Is it the longer days?
Is it the warmer temperatures?
Maybe it is the perfume-filled air. The trees are beginning their spring extravaganza - flowers
This euphoria has a name: Spring Fever. And I've got it, bad.
Life aboard s/v Eolian
Irrational Exuberance
The bridge is floating because the water depth is too great for pilings to be a usable support solution. Although it looks like it is two layers, it is not. What you are seeing is the roadway carried on pillars above the concrete pontoons. The ends of the floating span connect to fixed structures, but the span itself rises and falls with the tides - more than 16 feet. Tricky anchoring. Tricky engineering.
In 2005, we transited the bridge aboard Eolian. Opening the span requires at least an hour's notice (contact the bridge on VHF channel 13). When you are arriving at the bridge for your scheduled opening, you should hail the bridge again to let them know.
In this last picture, we have cleared the bridge and are looking back at it. To help give some scale, if you look closely, you can see one of the bridge tenders' pickup trucks parked on the pontoon.Destination: Hood Canal Floating Bridge
Project: FWD Head Replacement - DONE!
Why ski?
She's a Tease
Project: FWD Head Redemption
Project: FWD Head (not much) Progress
Aside: Why is it called a "head" you may ask? On the old sailing ships, the sailors were not provided with "facilities" of any kind whatsoever. When nature called, they had to go up into the bows of the ship, into the very head, and do their business as best they could, hanging on to the rigging while the bow plunged into wave after wave. There was a scene in Master and Commander that depicted this in the movie theaters (that scene was relegated to the "deleted scenes" on the DVD). Not very pleasant at any time, and downright nasty in the winter. I'm pretty sure I couldn't do it.The forward head, despite the investment of more than $100 in parts will still not pump sea water for the flush. Instead, we have been using the shower hose to supply flush water when needed. I became convinced to try a Jabsco head, for $154, instead of investing another $100 in parts to attempt another repair of the fragile mechanism inside the old Groco head.
Project: Replace the Forward Head
the approx 1 1/4" dia. Eventually, Jane found a short piece of 1" white plastic head hose that I had bought to use as a chafe guard on the docklines - this was the best we were going to do.I learned about sailing from that: Always carry tools! And spares!
Glad To Be in Seattle
Winter Maintenance: Oil Changes
looked a little weird - like it was mounted incorrectly. The front edge was higher than the back edge. Over time, that "weirdness" became more pronounced, until it looked like this (once application after application of various types of caulking - mostly silicone - were removed). Obviously, something was going wrong here, and attention was required.
is directed substantially aft), handles almost the entire load. Sometime in the 23 years previous to our purchase, the forward rod parted due to crevice corrosion. This left the entire load, in an extremely unfavorable position, on the aft rod. It was cracking, and had cracked nearly 2/3 of the way thru when I took the hammer to it.
I designed a replacement pad, larger than the original. After fabrication, this was installed over the ends of the abandoned rods, bedded in a generous layer of polysulphide. It is held to the bowsprit with 4, 3/8" stainless hanger bolts (think: "lag studs"... that is, lag bolts, with the hex head cut off, and the shank threaded with machine threads), capped with acorn nuts. The 4, 3/8" bolts provide a greater bolt cross section than the original 2, 1/2" rods, and spread the load over a greater surface area and greater number of fasteners. The new pad is twice as wide as the old, providing a significantly better ability to resist the side loading that the sail puts on it.
Project: New Inner Forestay Padeye
Ghost is Now a Sloop!
With the exception of a Dana 24, there were no sailboats of size in the indoor exposition. I am not counting the Hobies, nor the Macgregors (which hardly qualify as sailboats). Nor the delightful collection brought by the Gig Harbor Boat Works. But Hunter, Benneteau, Catalina, etc. were just not there.Seattle Boat Show, Winter 2010