Thursday, March 25, 2010

Final sanding

Today the weather was cloudy, cold, windy and gray....but we managed to spend the day at the boat and get the remainder of the sanding around the window frames and door frames completed. Once the shrinkwrap is removed we will be able to begin putting the Bristol Finish on the trim. All of the trim requires 4 coats of finish, but this stuff lets you recoat every two hours without sanding between coats. Hopefully within one full day we will be able to get 3 coats on the wood, then wait 24 hours, final sand and put on the finish coat.

It all is really beginning to look like new...another week or so, and this project will be behind us.
Although there is a ton more trim to be done, the doors, frames and windows are the major pieces that make the boat look a world of difference.
The balance of the trim will be completed as the season wears on.

Monday, March 22, 2010

Coating the Doors

Dottie applied her first 3 coats of Bristol Finish to the doors today. They look really great. Such a big difference in the clarity of the grain within the wood, and the color is the real traditional amber of finished teak.

Wednesday the doors will get their final sanding and on Thursday the final coat will be applied.
We will bring the doors up to the boat on Saturday the 27th, and after they are re-attached I will remove the shrinkwrap so that dottie may begin coating the rest of the trim work.

I will post some pictures when the job is complete.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Another project about to begin

Today is Thursday the 18th of March and I just returned from the marina. Another beautiful spring day, I brought up the new air conditioning unit that I purchased at the Annapolis Boat Show back in October.
Todd Walker, who is our marina handyman / fix-it guy will begin installing the new A/C the first week of April. I just wanted to get it out of the box and my barn and set it on the boat for now.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Spring Update # 1

It's been a week already and most of the sanding of the teak is completed. We took home the two doors and are refinishing those in our barn / garage. Today was an excellent day to do that....weather was sunny, calm and in the mid 60's.
Both doors have been sanded, stripped, washed and bleached.
We will begin coating all the teak with a product called Bristol Finish starting this Monday.

Monday, March 15, 2010

2010 Season is underway

Although our marina contract calls for the season to be May 15-Oct 15th, Dottie and I have started our spring rituals of commissioning and projects.
Today and the rest of this week they are calling for temps in the mid-60's during the day. To us, that is spring weather so we have begun sanding and refinishing teak. Our generation of trawlers came with plenty of exterior teak, and we decided to re-finish most of it this spring.
The method in which our boat is shrink-wrapped allows us the opportunity to stand-up and walk all around our decks. So, most of this work will be accomplished prior to the removal of the blue plastic shrink-wrapping.
Actually this is Dottie's project and today she began sanding the cabin house trim. Once that is all done, she will move on to the doing the 2 doors, door frames, then windows and screen frames.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

The best laid plans....oft go astray

As the old Proverb goes:
The Best Laid Plans of Mice and Men Oft Go Astray

and so did our tentative plan as was outlined in our closing post of the 2009 season.
Our plan was NOT to stay at Oak Park Resort Marina this year and do a bit more traveling. We spent the past few months planning and discussing where would go this upcoming season. I even went to the Florida Keys for 6 weeks to search out different marinas and places to lie on the hook. In all of our discussions and planning we forgot one little detail.
Although, not little at 90lbs, Toby our Golden Retrevier,


never crossed our minds. You see, Toby gets sea-sick, and like most cruisers we just forgot about his illness and figured we would bring him with us.....but that can't be done.
Toby will turn 10 this July and for the past 8 years he has spent his summer weekends in a kennel. He is so adapted to that kennel that he even know which is his cage and his run and goes right to it the moment we bring him there on a Friday, and he must know the sound of our car come Monday mornings because he is up and ready to go home every weekend. The first time we brought Toby aboard our boat, he got sick within minutes and after a visit to his vet, we were told it is simple sea-sickness. The vet told us to give him a Dramamine or Bonine and that should do it, but neither did the trick. Actually both meds made him even worse on the boat, and the vet said our other alternative was a injected drug, but that the drug may cause his disposition to change. We did not want that and decided that Toby was just not a "boat dog". The three of us learned to live with that fact.
So, after returning from Florida last week, I signed a contract with the marina and once we get launched, we will be residents there for the summer of 2010....again.