Olympia is getting closer!

This is the latest report from the ship.  As you can see, they’re pretty mellow about issuing their reports.


25/Sept/2014 12:00hrs LT   –    20:00hrs GMT
21*43 N  –  109*23 W
Wind: NW  2 – 3  Bft
Swell : NW  1.5 mtrs
Speed: 13.74 kn
Miles steamed last 23hrs : 316 MILES
Miles to go next port Balboa : 2042 miles
Eta Panama (transit only) 01/Oktober   –  18/00HRS
Vessel pre-booked for Canal Transit 02/October
Eta Port Everglades 06/Oktober  PM

One point of sanity for me is watching the numbers drop as the ship approaches the Panama Canal.  By this time, if ship did only 300 miles per day, she would be 1,442 miles from the Canal.  I can wrap my head around that number for sure.

So what do I do with myself these days?  Pace.  Pace and plan.  Pace, plan and panic.

I content myself with looking at the various parts of the build process until I think I can build a 55 myself – well, at least as part of the build crew.  I ask myself questions, some of which I answer, some of which I don’t want to answer.  

I am attending the Rendezvous in Solomons next month.  I’m hoping that while I’m there, we will be getting pictures of the offload.  I decided to go to the Rendezvous instead of standing on a dock for hours burning vacation days when I could actually be learning something.  I do have tickets booked for the week after the Rendezvous to finally lay eyes on the image I’ve had glued to the back of my eyes since what seems like forever.  

I must confess that there is degree of apprehension about this meeting.  While I’m out of my mind excited to finally see the real Olympia, the specter of seeing her without Tom by my side will be something to reckon with.  I will have my beloved Laura by my side however – one needs to share this kind of surreal moment with a very special person.

So friends, just a few more posts until the real deal is here.  I have a feeling we are not going to be disappointed by Olympia in all her glory.  The “home of the gods” is coming home to me at long last.

Day 260…Saturday Drive

Welcome to day 260 of  365 photos…last night at bedtime, I decided that I would take a Saturday drive to Lake Mattamuskeet.  I was pretty sure that there would not be a lot going on yet but I wanted to be sure. I was out of the house by 7AM and away I went. Mr. […]

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Five Year Report

 

Five years ago this month i was fearful, excited, eager and apprehensive as i left the comfort of my lifetime home, Puget Sound. As Stephen Stills said at Woodstock, “this is our first gig and we are scared shitless” that sort of wraps up how i felt. Like CSNY, it all turned out brilliantly. Today i have traveled half the globe, been to dozens of countries, lived within many cultures and had the experiences few will ever attain. Each year i do a report in sections: boat, voyage, crew, captain.

THE BOAT

Again Furthur as performed miraculously, little problems, some maintenance, some new items. We now have 6,645 hours on the Cummins QSL 9 engine. That is more than any other Selene and twice as much as most boats get in a lifetime. The oil is still clean at the 300 hour oil changes and we have not used a drop of oil between changes. Sometimes i get a little smoke at the exhaust but that is usually fuel related, recently i had fuel from two different sources in the two tanks, running on one i got smoke, switched tanks and clean as a whistle. The perils of third world cruising.

i am now in Thailand where i always do major work and catch up on things i need help on or ya things i just do not want to do. My Tecma heads have been incredible, my guest head gets more use than any non commercial toilet on the sea! With up to 5 girls on the boat at once its life is not easy. The waste hoses get clogged with salt residue and constrict like hardening arteries. Also i have not used the holding tank in 5 years and do not intend on using it. So we cut the hose run in half, eliminating the Y valve and preplaced all the hoses on both heads. We are replacing all the components, valves, motors and switches.. should be smooth sailing.

The big addition this year was to add solar panels, clearly in the “why didn’t i think of this before” as i am always were the sun shines! so now we get 900 watts of rays from the sun, enough to cover most of our daily use at anchor.

As a past Commander of the United States Power Squadron and certified old school navigator, this comes hard, but after going half way around the world and never looking at a chart, never once, it is time to acquiesce to the digital age. I have 4 computers with two navigation systems and 5 GPS’s working on them. The piles of unused charts that take up the area designed for an ice maker are going away, and we are getting a real icemaker!

In Sand Diego i installed a small A/C unit in the pilot house, a typical sea water cooled system. It has never worked, never run for more than a week without failing. There is an aircon/refrig guy here i really like, he is the one to get my Frigaboat freezer running perfectly. He took one look and determined the hoses were the wrong type and collapsed easily. They replaced the hoses with the proper ones, rebuilt the motor and after test period all is well. The most common complaint by the crew is the lack of air circulation and heat in the guest stateroom. i have pondered solutions with no luck but the pilot house AC sits right on top of the room, so they ducted vents into the two staterooms and yahooo AC !! i warned the current girls that the past crews will be very jealous!!

i am hauling out to replace my PSS shaft log, it has served ten years and so many hours and it is just a good idea to replace it. We might pull the stabilizer that we did not redo last year as well. A touch up on the bottom paint and new zincs and a way we will go. Interestingly the zincs have lasted two years, we spend so little time in marinas and i think the 220v system creates far less stray current than the 110v US systems.

So we will embark on our next big adventure in October, back to the Philippines with the boat standing tall and cool drinks in our hands.

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Sept. 26 – Jacksonville, FL

Jacksonville Free City Dock at Sisters Island

“We are tied to the ocean. And when we go back to the sea, whether it is to sail or to watch – we are going back from whence we came.”—John F. Kennedy

We’ve been in Jacksonville for six months…way too long for our nomad spirit. I can’t say it’s been boring, we’ve explored the St. John’s River, worked on our teak, had time to play with our grand daughter, got to welcome our grandson into the world and had a lot of quality time with him and his parents and we’ve bought a new boat. Although we haven’t spent much time on the water, it certainly has been a busy season. Our plan now is to move The Pearl south to Harbortown Marina in Ft. Piece. We will leave her there until we return after Christmas and move to Marathon for the winter. Once we have her settled we will come back to Jacksonville and get the Texas Pearl ready for her trip home to Texas.

Things on the Hatteras are going well, the name has been changed, the prop shaft packing has been changed, the hull polished and the bottom sanded and ready for a coat of paint. She should be put back in the water by Monday. In the mean time we are starting our trip south on The Pearl. The FEC Railroad Bridge in Jacksonville has been operating on a limited schedule the last few months and was closed completely last week. We left our slip in time to make the 2:00 opening this afternoon and are spending the night at the free dock at Sisters Creek. We arrived at the free dock just in time to have happy hour with another couple from St. Pete. The dock is part of a park and is very remote…a nice change for us. The view of the water is pretty and I’m sure if it wasn’t so windy we’d see lots of shore birds…at least the wind will keep us cool tonight. Tomorrow we will move to Beach Marina at Jacksonville Beach to enjoy their free docking and Tiki party they offer on the last Saturday of the month.

The FEC Railroad Bridge in downtown Jacksonville is opening…we are finally out of here

Newport Boat Show: Part 5 – Time to Celebrate

Reader Note: It’s been a busy 12 days since were returned from Newport.  Time to catch up.The Newport Boat Show ended on Sunday, September 14 at 5:00 PM . My Outer Reef friends asked if they could blow our Kalenberg (read as very loud) air horn as…

Day 259…Bad Settings – Bad Photos

Welcome to day 259 of  365 photos…Did you know that bad settings and bad form equals bad photos?? Well, duh!! It seems that is a lesson that I keep forgetting! *sigh* It was another gray, drizzly morning but I decided to take a walk in the park anyway. One thing nice about walking on days […]

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Do not step in the wet epoxy

then walk in the house and across the kitchen floor. Don’t ask me how I know!  :-(Today I started filling the kerfs in the bottom panel on the starboard side. These needed to be filled before any fiberglassing takes place.I know it looks a little …

FPB 64-10 Launches, FPBs 78-3 and 64-11 Begin Construction – Posted by Sarah

We are pleased to report that FPB 64-10 has begun her sea trials. Riptide is sitting well on her lines and happy to be afloat. The roof structure has been installed on FPB 78-1. The engine room of FPB 78-1 looking from aft to forward. The bulkhead cutouts outboard will eventually have bolted cover plates. […]

Savory or Sweet Breakfast

Savory or sweet, that is the question when it comes to breakfast preference and it isn’t really that easy a question. I’ve done a couple of random surveys, but the results have been very inconclusive because people said either both or depends. Perhaps the … Continue reading

Day 258…Foggy Day

Welcome to day 258 of  365 photos…it was a foggy day today. Last night we had this beautiful red sky at sunset and I thought today would be sunny and bright. That was not to be – we had the second foggy, rainy day in a row. Showers prevailed. This was the sky last night. […]

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