Fixing things

In David’s last post, he mentions fixing the windlass brake he also mentions “problems with the mainsail leather straps”…well, those problems were that numerous of the old lashings holding the bronze cars to sail managed to break as the wind piped up on our new year’s eve sail. Just as things were getting “nice” with some good healthy winds it was chink, chink, chink, as each of the old lashes broke and the bronze cars slid down the track and hit the car below it. We doused the sail after about 6 broke free (click on this link and you’ll see a pic I took looking up at the problem. Just below the spreaders you’ll see one good car and then three eyelets which aren’t attached to the track. Then, a bit further down, another!). At the time, we didn’t know if the breakage was just the few old lashings or if it was happening to new lashings, too. As it turned out, it was just the few old ones left.

David and I spent last Saturday, at anchor “fixing”. David doing his rivets on the brake and me putting new leather lashings onto the remaining cars that had had (or still had) old leather lashings. I’d already done about 3/4 of them with new leather before putting up the sail, so my part took very little time. The sail is heavy, so I just took most of the luff off of the track and used some line to tie the sail down to the cabin top so it wouldn’t blow away while I worked.

We planned on sailing Sunday, but David and I ended up taking much of that day working on the rigging–me splicing thimbles into running rigging, sewing leather chafe guard over blocks and fittings which remain aloft on the topping lift and David making a becket for a block he’d rebuilt to be used for the staysail (and installing it) as well as climbing the mainmast to install my newly made topping lift.

David drilling for the rivets in the newly painted steel ring. You can see the uninstalled brake pad/shoe in the bottom of the picture, btw :

drilling

The finished rivets:

done

My “work area” of sail tied to the cabin top, reel of spare anchor rode as a seat, Latigo leather laid out on the deck for cutting into strip:

sail1

I’m happy to be done with my work–here I’m showing off a sail slide lashing:

sail2

So I have the flu

I wondered what it was going to be like to be sick aboard. Pretty bad. I’ve had the flu for almost 3 days, seemed to turn the corner last night and was finally able to keep clear liquids down. Keeping my fingers crossed that I’ll be back fit as a fiddle in a couple days. Today is my birthday and rather than splurge on a nice dinner at our favorite restaurant (yuck! when you’re sick that’s the last thing you want) we’re splurging on a day and night at a nearby yacht club. Shore power and hot showers! Oh, what a fine birthday present that will be for me.

I did learn that Beamer the cat makes a very fine heating pad. He’s a nice little source of BTU’s 🙂

Storm casualties

I am really bummed. I’ve just learned that a live-aboard family here in San Diego lost their boat during the gale last week. They are a very cute family–a couple with three small children–8, 6, and 2 and a little dog. Their boat was broken up during the storm. Gone. I know they are OK but I’m so sorry for them. I will write more, later…

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