Been eating well lately… too well. Going out for breakfast most mornings, if only to the corner store for a muffin, Red Bull, etc., and going out for lunches as well.
A couple nights ago i found myself seated before a well-founded round of plates: tuna sashimi; medium flank steak with a soy drizzle, truffle risotto, and baby asparagus; and key-lime pie to top it off.
Skipped breakfast today and waited too long for lunch, so my purchases were shaped by my stomach: a fine large Fuji apple, a Bolthouse, a dreadfully expensive Pom, and a a large bar of Ghirardelli.
Ah, reeling back from the precipice… i “discovered” the Cash & Carry wholesale place in town today, and stocked up on cases of all those “all too expensive in the BVI” staples, like ramen, tinned tuna, beans, rice, soups, etc. Half the price of what i’ve been paying!
Groceries tend to be expensive here, but also remarkable is the large difference between the lowest and highest selling prices of any single product… it really pays to shop around, and i’m trying to train myself to do so.
May 19, 2006
cash and carry
April 29, 2006
two weeks
Dropped the boys off at the airport this morning, after a couple weeks of fun. Mixed in with all the usual debauchery were a couple sailing days with ’em aboard our yard playboat, an Impulse 21, including the obligatory trip to the Willie T.
The boys really tore into the baot too; Chris wanted a project, so i had him fair my bottom repairs… he went on to sand and fair everything below the sheerline. Whoa… looks like i’ll be painting the topsides after all! Cory and i got thje remaining bits of hardware off and sanded the decks. Rebuilt the winches, rebuilt the forepeak doors, filled the old unused deckfills, chipped and Ospho-ed the iron keel, and started in on removing the window frames.
My next step is a healthy coat of primer to cover up everything, and better show what, if any, further fairing needs to be done. i intend to paint with Interlux Perfection, so i’ve picked up a few quarts of Interlux 404/414 epoxy primer.
April 10, 2006
Centaurea Update
got a few good bits done on the boat this weekend. i chopped and sawed out the last vestiges of the old engine beds for the now-removed Perkins 4-107. The original motor mounts below and aft of the now-removed ones look to be in good shape, and will become the basis of mounting options for the incoming Universal M3-20.
At the other end of the boat, i’ve started work on the inner forestay tang. The existing babystay is in an awkwrad position both above and belowdecks, so i am removing it and installing a proper inner forestay further forward, along with a jibstay on a short bowsprit. The inner forestay tang will come up through the deck immediately aft of the anchor locker lid.
i played around with plywood template stock, hot-gluing pieces together to form a mock-up tang fitting. i want something that attaches to both the slanting aft floor of the anchor locker as well as to the vertical bulkhead forward of the v-berth. The tang pattern i came up with is just about perfect, excepting that it would be expensive to have fabricated… lots of cuts, welds, and 3/8″ stainless plate!
Instead, i am going to use some West-saturated hardwood blocking to support a more conventional SS tang plate; a little less elegant, but loads cheaper and just as strong. With both designs, i’m avoiding placing any strain on the underside of the deckhead itself, instead distributing the load to two oher ‘glassed-in bulkheads.
As part of patterning-out the above bits, i needed better access to the forwardmost areas of the boat. At some point, the thin v-berth matresses have been replaced with the current thick, supportive, and very comfortable ones, with the only trouble being that the doors forward of the v-berth (that provide acces to the under-anchor-locker “cable tier” area) would not open properly; the mattresses where higher than the opening!
i removed the entire door and frame assembly, took it into the shop, and after disassembly, “sectioned” 4″ out of it. Re-assembled, the doors now swing clear of the new, higher mattresses.
Tomorrow: a trip to town, and i’ll have all the fasteners to start the next stage of my main sliding hatch re-build!
April 8, 2006
another reason…
Via the builder’s website, i’ve learned that the new Nigel Irens “fusion schooner” Maggie B. will be attending Antigua Classics this year. This is a boat whose construction and design i have been closely following; a modern high-aspect-ratio gaffer, otherwise traditional in looks, but thoroughly modern in construction. Canadian-built too!
i have to stop keeping track of the boats i’ll be missing out on seeing this year… oh, maybe they’ll stop by here, eh? Just maybe…
