Beryl’s Winter Perch

Beryl Ship's Cat on top of spare sail

In the summer, ship’s cat Beryl spends her time sprawled out on the boat’s sole, taking advantage of close proximity to the year-round cooling of the Pacific waters. This makes a lot of sense because typically summertime Pacific water temperatures are in the 60’s wherever we’ve been and winter temperatures much lower. Water in the 70’s beneath the keel is quite a rare situation aboard Mahdee.

In the winter, Beryl finds the sole a bit cool for her liking and she climbs to higher perches in the boat. The closer to the cabin overhead, the warmer it is of course. We have the old mainsail as a spare stored adjacent the main saloon in an area we call “the storage bed” because it does nothing but store various things for us. In theory, it IS a bed, but… Back to the sail! with all its bronze sail slides attached, weighs over 100 lbs and takes up quite a bit of space as well. We move it rarely since it takes both David and me both to get it to a new location in the boat. The top of the sail sits about 24″ below the overhead and it just so happens that a fan we have hanging high up in the galley behind the solid fuel stove, pushes air across the stovepipe and directly to the area where the spare mainsail resides. This is a prime warm spot.

This year, when it got cooler, Beryl began to hang out near the diesel bulkhead heater — the heater we usually run 24/7 if it’s cold but we’ve decided to not use this year. Instead, we’ve been keeping the solid fuel galley stove stoked with cleaner burning Anthracite from Pennsylvania. It only took her a few days to relocate to a better, warmer perch atop the spare mainsail. There she sits, hours on end, watching all the goings’ on aboard Mahdee.

Swedish Mainsail or Trysail?

We have a photo of Mahdee from a late 1950’s newspaper clipping.  In it, she is sailing downwind under staysail, reefed foresail, and Swedish mainsail. In the pic, according to the caption, she is passing near Gloucester, MA and will touch at Newport and make landfall at Hamilton on her way to the West Indies. A Swedish mainsail is different from the regular one in that its seams are vertical and its size is smaller — much like a winter sail or a sail permanently reefed. We wondered about the use on Mahdee of a Swedish mainsail in that picture until we sailed Mahdee for a bit over a year. Then we totally understood. Her fore-and-aft sail balance is such that it’s desired to frequently sail with the mainsail reefed. Only in the typically mild Southern California sailing have we been able to consistently use the mainsail without a double reef in place. Everywhere else, she’s reefed and I’m thinking about a smaller mainsail. A good part of this is because we sail short-handed: just David and me. With only two of us, we’re extremely cautious about getting too much sail area up and having to deal with it if the wind suddenly pipes up. If we take the jib down, as it is in the newspaper photo, we must take the reefed mainsail down as well in order to keep the helm balanced. A small sail set on the mainmast is the solution.

Mahdee with Swedish Mainsail

I put it on my list of things to buy for Mahdee: Swedish mainsail or a trysail. Back and forth my thoughts go with whether the choice should be one or the other. Right now, I’m leaning towards the trysail and I just happened to run across this lovely video of the Schooner Adventuress with her trysail in use. A perfect example of a trysail in other-than-storm-use! Now I just wonder where they had it fabricated…

Trysail in use aboard Schooner Adventuress

.

The Marlinspike Christmas Decorations

Mahdee Dressed for ChristmasMahdee Dressed for Christmas

The Westpoint Harbor Marina has a tradition of a Christmas decoration contest and winners are recognized at the Christmas party. Last year was our first Christmas here and our main goal was not to be a Grinch–so we needed to put something up.  Lacking any decorations, we purchased about 300′ of lights and ran them up halyards–fore and main–and also around the rub-rail.  And we got a couple of feature items–a baby Christmas moose (something that was probably a big seller in Minnesota, but not so much in California and therefore a pretty good deal) and a twinkling snowflake.  The net result was a big surprise to us, but was probably helped by us being newbies in the marina–we got awarded the 2nd place in the sailboat category.

Christmas lights on MahdeeChristmas Lights On Mahdee

Last January, we also retrieved some of our old things, from a faraway storage location, which included our Christmas decorations from when we lived in a house and decorated heartily for the jolly season of Christmas.  Last year it was too late to use those items by the time we had them, but this year we could.  One thing we decided to use was the old lights–at least 300′ more than last year.  This allowed us to run lights up both masts on flag halyards–about the only lines remaining after raising the other lights–oh and the canoe which is held up off the deck by halyards while in the marina.  Plus we had lights to go around the guard wires and lights for the charthouse and more to put around the cockpit.

Baby Moose for Christmas Really, that IS a baby moose at the helm of Mahdee!

Because the real Grinch this year is the BCDC government agency which is attacking the marina in a devious manner, there is an excellent spirit among the boaters who want to show that BCDC isn’t going to steal Christmas this year.  This meant the competition for Christmas decorating was intense.  Again, our modest goal was to be an “also ran,” and not stand out due to lack of spirit.  So we got out the lights–old and new–and got out the marlin and other ropes to take the tension off the light cords and started rigging.  We didn’t have the flashiest display.  The lighting impact was helped by the fact that none of our immediate neighbor boats had lights and the slip next to us is now empty making our lights more visible.  Our main mast is also one of the tallest in the marina and being on the last slip meant our lights had mostly dark sky behind them when viewing from the marina road.  Nice attributes, but not like some of the vibrant flashing light displays on the other marina boats.   We felt, however, that we had achieved our objectives.

Santa Stop HereSanta Stop Here! sign on Mahdee’s bow just in case Santa should have difficulty finding us.

Curious about how much load we were putting on our electrical system with all the new lights, I put the kilowatt device on the lighting circuit.  The lights alone were drawing the same power as a medium electric space heater–but of course without any of the heat benefit on the inside of the boat.  I mentally totaled up the electric costs considering the pricy local $.38/kWh electricity charges.  More importantly, we don’t want to overload our power connections.  Fortunately, Brenda has been dedicated to using the solid fuel heater on board Mahdee so we have the reserve electrical capacity to run all of those lights without risking an electrical fire in the shore power cord. Lucky us.

Mahdee's Christmas reflectionMahdee’s Schooner Rig Reflection.

The day of the party arrived and so did big winds replacing the calms of the previous and following week.  We had gusts up to 40MPH and as darkness fell the top section of lights on the mainmast above the spreaders were dark.  I lowered the flag halyard to check the plug and it was snug and there were no signs of a broken wire or loose connections in any of the bulbs.  Even though we had wrapped the lights around the flag halyard, I had been concerned about the weight of that light string stressing the copper electrical connections because it is nearly vertical for about 65 feet above the deck.  The judges were already doing the rounds, so I put back up the lights resigned to having the dark gap above the spreaders.

We went with the “more is better” lighting plan.

It was a complete shock then, that at the party in announcing the winning sailboat, they described the light display as visible from the international space station and then said Mahdee had won first place!  Wow! The prize was a very nice wireless printer/scanner that we will be able to use in our workshop.  But I was still curious about why we had won.  By chance, during the party, I ended up talking with one of the judges who complimented the overall lighting display on Mahdee and said the ultimate deciding factor was that the judges didn’t see a single zip tie in the rig–all marlin and knots holding up the lights–which demonstrated a truly nautical dedication to Christmas decorations and an environmental sensitivity that was absent on most of the other boats.  The funny thing is that I never even thought of using zip ties…  Oh, and two days after the party we had another wind storm and that night when the lights came on, even the section above the spreaders on the main mast lit up–fixed by the new winds–I consider it a Christmas miracle.

Google Analytics Alternative