Wednesday, August 30, 2006
Flash
The SSB is fixed. At least mostly fixed. After exhausting every other possibility, the technician returned the theory of inadequate ground. He connected a new wire to ground in parallel with the old one and the transmit current jumped from 10 to 15 amps.
The primary ground is a strip of copper ribbon about 4 inches wide that runs from the antenna tuner to the through-hull grounding plate. The ribbon makes a ground connection and also provides a ground plane for radio propagation. The ribbon is old and worn. I found fragments of it in the bilge. Perhaps it was damaged by the work being done or by the lightning.
Anyhow, the SSB is good enough for now. I'll plan on replacing the copper ribbon myself. Meanwhile, we can leave Rockland tomorrow morning. The weather report sounds good. :)
So Very Very Close
Rockland Harbor, N 44 06.664 W 69 05.823
Everything works -- Almost. The new Furuno radar works, and the screen is much better and echoes easier to read than on the old radar. The new Raymarine wind meter works, and it too is much easier to read than the old one. The GPS to PC interface works. The ICOM 710 SSB works, I am able to send and receive email via sailmail. That's how I'm posting this blog.
We even relocated the GPS and the radar. Before they were mounted on the top of the wet locker. The disadvantage to that is that the screens were too far away to read easily and that all operations and button pushing had to be done down below. The helmsman would have to leave his/her station to operate the GPS or the radar. That's not the best practice. Our cure is to mount the GPS and the radar on a swinging arm. Now we can swing them out to the companionway door entrance and view them and operate them from the helmsman's station. We can swing the arm the other way to see them and view them inside when sitting at the navigator's table. It's a definite operational improvement.
The only thing that doesn't work (apparently) is the SSB tuner. The tuner matches impedances between the SSB and the antenna for maximum power transfer. It does this frequency sensitive adjustment on command from the SSB. It doesn't appear to be working because when I transmit, the radio consumes only 6-10 amps of 12 volt power. The minimum is 20 amps and before the lightning strike our old radio used 25 amps. The net effect is that the radio works but only at low power. I can send emails via a station in Nova Scotia less than 100 miles from here, but I can't contact really distant stations. Long distance communications is the whole point of SSB radio so we can't accept it in this state.
The Ocean Pursuits technician was out here 4-5 times today with different ideas for diagnostic tests suggested by the manufacturer ICOM. None of them worked. We'll have to continue tomorrow.
From Libby: I had a great time at the Farnsworth Art Museum, There were some Winslow Homer paintings, along with paintings by N.C. Wyeth, Andrew Wyeth, and James Wyeth with a tour given by Andrew Wyeth's granddaughter. It is a great collection for such a small town.
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Monday, August 28, 2006
A Cold Cold Day
Rockland Harbor
Today has been cold and drizzly. It feels like late October. But the forecast for the rest of the week sounds OK.
Well, we were gone for 10 days. The break was nice. It was certainly good for Libby and I to have time with the grand children. In addition, John and Cheryl had a good week in Washington, we got to spend a day with my sister Marylyn, and we also got to see friends, Jerry and Phyllis, Bud and Nan, and John and Mary Ann. I even got to spend a few hours at the West Charlton fire house shooting the breeze with the guys.
While we were gone, Ocean Pursuits worked on Tarwathie. They did a nice job installing the new radio, and the radar, and the wind meter. They had to take the mast down and put it back. They had to route cables and they did such a nice job that it is neater than when they started. There is still some work to do, so we'll be here at least one more day.
Should we sail south with Hurricane Ernesto heading North? No. We'll stay close by safe anchorages until it is safely past. We're also in no hurry to leave Maine. We could stop and visit Bath and/or Portland on the way south. We didn't see those places on the way up.
Our plans for September are loose. We had hoped to sail with John and Mary Ann in mid September, but that will be put back a month or so. We also had hoped to sail with Sten-Orjan from Sweden for a week, but he had to cancel also. Perhaps 2007 for him. I guess we'll go back down and spend more time in the Chesapeake. There are still numerous Chesapeake gunkholes that we haven't seen and others that we would like to revisit.
That means we'll be making a 3 day passage from Rhode Island to Cape May NJ sometime after labor day. Anybody want to go for a ride?
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Sunday, August 27, 2006
Back On The Water
Rockland Maine
We made it back onboard Tarwathie by 1800 today. It sure feels good to get back on the water.
A longer blog can wait until tomorrow.
Meanwhile, if this blog gets through, it demonstrates that the SSB radio is fixed.
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Saturday, August 19, 2006
A week off
We are in Vermont, enroute to Rome New York to babysit the grandkids for a week.
Tarwathie is in Rockland in the hands of Ocean Pursuits. They will hopefully repair the radar, SSB and wind instruments while we are gone. We also took advantage of the hiatus to take the sails to a sailmaker for mending.
No more blogs this week. If the SSB radio gets repaired, I'll post one on the 28th or 29th
A contestant in the Great Lobser Crate Race
As described in the From The Lobster Fest, one has to be light in weight and fleet of foot to succeed. |
Tuesday, August 15, 2006
Charmed For Lunch
We came into the harbor today and rented a mooring. Belfast is very reasonable and provides good facilities. When you come here be sure to meet harbormaster Cathy. She's a pip.
Our Westsail friends, Don and Margaret met us in town and invited us to their home for lunch. What a treat! They have a charming little cottage in Bayview. Bayview was a former religious retreat with lots of cottages all built around the same time mid 19th century. When Libby and I first set eyes on it, we both exclaimed "Round Lake." Round Lake is a village near Saratoga Springs NY that is also very charming and of the same concept and style as Bayview.
Margaret runs Bayside Cottage Rentals as a business, and Don helps out. They manage weekly rentals for 35 cottages in and near Bayside. It sounds like a rat race. They described for us how they have to scramble every Saturday to turn around the rentals in just 5 hours. One family leaving, clean up, then another family arriving. Their dream is to live the cruising live on Heron, their Westsail 32, much like what Libby and I are doing. Working as hard as they do, it's easy to understand how appealing cruising would be.
Check out their web site. I'm sure that a number of our friends would love one of these Bayside cottages for a vacation.
We heard Margaret and Don both describe how they plan to adapt their life styles and their avocations to accommodate the wishes of the other. Two people that willing to adapt have an excellent chance of succeeding in living their dreams. We wish them fair winds and safe voyages onboard Heron. Hopefully, someday we might meet them in some cruising location.
Margaret is not only lovely but also talented. She does art with ceramics and plastics and she has already figured out how to do it onboard the boat. Perhaps they could supplement their income that way.
Around Penobscot bay
Monday, August 14, 2006
Belfast
Belfast Maine, N 44 44.842 W 68 49.385
Monday, August 14, 2006
Well we reluctantly left Moore's Harbor this morning. Boy did we like
that place. We were driven however by business. I had to check on the progress of the estimate for repairs, and to check with our son John about transportation from Rockland. Our cell phone didn't work on Isle Au Haut (usually a blessing) so we had to leave to find a cell signal. We'll see. Perhaps we can get back there this week.
On the way up here we stopped for lunch at Butter Island. I spotted that on the way to Isle Au Haut last week. Butter Island has something very rare and desireable -- meadows; wild meadows. It's been a long time since we walked in a real meadow on a sunny day, not a hay field, not a lawn but a meadow. Hopefully there would be berries to pick. We anchored, found a trail and hiked up to the top of the hill where the meadow was. It was just as pleasant as we hoped, except that the berries were all picked or dried up. Too late for that. Anyhow, Butter Island is very nice.
After Butter Island we set sail again. The winds were brisk, about 20
knots. I went below for my nap. After the nap Libby said that she and
Tarwathie had been having a great time. We were surging along at more than 7 knots, and Libby said that we passed three larger sailboats as if they were standing still. People keep saying that Westsails are slow. Actually, when the winds are 20 knots or more, she is stiffer and can outperform many boats up to 50 feet long.
Tomorrow I'm going in search of a library in Belfast to see if I can
post these blogs.
Next week we're going to Rome NY to babysit the grandchildren for a
week. Libby really needs grandkid time. Our thought is to leave the
boat in Rockland near the place who will repair her. Perhaps they can
do it while we're gone or upon our return.
My watch is unhappy. It is the kind of watch that automatically
synchronizes with station WWV in Fort Collins Colorado every night.
With nightly synchronizations to the time standard, it is alsmost always accurate to with 0.5 seconds. However, Maine must be too far from Colorado. The watch hasn't succeeded since July 31. Now it is three minutes off. Tsk tsk.
Sunday, August 13, 2006
Another day in Paradise
Heaven aside, the word paradise is used most frequently with reference to tropical places. I love the tropics but I think that the colder climes offer much more beauty. Maine is wonderful. Lake Champlain, and the Baltic in Sweden and Finland, were also wonderful. Norway was stunningly beautiful According to the tales, the waters of British Columbia offer even more of a paradise. I hope to sail there sometime, and to sail to New Zealand too. I vote for temperate paradises over tropical paradises. Nevertheless, we'll soon head south to avoid the cold of winter.
Saturday, August 12, 2006
Never Say Never
Friday, August 11, 2006
Andrews Island
Thursday, August 10, 2006
Rendezvous in Searsport
Tuesday, August 08, 2006
Sailing Days In Port
Sunday, August 06, 2006
The Lobser Fest
Saturday, August 05, 2006
Rockland
Will Dick and Libby ever get to Bar Harbor? Stay tuned for the next episode of the dickandlibby blog.
Friday, August 04, 2006
The Concert
When she conducted the band she had a huge smile on her face.
Thursday, August 03, 2006
Black Smoke
Wednesday, August 02, 2006
Tuesday, August 01, 2006
Familar Territory
I fixed the running lights and contacted the insurance company. They said to wait for an adjustor before doing any repairs.
Northward
Family Day
Kittery Point Maine, N 43 04.963 W 70 43.431
Saturday, July 29 2006
What a great day this was. Janet and Gordie picked us up and drove us to Brian and Lee's camp. The camp is located on a small lake in New Hapshire (I can't remember the name of the lake). There we met with Dot and Art my aunt and uncle, and Brian's chilcren Vanessa and Ryan and Shawn, my cousin Warene with her husband Richard, and my sister Nancy with her family Karl and Lena and Alex. There were also a couple of friends of the kids there to make a total of 19 relatives and friends. This group had never gathered before except for weddings and funerals, yet here we were for an unplanned and spontaneous reunion.
It was great fun. We all got to swap stories. Brian and Lee treated us to swimming, and rides on the Sea Doo and wake boarding behind his speedboat. Brian also cooked a turkey and we had a great barbecue. We all continued until after sunset when we reluctantly parted again. I'm certain that everyone there, young and old, enjoyed themselves thoroughly. Thank you all for the hospitality.
My aunt Dot is 88 but her mind is still sharp. She told me about some family lore, about visiting her grandfather (my great grandfather) George Donovan at his farm at Cape Breton Nova Scotia. He was a fisherman, a farmer and a storekeeper there, apparently a mainstay of that community. Now, the family lands have been sold to the state. It was the first I had ever heard of these ancestors of mine.
Uncle Art is 93, but in very good shape for his age. Art told me about some of his exploits in the South Pacific during WWII. Art served in the Phillipines, and Guadacanal, and on Corrigador. His favorite story was about the day when General MacArthur came ashore on his celebrated return to Corrigador. Art saw him approaching walking through the water, but he didn't like the general because the general had declared the place as secure whereas Art and the others knew that there remained a lot of japs and that the place was dangerous. Art said that he pretended to wash his face, covering it with his hands and bending over. When it was done his buddies told him, "Art, you just mooned General MacArthur!"
My other uncle, George, who was not there today, also has interesting war stories. He was on the second tank to cross the bridge at Remagen Germany. He said that they fully expected to not reach the other side of the bridge alive, but they did.
Struck By Lightning
Kittery Point Maine, N 43 04.963 W 70 43.431
Friday, July 28, 2006
We sailed back down the Piscataqua River this morning without event. We were very conservative in choosing the time so that we did not have strong currents. We learned from a book that the Piscataqua River is the second swiftest commercially navigable river in the USA. What's the swiftest? Maybe the Mississippi. We rented a mooring for two nights at Kittery Point. The location is near the mouth of the river so that we could get in and out easily.
Around three in the afternoon we greeted our guests. Warene and Janet, my cousins, and Richard and Gordon, their husbands. We make a merry group. Janet, Warene and myself are not only cousins but we were childhood playmates. Gordon as it turns out is an experienced boater. He used to be a lobster fisherman here in Portsmouth, and he once sailed from Plattsburg, NY to Fort Lauderdale, FL.
Our plan was to take an evening cruise, but the forecast was for severe thunderstorms so I decided to stay in port. Not all of us were experienced sailors. Warene had thought to wear high heels on the boat. As it turns out, the decision was wise. As the six of us sat below eating dinner, a furious storm came by. It blew up to 42 knots. It rocked Tarwathie enough that everyone had to grab their plates to keep them from sliding off the table. Worst of all was the lightning.
I followed my standard practice and put computers and GPSs and radios in the oven to protect them from lightning. Soon after I did that we suffered a hit. I heard a loud "crack" sound of a spark, and some of the audible alarms on the instruments sounded. I never did hear any thunder. Luckily all six of us were fine. Nobody experienced even a shock. The spark sound came from the neighborhood of the mast where I have a thick copper cable that leads to an under water grounding plate on the hull.
I checked the instruments and stuff. At first I thought that we escaped totally unharmed. Then I discovered that the SSB radio and the radar both appear to be fried. Oh dear. I sure hope that the insurance policy will pick up the bill for that. It could be as much as $6000 to replace those two. I'll find out on Monday.
Sorry blog fans, but I'll be posting much less frequently until the SSB radio is replaced or repaired. The SSB radio was my tool for transmitting blogs from onboard.
We weren't the only victims of the storm. In Portsmouth, across the river, the steeple of the North Church being rebuilt was blown over. In Melrose, where Nancy lives, they had a furious storm and lost power for the first time in years. Apparently the line of storms raged across the whole New England Coast.