Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#8
![]()
posted to alt.sailing.asa
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
cruisin wrote:
On Jun 14, 7:24 pm, katy wrote: cruisin wrote: On Jun 14, 10:34 am, "Wilbur Hubbard" wrote: "cruisin" wrote in message legroups.com... Not really. It's actually pretty beautiful and the people are actually pretty cool. I love it when I can bash another myth. Anyway, we're stuck here for a bit looking for pipefittings for a new exhaust riser, and a couple bazillion other projects, mostly small but requiring city-type resources. Papeete is a city, all right. Got new logs and pics up on the site, for those interested. Fumbling along living the dream, Mike and Barb s/y Arabella http://www.sailinglinks.com/notes.htm You should have listened to Capt. Neal when he said simplify, simplify, simplify! Now look at you guys. Stuck with more projects than sense. But, there are sailors and there are tinkerers. Tinker away! Wilbur Hubbard I know, Wilbur, and we haven't hardly been sailing at all on this trip. We should have listened to the wise and benificent Capt. Neal when we could have bought a Crapanado 27 with an outboard and a cedar bucket instead of this POS boat. I live every moment consumed with regret. Mike I saw you smirk when you wrote that...say "hi" to Barbi for me...- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Well, ya know, the Admiral says hi back, and wants me to tell you she's not leaving here until we have an autopilot! Not to mention an engine that works, but you can see her priorities. What a complicated mess this boat really is. The wonderful Hydrovane self-steering rig I spent too many boat units getting and installing never really worked yet. The "bulletproof" Robertson autopilot uses too many amps when sailing (it's either that or the fridge, and I like cold beer) plus broke during the crossing, so we've been steering this tub by hand for 3000+ miles. The company is out of business, so getting it fixed is problematical, plus it's kind of intermittant- breaks during a passage, then days after you've arrived in port it decides it wasn't really broken. The docks here, as everywhere but the US, I guess, are wired with 220 volts, so we had to track down the appropriate transformer...then it blew the dock circuit breaker every time we turned on our "AC in" breaker. And on a much grosser note, the blingedy blangedly electric head needs another intimate encounter with yours truly. Luckily the manual one is hanging in there for now. This is the real stuff you deal with while cruising, along with the pink sunsets and drinks by the pool at some luxury hotel. Shoulda bought the Coronado with the purple upolstery and the cedar bucket. Best, Mike 'n Barb s/y Arabella www.sailinglinks.com Nah...just get rid of all the electric stuff....except the fridge...we had an electric toitoi on the 27..hated the thing and it never worked proerly...of course, if it was a house instead of a boat, you'd have to be painting the soffits, raking the yard, fixing the AC or furnace, blah de blah de blah, so I thinnk you still have the better deal...and yeah, I see Barb's point about the autohelm.... |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Tahiti Ketch forum underway | Boat Building | |||
Tahiti Ketch forum is underway | Cruising | |||
Your Boat Sucks If..... | ASA | |||
Ever heard of a steel version of the Tahiti Ketch? | Boat Building |