Showing posts with label haul out. Show all posts
Showing posts with label haul out. Show all posts

Monday, February 13, 2012

Picking up the Pace, January 2012

After we saw Mum off from the Big Island, we reset to “work” mode. With exactly one week to get Tao prepared for being on the hard, it was a whirlwind. Steadily we worked our way through our closing list. We experienced our first “Kona winds,” which occur when a low swings far enough south for SW winds to blow, pushing the vog to Hilo instead of Kona. Spectacular views of Hualalai and Mauna Loa suddenly became visible from the safety of our mooring in Honokohau Harbor. The extra sunny conditions allowed us to haul up, rinse off, and dry all of our working sails. Next, we pulled the main running rigging down, replacing it with spare lines in order to wash and dry our salty lines. Shawn and Grizzly took breaks frequently to watch the enormous green sea turtles swimming around our boat. The head was cleaned and closed down, our weather cloths, dodger and solar panels were removed, all food stores and medicine were sifted through, and Yannie’s oil was changed and her bowels cleaned with a vinegar flush. The day before haul out, Chris spent three hours taking turns snorkeling and using air from his dive tank to painstakingly clean the bottom, in hopes that we would not be charged for a post haul out pressure wash. Amidst this activity, Shawn continued to teach at Bikram Yoga Kona and Chris accepted packages (all delivered through the nice folks at the DLNR office) containing gear for the next possible voyage, most notably including: a new 85-watt solar panel to fill out our solar farm, a new refrigerator to use up all that extra power generated (18-Liter Waeco), and new wire to replace our standing rigging. Phew, busy week!
 

After motoring to the haul out early for our 0800 haul out time on January 19th, we ran Yannie clean with freshwater. Only Grizzly knows how it felt to be aboard Tao during the haul up ride out of the harbor in slings and the subsequent journey through the boat yard, across the street, into the reserved space we had been renting for the past couple months. Gentry's Kona Marina folks were quick, professional, and got Tao securely set into her jack stands after sharing with us her weight; a whopping 21,000 lbs!! (Full fuel tank, minus 70-gallons of water, and very few food stores. Our previous estimate was a mere 15,000-lbs; no wonder we had to raise her water line ;)). Jane and Tim from Midnight Blue helped to keep us sane over the course of the month; from a mega sushi rolling night on their boat (for which our neighbor Russ, known as the “Ahi King of Kona” provided a huge chunk of fresh ahi tuna), to taking Chris surfing (with his new surfboard), to sharing freshly made pumpkin soup as we worked into the night, and giving us rides to the vet (to get Grizzly her travel certificate), out for a last dinner at the Kona Brewery, and finally to the airport to see us off. Many Mahalos!!


The three of us took an overnight flight from Kona to LA, where Chris’s mom, Jane, cheerfully picked us up at 0500 PST. As the sun rose, Jane whisked us out to a delightful breakfast with Abe while Grizzly settled into her familiar Santa Monica home. Over the next week, we enjoyed catching up and getting our bearings on the mainland. This included: a visit to our LA storage unit to assess what cold weather gear we had and what we needed to get, Shawn fighting off a cold, several delicious dinners, visiting and movie with Ledy and Angie, and a trip to South Pasadena to hang with Noah and Al from Scheherazade. The following week we enjoyed sunsets overlooking Santa Barbara Island from Dave’s (Chris’s dad) Palos Verdes peninsula home. Amid bike rides, beach hikes, and tasty dinners, Chris took a trip to Minney’s Yacht Surplus and did some metal work to create plates for Tao’s water tanks. Shawn managed to renew her CA drivers license and, with Anette’s help, worked on some sewing projects. We both got our teeth cleaned (by Joy, possibly the best hygienist in the country) and squeezed in Rajashree’s (Bikram's wife) class at the Bikram Yoga world headquarters. On the evening of the last day in January, we packed up once again, stuffed Griz into her carry case, and made our way to LAX (with one 50-lb and one 48-lb bag to check) to catch our flight to Boston. Our destination: Cape Cod. Jane and Abe’s peaceful summer home, overlooking Sandy Neck Salt Marsh Conservation Area, is the perfect place for us to recover from over a year straight on the boat (half in Mexico and half Hawaii, not bad!) and make plans for our next steps…
 
  

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Out of the water!

After several days of taking pictures and collecting every measurement we could think of that we might need over the summer away from the boat, we had a last dinner potluck with new boat friends (Smoke-n-Blues we met in Coyote Bay, Odyssey who since we’d seen them had exciting engine stories off San Francisquito, and Sea Tern, a couple who had just nearly lost their shaft and the 80+ year old woman dove in and hammered it back in to stop the inflow of water!) on Wednesday May 27th. We awoke the next morning early knowing the clock was ticking. We had already replaced most of our rigging with runners that we don’t mind degrading in the sun, and the mainsail was removed and taken to an awesome sail maker in San Carlos to have a third reef put in. So, no more sailing, we motored out 3 miles off shore, sent out a Spot report while we emptied our holding tank for the last time on this leg of our journey. (There are no pump-out facilities in San Carlos Bay, and sad to say, I don’t think many people take the time to go 3 miles off shore to pump out their holding tanks, Yuck!) We made our way back into the marina and tied up to a dock for one night for the first time since Ensenada.

We literally exploded onto the surrounding dock fingers. First we found a hose on the dock to borrow and washed down the deck and all deck hardware trying to reverse the corrosion that inevitably occurs. Next, we started the process of rinsing all the sails, canvas, and foul weather gear with freshwater and then hung it all out to dry before removing and folding them for the summer. We set up a 5-bucket system to rinse, then wash, then rinse, rinse, rinse, rinse all of our salt permeated lines and finally set them out along any already unused dock space (apparently we have mountains of lines aboard!).




In the midst of this craziness, Chris decided to take the cold-water wax off his surfboard for storage (yes, we have finally found warm water!). Shawn was in the bucket line with the ropes and heard a commotion along the finger of the dock we were tied to. Chris had lost a surf skeg into the water, immediately dropping to his knees to grab it, it floated down just below his fingertips and very seal like, he plopped down shoulder first, then head and finally feet slid into the water fully dressed between the dock and the next boat. He came up sputtering and cursing, his sunglasses askew. The skeg had been saved but he had lost a ¼-inch round chunk of his shin on some pipe-shaped object below the water. First aid ensued, a half-hour of irrigating the wound and then dressing it followed with close monitoring for the foreseeable future. Although wounded, the race against the clock and our 2pm haul out the next day continued. Rope washing continued (see the gauze on Chris' right shin?) and Rocky and all our other anchors were pulled off and washed along with associated rhode and chain (all together nearly 1,000 feet). As the sun set, the drying slowed and we had to leave all the ropes out for the night. We topped of the diesel with biocide, and flushed the engine and head with fresh water and vinegar. We enjoyed brief showers and basic dinner before we quickly fell into uneasy sleep thinking of all the tasks still on the list.

The next morning dawned wet- condensation, we willed the ropes to dry. We collected and re-organized all of our gear and tried to prepare the boat for hauling out. Last minute Chris had to ride the newly rinsed Dahone to the dry storage to pay the bill before hauling (we had incorrectly assumed that this could be done at the marina office), while Shawn scrubbed Eeyore’s bottom and set him out to dry, dry, dry! A persistent breeze was blowing from directly astern. Not wanting to have any motoring-in-tight-spaces-shenanigans, we lined Tao out of the too-small-slip and motored across the marina to wonderfully waiting friends from Plume, who caught our lines.

The next hour was a blur; a tractor pushed a huge trailer into the water under Tao. They hauled her up with Shawn aboard, who felt the shake as she slid- they had placed the keel support too far forward and the weight was resting forward of the flat part of keel on our cut-away. Back into the water and readjusted to the right spot, and quickly out of the water again. Tao, dripping wet and out of her element, was pushed by this tractor onto the road for a strange and thankfully quick ½ mile trip to the dry storage facility’s work yard. Once safely on stands, we checked the bottom, which looked great except for a few spots that had been knicked on the cutaway part of our keel in the first attempt out of the water, our zincs were toasted, and our propeller, rarely used, was 100% covered with barnacles. Totally physically and emotionally spent, we managed to clean the bottom before taking showers and having a nice chicken cacciatore and wine meal under the cover of mosquito nets as we mentally prepared ourselves for the 3 frantic days to follow.