The “Stuff”

Getting together the “stuff” for doing stuff! What fun. Today, David and I drove Buttercup down to our storage garage to make sure our stuff (the wood mostly) was still there and we’d be able to use it to make stuff (the furniture) for Mahdee’s interior. Yesterday, we stopped by the North Island auto hobby and woodworking hobby shop. We’re very excited to learn that there are 4 volunteers that are now keeping the woodworking shop open Saturday through Tuesday. That means that we’ll be able to work in the shop on those days without any “management” duties. We’ll be able to come and go as we please, using the shop as regular customers rather than volunteers on most days! Sweet.

We pulled one of Mahdee’s old cabinet doors out for inspiration since we’ll be making several just like it. I also pulled out the naval architect’s drawings and the photos I took of Mahdee’s limited interior before we bought her. Poor thing, she looks so awful in those photos! I’m really looking forward to getting the main saloon built in first. Finally, we’ll be able to sit somewhere besides the charthouse or on the bed. Oh, luxury.

Let There Be Light

You know, some people decide they’d like a light somewhere. In our case, that somewhere is inside the steering box so that we can see where the steering gear is placing the rudder is in the dark of night. There’s a little beam across the top of the box to mount it under so it will be indirect and shine down on the gear rather than up into our eyes.

Some people just go to the store, maybe the marine store, and buy a light. Perhaps an LED, something pretty, something simple. Buy it, install it.

Then there’s us: David says he’s going to put a light in there before our passage down the coast. I ask when we’re going to the store. He says we’ve already got what we need. Uh, oh. Not “we’ve got a light” but “we’ve got what we need.”

Out come the boxes and bins and David starts poking little bare wire red LED’s from Fry’s into some speaker wire. Five LED’s poked into a length of speaker wire. That’s my light. “Here you go, Brenda. Oh, here’s the liquid electrical tape. You might want to seal up the connections.” So, I get to googe up the wire/LED sandwich with icky black goo.

Other people just buy cute little lights. Nope, not us. We’re definitely the “special” type of people that my mother used to tell me about.

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Follow up after dark. It works. There’s a nice red glow in the case now and one can see the position of the steering gear/rudder in the dark. Cost: $1.00 worth of LED’s, a scrap of speaker wire, and a dabble ($0.50) of liquid electrical tape. 4 zip ties and a few wire clips ($1.00). I suppose it’s worth it for $2.50 installed cost and not much work.

photo ops

Here are some pics of what we’re doing now. Click on the image for a larger view of the same picture.

Every time David sits down in the boat, Beamer jumps in his lap for some petting:

Beamer and David

Mahdee’s temporary slip is between two large sport fishing boats. One moved, so we took a quick picture of her:

In the water

David used a long series of extensions to drill out the wire chase in the top of the mast. It had been closed up around a single wire at some point in the boat’s past:

drill wire chase

Here’s the final hole he drilled. The small rope will be used to pull wires.

ready to pull wires

Here’s the bronze masthead fitting that goes onto the top of the mast that the hole was drilled in. We will be replacing the single light on the top with a tricolor light and a bracket to hold an Airmar weather station.

masthead fitting

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