We (Silver Fox) were RC last night.
It wasn't too bad when we went down to the boat, so we decided to go ahead with the race!
Made the announcement on the VHF at 5:30, and as we dropped the dock lines, the rain filled in.
And didn't stop until... actually, its still raining now!!
With the persistent rain came a building wind out of the ENE. Sustained 25 knots of wind with higher gusts, when all was said and done.
The seas also built up, and were easily 5 feet plus, and quite confused.
Being stubborn buggers, and since some boats made the effort, we set a course, a start line and ran a sequence, while holding on to the boat as it rocked and pitched its disapproval!
3 boats were out; CYMRU, Coeur d'Alene, and Trouble.
Trouble was the only one to come to the start area, but apparently the crew refused to hoist any sails, and they motored home, followed by the two other boats under sail.
So there was a start, but no racers.
Can't say I blame them!
Thursday, September 30, 2010
Monday, September 20, 2010
Hurricane Earl - Fri Sept 4th 2010

Boat US is our insurance carrier for the boat, and their policy is to pay for half the haul, wash, and blocking, so I decided to play it safe, and as a bonus get to do some needed work to the bottom of the boat.
The next project was to paint the prop and shaft with Cold Galvanising as it was too popular with the barnacles. We had nothing on there up to now.
The boat came out on Thurs the 2nd Sept, and went back in on the Tuesday after the Labor Day weekend holiday.
Opening the seized stuffing box was a bugger, and when I tried it on the water last year, I think I loosened the seal to the stern tube. That is why I wanted the boat out of the water this time.
Anyway, replaced with 3 pieces of square shaped PTFE flax stuffing ($5 a ft). 5/16ths is the size, and the 3 pieces fit in perfectly. Each piece was over 4" long to go around the 7/8ths shaft (so get more than a foot of the stuff).
The stuffing box and locking nut were frozen together. Used PB Blaster overnight and 2 big pipe wrenches to force them apart.
Did have a drip every 6 seconds (with engine off) before, but a nice dry bilge now (1 drip every 20 seconds when under power).
Can get the packing nut tight enough by hand - no wrench needed there. Make sure to use wrenches to tighten the locking nut though, as it will work loose otherwise.
Got the rudder and a foot of the waterline twice with a quart of paint (400 sq ft coverage), plus we touched up around the top of the keel. Let the bottom coat dry overnight before applying the second coat. Used the roll and tip method, and got a very smooth finish.
The cold galvanizing was easy enough, and we also hit all the metal thru hulls with the stuff. Used a full aerosol can on the project, and the can cost around $8 at Do It Center.
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