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Shake and Break, part 8 - April 30
On Thu, 07 May 2015 15:44:16 -0600, slide wrote:
On 5/7/2015 12:31 PM, Sir Gregory Hall, Esq. wrote: I never felt ok about doing this given the bird s**t I had to rinse off of the decks and the often serious diseases carried in that stuff. I kept a tarp to deploy in cases of rain instead of bare decks. Even so I did the Clorox trick as well. A clean tarp is a much better idea. I would hesitate to drink water gathered off the decks even when Cloroxed but it sure could be used safely for bathing, laundry, etc. I suspect most of the water Skippy collects is used for bathing, cleaning and laundry. I have found that one conceited woman with long hair can use 25-50 gallons of water a day. If you read Skip's recent narrative in whole, you'd see he's rather penurious with his fresh water. He bathes in salt, for example, most of the time. Did I misread or did he not say his *forward* water tank holds 125 gallons. Why, that's totally absurd. If he has an aft water tank of similar size that would mean 250 gallons of water. OMG! Can you say gluttonous waste? I have two water tanks. One is 18 gallons and the second is 12 gallons. They are usually autonomous but can be connected by opening a valve. I also carry two, six-gallon plastic water jugs and five or six one-gallon jugs of the spring water type in various stages of fill. I prefer to haul water from shore to the boat in one gallon jugs as they are ever so much easier to deal with than the heavy six-gallon type. In my case, all my boats have had integrated water systems in the sense that fresh water is fungible with no way to pull water from tank A for washing but tank B for drinking. Even if I closed one tank reserving it for drinking, the lines would contain the lesser quality water. This is why I didn't drink from the deck water although others did. Most bird transmitted disease are from pigeons and the like but seagulls were the source of a disease breakout in NYCity a bit back. One could always boil it in a pinch but that would consume too much stove fuel. All chain rode is unnecessary, destructive of the environment, prohibitively expensive and it causes undue stress on the deck hardware, deck and boat in general. It is also too heavy and doesn't take long to rust. Responsible and wise sailors use a combination of chain and nylon rode. I had that on my previous boat finding no issue with nylon bent to chain but this boat came with all chain. I saw no reason to not deploy it. I'm skeptical that it is more damaging to the sea bottom than rope / chain rode. Only a short length is on the bottom and that is the same whether the rode is partly rope or not. Depends upon the strength of wind and current. In many cases if you have out 100 feet of chain, 80 or so feet can be scraping back and forth along the bottom, wreaking unnecessary havoc on the ecosystem there. I found a few situations where I had to ride a short scope and there the all chain was invaluable. The ONLY time I would not decry all-chain is in areas with coral heads or sharp rock ledges that might chafe through combination rodes. I find it ludicrous that so-called sailors use nylon *snubbers*. I see them struggling with them, leaning over the bow trying to hook them, etc. So freaking stupid when a combination chain/nylon rode eliminates the need for such stupidity. I had a winch but didn't use it all too often. If you need a winch, then either your boat is too large or your body too weak. I'm boatless now but hope to be afloat again in a few years. I will never again buy a large, heavy complex boat like I had before but I don't have an issue with those who wish them. I can remember fewer more pleasurable experiences than, after single handing offshore for a number of days, anchoring in a quiet cove and then going below for a HOT fresh water shower. It was a luxury beyond belief. However, the constant maintenance and cost wore me out. On the balance, I will KISS for sure next time out. Yup, let the pretenders like Skippy have the big, cluttered, system-laden, wallowing well below the load waterline, garbage scows on which they spend 90% of the time they could be cruising working on them instead. Examine his diary entries. Perhaps 5% is about sailing while the other 95% is all about problems he has with one unnecessary system after another. So myopic yet so typical, these days where trying to impress takes precedence over ease of sailing. -- Sir Gregory |
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