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| red track, 7th October, 5.8nm; yellow track, 19th October 7.7nm |
Lots of Spring jobs in mind...
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| red track, 7th October, 5.8nm; yellow track, 19th October 7.7nm |
Lots of Spring jobs in mind...
As ever, the weather has cycled through various events, some of which were conducive to sailing, others not. However, I have managed four brief sails over the past five weeks.
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| A blustery sail up to Ipswich Docks, where the weather did its worst… |
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| 28th August, white track, 2.8nm; 8th Sept, red track, 4.4nm; 23rd Sept, green track, 8.5nm; 27th Sept, yellow track, 8.5nm. |
In the meantime, I was able to do some repairs to the tender which I picked up in a bit of a hurry early this season, and which spends its year at the boatyard at Pin Mill. Chief amongst the issues were a damaged keelband and two 'watertight' buoyancy tanks, fore and aft, which were decidedly not watertight! So this was a good opportunity to practise some fibreglass repair work. Herewith, some pictures of the process:
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| Practising calligraphy…(badly!) |
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| The bit right at the end of the skeg needs some reinforcement and tidying up but it looks basically watertight, despite appearances so can wait till late in the year. |
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| Similar repairs done with the stern chamber. |
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| While I was at it, a few dings and scrapes were mended on the hull, which I decided at this point not to paint again for security reasons. |
It was great to be able to attend this event, particularly by making the passage round from the Orwell to the Deben.
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| Sheared Eye bolt at the masthead which previously held a block facilitating the yard uphaul. |
Fortunately, the unstayed mast stayed firmly in place. Nevertheless, the mast had to be transported home for some repair work.
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| Carbon fibre damage, mainly caused due to the incorrect mounting of the eyebolts - some penny washers might have helped... |
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| I sourced this through Hilltop Products. 5m of 101.6mm Inner Diameter tubing (before shrinking), with a 2:1 shrinking capability - more than sufficient for this 80mm diameter mast. |
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| Daisy IV at the jetty at Pin Mill. Repaired mast fully rigged and tested. |
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| Sail up - it all works...! |
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| Red track 3.7nm - this was from August 9th, when the rigging broke. Yellow track from August 14th - 4.7nm - a successful test of the repaired rigging |
I joined the rally organised by the Drascombe Association based at Bradwell Marina. It was a good excuse to make a first extended sea passage in Daisy IV, in this case along The Wallet. I'd made this trip many times before in my previous boats - fourteen return trips, as it so happens - so was looking forward to seeing how Daisy IV managed for her first but my fifteenth. In the event, conditions were absolutely ideal - NW winds to help me down there, and SW winds for the return trip. Except for the final stretch home on the Orwell on the return journey, the whole journey was managed without having to tack!
I had intended to stay for longer, making more of the return trip and joining a few other boats for a cruise, but storm Floris had other ideas, forcing me back home a day early.
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| Outward trip, 1st Aug, yellow track 28.6nm; sailing the Blackwater, 2nd Aug, green track 23.6nm; homeward passage, 3rd Aug, red track 29.2nm. Total track length 81.4nm |
Deep down in the darkest recesses of any boat lies a place that few dare to venture. It's an unforgiving space, full of rancid smells, foul gunge and, all too often associated with things which, at best, haven’t been operating as should well be the case. Anyone who finds themselves here is visiting the boat's bilges.
I had reason to poke around here over the past few days since the bilge pump, which is necessary for pumping out water that habitually accumulates here, wasn’t working properly. If there is a weakness in the Deben Lugger design it is the fact that much of the rainwater doesn’t run off through the scuppers, and finds its way into the bilge. A decent rainstorm, whilst on the mooring, will lead to a significant accumulation of water which, if left unchecked, could eventually lead to the hull being submerged.
Following this week's storms, Daisy IV found herself many litres of water in the bilges, and reaching over the floorboards. A subsequent inspection of the hull revealed a Rule bilge pump connected to a Rule-a-matic float valve. Previously this has only been used in its 'manual' mode of operation, since the thing wouldn’t switch off once the hull was emptied, as it is intended to do.
The problem seems to be with the float valve which was incorrectly installed at a level which was little higher than the bilge pump, so that the water level could never quite reach the depth required for the float valve to sit sufficiently low to switch off the electricity supply.
Eventually I managed to remove the float valve, and have now added a centimetre of supporting wood so that it sits high enough to operate as intended. So, we shall await with interest the outcomes of the next deluge…
Following this piece of maintenance, it seemed the only sensible thing to go for a little sail. The tide was in its early ebb, so it was good to beat upstream against a F3 NWW breeze, before a run downstream as the wind increased to F4.
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| 9.4nm |
2023: 155.9nm
2024: 137.2nm
2025: 352.8nm
2026: 27.9nm (up to 18th April)