On 3/31/10 11:43 AM, Tim wrote:
On Mar 31, 8:30 am, wrote:
wrote in message
...
On Mar 30, 3:28 pm, wrote:
On 3/30/10 4:02 PM, Tim wrote:
Yeah, I ahve some jerry cans but they're to heavy, but I couldn't
believe it when the wife said we could carry some fresh water in
gallon milk jugs (huh?) but sounds good to me.
Plastic milk jugs are made of very thin-walled plastic, and can't take
much of a hit before they puncture. Why not buy two six packs of one
pint water bottles, save the bottles as you drink the water, and then
wash them off and refill them?
My little Parker has a 20 or 25 gallon insulated baitwell under the
pedestal seats. But when I have live bait, I keep it in a separate
baitwell, which means the bigger baitwell is available for use as a
cooler. I dump a couple bags of ice in it and stow drinks in it. At the
end of the day, I simply pull the unopened drinks out and let the
baitwell drain on its own accord. I keep my refilled water bottles in
there.
I also have a few igloo coolers of various sizes, and typically take one
of the smaller ones aboard for food storage.
--http://tinyurl.com/ykxp2ym
Well that's what I was thinking about the milk jugs. And really I was
surprised that she mentioned it, because it really seemed below her
order of things to offer the suggestion. Plus, the idea is to keep the
interior as un- cluttered ans possible. That's why I'm thinking on
going with a couple of thin line 5 gal. heavy plastic containers with
either an electric or air pump and using a shower nozzle for supply.
Yes, keep the drinking water in the cooler!
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We freeze gallon jugs of juice and milk for camping and boating trips (also
chicken and meat) and use this to keep other (non frozen) foods cold. We use
everything as it thaws and this saves on ice and cuts out the water pooling
in the bottom of the coolers..- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
Another reason why I wanted to 'try' to use the fridge is for weight.
50 lb fridge loaded is still lighter than a couple big coolers loaded
with ice etc. and mroe compact too! But then again, using a couple
more batteries etc it may be a toss up. But with the batteries etc I
can space them around th hull to where they're not sitting like a
chunk of lead (pardon the pun) in one spot.
That's what I'm looking for is to take advantage of wasted space and
weight distribution on the boat.
Heheheh. Batteries and wires and chargers everywhere...you should call
Froggy in for a consult!
The only small boat I ever owned with an electric fridge was my 25
Parker. It worked perfectly...I tried it once. But after that, I shut it
off permanently and used it for dry storage.
Ice and coolers...nothing beats them on small boats for day and long
weekend cruising. Very little to go wrong, no batteries, wires, charges
with which to fuss.
--
http://tinyurl.com/ykxp2ym