So lets see. We last left this post leaving Swansboro, NC and happy to report we made it to mile 278.2 despite the cold front that blew through. Lucky to make it thru Onslow Bridge – they shut it down 1/2 hour after we passed through it bec…
Refit Blog #10 – It’s Snowing in the Boat Shed
Starr Refit Blog #10 – Weeks 10-12
Weeks of Nov. 25 to Dec. 13 – It’s Snowing Inside the Boat Shed at PacFish
We are nearing the end of the itchy fiberglass sanding work. Since my last report we have removed the transom and top deck forms. Sharry calls me “Frosty the Snowman” when I come home from work, and it’s not because of the recent cold weather but because I am covered with fiberglass dust.
Our work on Starr is Itchy and Noisy! Here is a short video looking down the port side deck:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WAvVNda-QZg
And another where Pablo is die-grinding on the top deck
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=agF7i8P30cw

The transom with the foam removed

The top deck with the form removed
By this past weekend Dana and his guys had finished one full week of grinding away 16 years of accumulated bottom paint. They masked the bottom from the boot stripe down, and ground off the bottom using 8″ grinders with 40 grit paper. It was a very messy job.

The bottom is masked off

A clean bottom ready for barrier coat touch up and new bottom paint
Here is what they looked like all week long

The Men in Blue, Dana and his guys
While Dana and his crew were glassing and grinding the connections between the existing and the new sections, we (Randy, Dave, Tom, Nick, Brandy and I) were inside working on the mechanical and electrical systems.
The grey water tank top manifold was rotten, so Nick Parks is building a new one and replacing the PVC piping with Mepla. Mepla, is a triple layer of pipe which consists of an inner layer of cross-linked polyethylene, a middle layer of welded aluminium, and a protective outer layer of HDPE.
http://www.international.geberit.com/

The rotten grey water tank top
Nick Park installing the Mepla piping
Brandy and Dave spent a week in the shop polishing the stainless and getting parts ready to send to either be
re-chromed or power coated.

Brandy with the polisher

Brandy back on board Starr looking for tools
Back outside we (Dana, Pablo, Chris, along with Randy and I) were attaching the pre-laminated transom deck. The top was loaded down with 12×12’s to compress the pro-set adhesive connection.

The transom loaded with 12×12 timbers for compression
The top deck is being faired out using Awl Grip’s Awl Fair

Sophan with fairing compound

Screeding the fairing compound

Dana with jig for shaping the gutters
Over at SBMC, Aaron McCrum, S3 Maritime’s fabrication specialist, was building Starr’s new wheelhouse console out of aluminum.
The new wheelhouse cowling

Aaron McCrum putting finishing touches on the console.
Now that the transom deck is in place, we are getting ready to make the patterns for the new teak decking. I did get a bid from a well-known national teak decking company that does a lot of work for our Northwest boat builders. Paul Zimmer, who is the partner at S3 Maritime, heard that I was about to let the bid, and Paul suggested that I talk to Adam Karpenske, a young and talented local shipwright. I wasn’t aware of Adam working in our neighborhood, but given the choice, I prefer to give my business to our local craftsmen.

Adam Karpenske
http://karpenskemarine.com
While I’m talking about talent, I’m continuously amazed at the talent that exists here in Ballard, “the center of the maritime universe”:
A few days ago I went looking for Chuck Albertson, who was just finishing managing a “new build” 58ft x27ft combination fishing boat which can carry over 200 tons of fish. Northern Marine had just launched the boat, and Chuck was overseeing the final touches here in Ballard. Chuck said the boat was tied up next door to Starr at Ballard Oil. I went next door to find it, and saw a Seine boat that from a quick glance looked new, and I scrambled over the rail.

The Arctic Fox from Petersburg, AK
What caught my eye first was the beautiful stainless hydraulic piping. Out of the engine room walked Paul Hoffman, the hands-on owner of Pacific Marine Hydraulics. I also noticed that the boat I’m on isn’t the one Chuck was managing. The worn wood-clad decks show that this boat has been hard at work. Paul told me about this boat, and it is one highly productive fishing machine. Paul installed the hydraulics on the Arctic Fox several years earlier. Daniel Crome, the 30-something-year-old Skipper/Owner is from Petersburg, Alaska and works 5 different fisheries. The single screw boat runs 11 months of the year, fishing King Crab, Salmon, Dungeness Crab, Heering and Sardines, and ranges from Alaska to Northern Oregon.

Paul Hoffman installed this hydraulic system many thousand’s of miles ago
These hard working machines are all single screw and can’t afford any down time.
One of many details that Paul was pleased with on this boat included the through-bulkhead JIC unions that are CNC cut and fabricated at JK Fabrication. These unions allow the 3000psi hi pressure oil to connect leak free thru the bulkheads and deck plates. http://www.jkfabrication.com
Paul had the hydraulic valves Hot Spray Zinced, and then epoxy painted. They look like new after years of continuous duty. What he didn’t mention, but is clear to me is that his stainless tubing workmanship is “pure art”! When Paul sends his work to sea it keeps working!
I finally caught up with Chuck. He had moved the Optimus, the new Northern Marine Combination Seiner/Crabber/Everything, over to the West Wall at Fisherman’s Terminal.

The Optimus from Sitka, AK
The hydraulic system on Optimus was built right next door by Puget Sound Hydraulics.
http://www.pugetsoundhydraulics.com
Take a look at the Stainless hydraulic piping on Optimus

Optimus hydraulics
Meanwhile back in Starr’s engine room, I’m “re-arranging the furniture”. I’m moving things around: like changing the orientation of the sea chest, moving the diesel furnace from the port over to the starboard side, replacing the hydraulic manifold with a more compact one made of stainless, and relocating the pumps for the A/C system for easier servicing. I’ll talk about that some other time.
Next week we will be moving on to more fairing, and our goal is to have the fairing completed by January 1 and start working on priming the hull and house.
It feels good to be putting this awful, noisy, messy, nasty, dirty work behind us.
Don
Refit Blog #10 – It’s Snowing in the Boat Shed
Starr Refit Blog #10 – Weeks 10-12
Weeks of Nov. 25 to Dec. 13 – It’s Snowing Inside the Boat Shed at PacFish
We are nearing the end of the itchy fiberglass sanding work. Since my last report we have removed the transom and top deck forms. Sharry calls me “Frosty the Snowman” when I come home from work, and it’s not because of the recent cold weather but because I am covered with fiberglass dust.
Our work on Starr is Itchy and Noisy! Here is a short video looking down the port side deck:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WAvVNda-QZg
And another where Pablo is die-grinding on the top deck
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=agF7i8P30cw

The transom with the foam removed

The top deck with the form removed
By this past weekend Dana and his guys had finished one full week of grinding away 16 years of accumulated bottom paint. They masked the bottom from the boot stripe down, and ground off the bottom using 8″ grinders with 40 grit paper. It was a very messy job.

The bottom is masked off

A clean bottom ready for barrier coat touch up and new bottom paint
Here is what they looked like all week long

The Men in Blue, Dana and his guys
While Dana and his crew were glassing and grinding the connections between the existing and the new sections, we (Randy, Dave, Tom, Nick, Brandy and I) were inside working on the mechanical and electrical systems.
The grey water tank top manifold was rotten, so Nick Parks is building a new one and replacing the PVC piping with Mepla. Mepla, is a triple layer of pipe which consists of an inner layer of cross-linked polyethylene, a middle layer of welded aluminium, and a protective outer layer of HDPE.
http://www.international.geberit.com/

The rotten grey water tank top
Nick Park installing the Mepla piping
Brandy and Dave spent a week in the shop polishing the stainless and getting parts ready to send to either be
re-chromed or power coated.

Brandy with the polisher

Brandy back on board Starr looking for tools
Back outside we (Dana, Pablo, Chris, along with Randy and I) were attaching the pre-laminated transom deck. The top was loaded down with 12×12’s to compress the pro-set adhesive connection.

The transom loaded with 12×12 timbers for compression
The top deck is being faired out using Awl Grip’s Awl Fair

Sophan with fairing compound

Screeding the fairing compound

Dana with jig for shaping the gutters
Over at SBMC, Aaron McCrum, S3 Maritime’s fabrication specialist, was building Starr’s new wheelhouse console out of aluminum.
The new wheelhouse cowling

Aaron McCrum putting finishing touches on the console.
Now that the transom deck is in place, we are getting ready to make the patterns for the new teak decking. I did get a bid from a well-known national teak decking company that does a lot of work for our Northwest boat builders. Paul Zimmer, who is the partner at S3 Maritime, heard that I was about to let the bid, and Paul suggested that I talk to Adam Karpenske, a young and talented local shipwright. I wasn’t aware of Adam working in our neighborhood, but given the choice, I prefer to give my business to our local craftsmen.

Adam Karpenske
http://karpenskemarine.com
While I’m talking about talent, I’m continuously amazed at the talent that exists here in Ballard, “the center of the maritime universe”:
A few days ago I went looking for Chuck Albertson, who was just finishing managing a “new build” 58ft x27ft combination fishing boat which can carry over 200 tons of fish. Northern Marine had just launched the boat, and Chuck was overseeing the final touches here in Ballard. Chuck said the boat was tied up next door to Starr at Ballard Oil. I went next door to find it, and saw a Seine boat that from a quick glance looked new, and I scrambled over the rail.

The Arctic Fox from Petersburg, AK
What caught my eye first was the beautiful stainless hydraulic piping. Out of the engine room walked Paul Hoffman, the hands-on owner of Pacific Marine Hydraulics. I also noticed that the boat I’m on isn’t the one Chuck was managing. The worn wood-clad decks show that this boat has been hard at work. Paul told me about this boat, and it is one highly productive fishing machine. Paul installed the hydraulics on the Arctic Fox several years earlier. Daniel Crome, the 30-something-year-old Skipper/Owner is from Petersburg, Alaska and works 5 different fisheries. The single screw boat runs 11 months of the year, fishing King Crab, Salmon, Dungeness Crab, Heering and Sardines, and ranges from Alaska to Northern Oregon.

Paul Hoffman installed this hydraulic system many thousand’s of miles ago
These hard working machines are all single screw and can’t afford any down time.
One of many details that Paul was pleased with on this boat included the through-bulkhead JIC unions that are CNC cut and fabricated at JK Fabrication. These unions allow the 3000psi hi pressure oil to connect leak free thru the bulkheads and deck plates. http://www.jkfabrication.com
Paul had the hydraulic valves Hot Spray Zinced, and then epoxy painted. They look like new after years of continuous duty. What he didn’t mention, but is clear to me is that his stainless tubing workmanship is “pure art”! When Paul sends his work to sea it keeps working!
I finally caught up with Chuck. He had moved the Optimus, the new Northern Marine Combination Seiner/Crabber/Everything, over to the West Wall at Fisherman’s Terminal.

The Optimus from Sitka, AK
The hydraulic system on Optimus was built right next door by Puget Sound Hydraulics.
http://www.pugetsoundhydraulics.com
Take a look at the Stainless hydraulic piping on Optimus

Optimus hydraulics
Meanwhile back in Starr’s engine room, I’m “re-arranging the furniture”. I’m moving things around: like changing the orientation of the sea chest, moving the diesel furnace from the port over to the starboard side, replacing the hydraulic manifold with a more compact one made of stainless, and relocating the pumps for the A/C system for easier servicing. I’ll talk about that some other time.
Next week we will be moving on to more fairing, and our goal is to have the fairing completed by January 1 and start working on priming the hull and house.
It feels good to be putting this awful, noisy, messy, nasty, dirty work behind us.
Don
Refit Blog #10 – It’s Snowing in the Boat Shed
Starr Refit Blog #10 – Weeks 10-12Weeks of Nov. 25 to Dec. 13 – It’s Snowing Inside the Boat Shed at PacFish
We are nearing the end of the itchy fiberglass sanding work. Since my last report we have removed the transom and top deck forms. Sharry …
Refit Blog #10 – It’s Snowing in the Boat Shed
Starr Refit Blog #10 – Weeks 10-12Weeks of Nov. 25 to Dec. 13 – It’s Snowing Inside the Boat Shed
We are nearing the end of the itchy fiberglass sanding work. Since my last report we have removed the transom and top deck forms. Sharry calls me
Martinique and Dominica
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We spent about
a week in Le Marin in Martinique. It was
very calm there and the water was surprisingly clean and clear. There were quite a few boats anchored near
but we found a nice spot. Access to the
town was made easy by numerous dingy docks.
Emily got an eye exam and 2 new pairs of glasses with detachable
magnetic sunglasses for less than $200 US.
Tom refilled some more prescription drugs and all they needed to see was
an old Rx bottle. It should be this easy
in the USA!
we headed overnight to the north of Dominica and dropped the hook in the harbor
of Portsmouth. There we enjoyed a hike
up to Fort Shirley. This English
colonial fort overlooks the harbor and is among the ruins found at the Cabrits
Historical and Marine Park. It was fun hiking with the other kid boats.
were die-hard hikers and they organized for us to hike segment 12 of the Waitukubuli
Trail.
turned into a 6 hour slog up some pretty steep and muddy trails. Several sections were so overgrown that it
was hard to determine where the trail was and we were reminded of some of the “death
march” hikes we did with Lovina. Kim slipped and fell at one point and stretched
a tendon in her knee that would slow her down for several weeks.
the way and saw some land crabs. Most
surprising was the “elephant” we saw on the trail!
we also organized a guided van tour with 9 other cruisers and kids and did an
inland trip. We first hiked about an
hour deep in the forest to see the Chaudière
Pool. The fast flowing waterfall had
carved a deep pit in the rocks that allowed diving the 20 feet into the pool
below. Everyone had a chance and the
cool clear fresh water felt good after the hike.
decent restaurant lunch, we visited the descendants of the Caribs, the first
inhabitants of Dominica, or Waitukubuli, as they called it. We visited a bakery where we bought warm
coconut and ginger cassava bread and had a chance to buy more of the baskets
that they weave here. The Caribs live in
eight villages in this reservation.
roads our guide stopped several times to shows us cinnamon, bay leaf,
grapefruit and orange trees and we picked great bunches of samples as well as
lemon grass to make tea. Many of the
beaches were all fine black sand from the volcanic activity.
some time exploring the unique Red Rocks, a caved landscape in Calibishie,
which also offered a great view of some neighboring French islands and the
beautiful north-east coast of Dominica.
a week but too soon, the group decided to move north to Guadeloupe and visit
the Saints. Come along with us.
Martinique and Dominica
We spent about a week in Le Marin in Martinique. It was very calm there and the water was surprisingly clean and clear. There were quite a few boats anchored near but we found a nice spot. Access to the town was made easy by numerous …
December 14, 2013, Saturday
Panama City Marina, Panama City, FL: We were greeted by dauphins again when we left Joe’s Bayou anchorage at 06:15 and they followed us in the channel for while. We had 3 foot rollers on Chactawhatchee Bay. At first we thought we…
December 14, 2013, Saturday
Panama City Marina, Panama City, FL: We were greeted by dauphins again when we left Joe’s Bayou anchorage at 06:15 and they followed us in the channel for while. We had 3 foot rollers on Chactawhatchee Bay. At first we thought we…













