type rigs the jib lives on the forestay.  Once the jib was out the boat was reaching speeds in the high six knot range but Marian pointed out what she thought was a loose forestay.  Based on that observation Brian rolled up the jib and that was that for the day.   If indeed there was a problem with the forestay, it could have a catastrophic effect on the entire rig, keeping in mind what we said earlier about there being no backstay.

At this point we headed back to the dock and had some boat handling practice after which we docked.  Judy actually docked and it was pretty exciting in the 15 knot crosswind.  After several missed approaches she got into the slip with no damage.  It wasn’t pretty but alls well that ends well.

All in all, despite the cold, blustery weather, we learned a lot about our rig and how Sweet Escape handles under sail.

On Monday Brian used a vacation day and we used the time to register the boat in Wisconsin and write the dreaded tax check to the state.  We also made a stop at Racine Riverside to speak with Service Manager Marc regarding the loose forestay and another problem that Brian had discovered the previous day when operating the through-hull valve for the galley sink discharge.  When operating the valve on the seacock a tiny amount of water would spurt out from the side of the seacock.  This was alarming because this seacock is all that is standing between the interior of the boat and the water in which it is floating.  If a seacock were to fail, the boat would fill with water and sink.  The seacock appeared to have a small crack in it.

We have to say here that Racine Riverside’s service staff are truly amazing.  We met with Marc and told him about the seacock and within five minutes we were en-route to Pugh Marina with Marc and Broker Steve to investigate the problem.  It’s important to realize that this is a very busy time of the year for Riverside.  Boats are being put in the water and many people want work done immediately if not sooner.  Yet Marc dropped everything to come and look at our problem - I guess the possibility that your boat might be in danger of sinking moves you to the front of the line.

Marc came aboard and took a look at the through-hull and after the requisite amount of grunting and other various noises announced that the boat had to come out of the water - today.  So, with the help of Steve we brought the boat back to Riverside where she was hauled and the offending seacock replaced.  It was also confirmed that there was no problem with the forestay.

Sweet Escape remained at Riverside an extra couple of days because the Main Street bridge malfunctioned and could not open to allow boats through until Friday.