Letters from Peace Four - 13th July 2006
Rarely does the weather cooperate with our boating plans, but
during the past two weeks it has served our needs perfectly.
Just before they hauled us out, it rained so much we were forced to
rest a lot. Same for the day of the haul which had been a tense time
because it was our first ever haul with this boat. But after that, it
stayed dry almost the whole time so we could sand, repair, and paint
outside all day, every day. We worked to exhaustion and were grateful to do so.
The day we launched again, it stayed dry just until we got all our
equipment back aboard and the anchor set properly at high tide in a nearby
mud flat. Then it rained hard and Peace scrubbed herself nearly clean of
the yard dirt and refilled her water tanks too.
Yesterday and today it has been warm and sunny again so we have moved
the boat to deeper water and begun tightening the foremast rigging, bending
on sails, and tidying up tools etc. I do not think I could have ordered up
a better weather schedule.
July 16 We stopped in Portsmouth last night and boats were sailing in
and out past our anchorage. That harbor has more than its fair share of
yawls, gaffs, and generally well restored classic yachts and even speed
boats. We were out on deck working a new method of tightening the rigging
even more which has resulted in much better support for the foremast, and
people came by to chat so it was a pleasant stay.
This morning we are heading south again but our company is the famous
right whale population around Stellwagon Banks. We saw several on our way
north here, but visibility is better today.
Another thing that is better since painting the bottom is our hull
speed under power in calm conditions we get over 7 knots now. So Nev and I
have decided not to change the carburators on our 9.9 Yamahas after all.
That would have made them into 15 horse motors, but it is not needed now.
With all the repairs done to mast and mast case, we were finally able
to raise the foremain sail with it's recut luff minus the luff pocket which
had chafed through in several places from the halyards. We now have rope
lacings as per the John Leather Gaff Rig book and it raises and lowers with
ease and still sets well. When we can afford it, we will have the main done
the same way. We are just too old to struggle with the luff pocket sail cut
which always bound up on us. If there is a trick to operating that luff
sleeve, we never found it, and we did try!
There are some photographs of Peace at Greene Marine posted on the
Tiki46.com website plus more detailed descriptions of our work done there.
A special request:
Recently, at a pig roast, I met a professor who teaches about the
literature of the sea at university level. Laughing and joking around, I
told him about my sailing letters and recent articles in Multihull Review.
Then he wanted to hear all about us living aboard, and our cruising life.
Well, he was not laughing or joking around when he suggested that I should
write a book! But maybe, I thought, maybe he was just nuts.
So I asked the editor at Multihull Review - the guy paying me money for
those articles I have been writing. He might also be nuts, but it is nice
that hepays me for doing writing which I enjoy. He took the book idea
seriously, offered to edit my work, and was encouraging too. So...
I am starting to consider this idea of actually writing a book and
would be pleased to have some feedback from you readers of my cruising
letters. I would start with my years of solo saling on my old 28 foot
monohull and go right on to this boat's build and cruising life.
There is one problem though. I have terrible handwriting and only have
this tiny pocketmail gizmo and it is too wimpy to write a whole book. I
need a laptop that can run on 12 volts or that I can use with my small
inverter. I do not need a new or very powerful laptop though because I
never go on line and do not need a lot of fancy bells and whistles. I just
need to be able to write and down load onto a floppy disk or CD. It would
be fantastic to also be able to make telephone calls using it while we are
in the Bahamas too. The phones there are incredibly expensive.
If anybody has such a laptop that is not being used and needs a good
home, please contact me at peacefour@pocketmail.com. I am told that some
folks even throw them into the garbage after a few years of use! Due to
recent heavy expenses, I am really looking for something ultra cheap.
INVITATION!
There will be a Polynesian (Wharram) Catamaran Association gathering at
our mooring in Rhode Island over the weekend of August 4, 5, 6 and
attenders are requested to bring simple but healthy food to share. Remember
that we do not have refrigeration on Peace. Please email if you will be
there. Phone 401 261 7816 after 7pm or all day week ends.
All the best,
Ann and Nev
© Anne and Neville Clement, 2004