12-29-12 – Bahia de Tenacatita
It’s Saturday and while I’m sure
everyone is enjoying a peaceful Saturday after Christmas, we are hard at work
here on Autumn Wind; It’s another Saturday at the office if you will. So much to do and, well, basically endless
time to get it done, but today was a work day for us.
Morning comes early around here |
It all started at 6:30A. First chore is to make coffee. Of course we ran out of propane. I may add we have used 3 gallons of propane
in almost exactly 2 months. Not too
shabby considering we boil water for coffee every day and do all our cooking
with that. Thankfully we invested in a
second propane bottle before leaving San Diego so that’s not a very big
chore. Next, I spend a little time taking
advantage of free fresh water deposited by the dew last night to wipe down the
boat and remove some or the ever present dirt and salt that accumulates at
anchor.
Getting good use out of free water |
Using the dew on the solar panels
I wipe them down to clean off any interference that may rob us of free amps
throughout the day. Then with coffee made
we launch the dink for a trip to shore.
Lower the dinghy into the water; we pull it out each night and side tie
it to the boat out of the water so no one “borrows” it and lock the engine to
the rail for the same reason; unlock the engine on the rear rail and lower it
onto the dink with the engine hoist. Now
our car is ready. We load our coffee in
a thermos with our handheld VHF, a Frisbee into a dry bag and our trash into
the dink and head to shore. After an uneventful
surf landing we drag the dink up out of the surf and go for a nice walk down
the beach and back. A short Frisbee
session later we sit on the dink and drink our coffee while listening to the
morning net. Power back out of the surf
making sure not to dump the dink and we are ready for the day of work. Well not quite yet, we need to make some eggs
with onions and jalapenos wrapped in tortillas for breakfast…now it’s time for
work.
Elizabeth checking the engine compartment |
We need to organize some of the
gazillion pictures we have taken and Elizabeth disassembles the engine
compartment to make a check of the engine.
We check the oil, the impeller and the belts, look for weird spots, oil
or anything that may indicate anything amiss.
We may have sails, but we count on that little 35 HP diesel to get us
places when the wind dies. Check the
primary fuel filter and drain a little water out, all looks good there. Elizabeth removes and cleans the raw water
intake that filters the water coming
into our engine to cool it. Engine check
complete. What’s next?
After five days in Bahia de
Navidad the bottom of the boat has developed a little scum line around the
water line. It could be this or it could
be that we have loaded so much junk onto the boat to go cruising that it has
literally sank 3 inches in the water. So
the protective paint on the bottom that is supposed to repel this scum is now
under water and the gel coat is taking the brunt of the scum bugs. So we try to keep this clean. By now it’s actually hot so a little swim,
even if it’s work, is welcome. The water
is super clear and 82 degrees so I know you’re thinking this has got to be a
tough chore. Tenacatita is a good place
to clean your bottom as you can see the entire keel, rudder and prop. An added benefit is a clean bottom makes you
go faster, so we can maybe sail at a brisk walk now instead of a mosey.
Elizabeth bottom cleaning |
Cruiser safety gear in place for the use of sharp knives |
We need a new chafe guard on our
anchor rode so we start on this.
Explanation here for non-boater types.
The 35lb anchor that holds our 15 ton boat in place is attached to the
boat with a rope. This rope runs over a
roller and as the boat moves around it chafes on the roller. We do not want it to chafe thru and set us
adrift so we put a protective covering on it where it goes over the
roller. This protective covering was
procured months ago in Tomales Bay at the fire station. It’s old fire hose that we slice down the
middle and tie around the line. It’s
amazing how quickly the chafe guard gets beat up, so I can only imagine how bad
the rode would look if we didn’t protect it.
Wise use of our 1 tray of ice. |
Enjoying the fruits of Elizabeth's labor |
Mexican hats (flopper stoppers) getting deployed |
With the thought that it may get
a little rolly tonight I deploy our flopper stoppers. These are little orange Mexican sombrero
looking things that tie one after another in a line with a little mushroom
anchor off the bottom of them providing resitance to keep the boat from rolling back and
forth. I deploy them mostly because we
have them, not because we need them. Why
not, right?
Is there anything in there? |
The little Honda 1000 generator
is in need of some gas. So this is the
next project. Sounds easy until you see
where it’s buried in the cockpit locker, the gas is tied to the rail up front
and the nozzle is in a separate place. Then
you need to fill a little generator with a five gallon jug in a swaying
boat. Thankfully this isn’t the first time
for this so I only spill a little gas. Our
solar is keeping up great today but filling the little Honda in the dark is a
pain so might as well get it done. My
work friends know how long these little things can run on a tank of gas; think
of endless profilographing, and how they always seem to run out at the exact
time you need them most. We seem to need
to run it after two days at anchor to boost the solar and we are running a fine
line right now if we will have enough amps to get thru the night and keep our
beer cold. Be thankful for endless
electricity, because we seem to spend more time thinking about amps than
anything else; except water consumption.
Don't spill! |
Which reminds me, it’s shower
day! Always a big one for
Elizabeth. We each get almost a gallon
and a half for a shower today. Don’t
worry we don’t get the bathroom all wet, we shower off the back of the
boat. It also helps to wash the salt off
at the same time. It’s like showering on
your patio, easy clean up; just wait until its dark if you know what I mean.
Hope everyone enjoyed their
Saturday off, As you can see we spent it
slaving away at work.