Archive for July, 2008

Jalina, the Leisure 17

July 17th, 2008

Strictly, since this blog is about Kudu the Corribee, this post is a bit off topic, but I thought since it’s boat related I’d post it anyway. I saw in the blog stats that somebody had visited the site after searching for “leisure 17 yacht adventures”, well, this is one. I wrote it a few years ago but dug it out of an old website of mine to post here. The first part essentially reflects what I’ve written in the Introduction, and then it goes on to describe my first misadventure with the little Leisure 17. It also gives some idea as to my sailing experience, or lack thereof. Enjoy….

I’d been looking at buying a boat for a while, a search that started with narrow boats, instigated by too much noise from the neighbours in my flat and the realisation that even though I’m reasonably well paid, I couldn’t afford a house that I would be at all happy to live in and indeed give the majority of my wages to do so. I can’t remember how but I decided that living on a narrow boat, on the relatively quiet canals around Lancashire, would be a life perfectly suited to me. Well, perhaps not my taste in loud techno and rock, but I could have compromised a little.

After much research and even viewing a few boats I depressingly realised that I couldn’t afford it. The cheapest boat I saw was £16,000 and that was in dire need of expensive welding work and a partial refit. I simply didn’t have that much cash lying around and the three years following my 18th birthday created a not so marine mortgage friendly credit history, so I reluctantly gave up that idea for the timebeing (I’ll be back on it later in my life with more money!).

Still, the outcome of my barge hunting did plant a little seed in my head. I wanted a boat, no matter what it was. I looked at all sorts, from yachts to motorboats, but everything was above my budget, so eventually I was forced to the conclusion that boating is for either rich people, or those with a nice chunk of equity in their house.

Time passed but oneday while casually browsing ebay, I stumbled accross Jalina. She was a Leisure 17 sailing boat, and at just £900 was kind of n my price range. Well, actually I didn’t even have £900 lying around, but had a £300 deposit and decided I could raise the rest oneway or another, so I bought her. I do things like that – live life on a whim and worry about the consequences later. It’s really pisses some people off, who like to plan every little detail, and while it does drop me in the shit occasionaly, it does make for an interesting life, if not always enjoyable.

Having viewed the boat and paid the deposit I had one month to find the rest of the cash. Hmm, easier said than done. I had enough spare income to pay the remaing £600 in two months, but not one as the seller demanded. Actually, that’s another one of my non-virtues; impatience. I can’t wait for anything, if I’ve set my mind on something I have to do it right away, and so set about doing so. My girlfriend at the time hated my distaste for planning anything but was always up for an adventure or two, so with minimal effort I sold the idea to her and she graciously lent me the entire contents of her student overdraft and even drove up to York with me to pick it up – thankyou Sarah.

Great! I now own a boat, what do I do with it? Well, I towed her back from York to Preston on an unstable trailer that I later found out had partially siezed brakes, ran out of petrol on the M65, and eventually got Jalina to Douglas marine boatyard at Hesketh Bank, just outside of Preston. I spent the following two weeks sanding, painting, varnishing and anti-fouling until she’s was finally ready for the water.

I was the happiest man alive on that day. I mean, I’m sure it’s a fantastic feeling to take delivery of a £100,000 Benetaeu, but you’ve not spent hours in the wind and rain, scraping, cleaning, painting, struggling to put the mast up, rewiring bits of radio coax, and probably not spent every spare penny you didn’t have to do all that. Nope, this boat was as good as any £100k cruiser in my eyes.

Now, before I continue with Jalina I’m going to head off on a tangent for moment. During my hunt for a boat, and even when I’d dismissed the idea as a dream, I was going out on sailing lessons with a chap called Geoff from southport sailing school. He’s a marvelous guy, an ex school teacher who’d, in his retirement, ended up teaching people how to sail dinghys on Southport marine lake. I remember the first time I went out with him, which was the first time I’d set foot in a boat since partaking in an ocean youth club weekender when I was in school. It was blowing a force 4, and whilst Geoff was happy to take me out on the lake, he was a bit reluctant to let me on the tiller, because dinghys don’t have keels to keep them upright, and Southport marine lake isn’t the kind of water you really want to get a mouthful of. I think the wind must of calmed very slightly while we were out, so he decided to let me have a go. I was hooked instantly, this was great fun, and despite nearly dunking us both in the water after failing to let out the main sheet when a gust hit, I thought I was getting the hang of it quite quickly.

I went on to do a few lessons with Geoff, and basically now knew how to sail… obviously, sailing on a lake requires far fewer skills than sailing in the sea, and I’m not stupid enough to think otherwise, but I could sail in any direction the wind allowed and was thouroughly addicted to it all by now and wanted to gain some experience for myself by buying my own dinghy. Although I can’t recall exactly, I think looking for a dinghy is probably what landed me on ebay when I saw Jalina, who’s by now looking rather sexy (seriously, the Leisure 17 is a beautiful boat) tied to the pontoon at Hesketh Bank.

So, back to Jalina… Every night after work I’d head up the boatyard, just to sit on my boat and watch the ducks and the river coming and going. I even spent a night on her with Sarah and a bottle of wine. Even though it was only March at this point and still quite cold, I was happy to be out in the countryside doing something different, something constructive instead of sitting in the pub all weekend and feeling crap the following Monday.

The weekend after spending the night on Jalina, I planned to take her for a little trip down the river. The rivers Douglas and Ribble joined about a mile away from the boatyard, so I thought I’ll wait for the tide, then sail down the Douglas and up the Ribble to Preston docks, where we could grab a quick coffee at Preston Marina before sailing back. I say sail but it was mostly under power because both rivers point pretty much towards the prevailing wind, so anything other than a dead run require way to much tacking or gybing to make it practicle, at least with my inexperience.

A couple of minutes after the bore hit the end of the pontoon, Sarah, me, and Jalina cast off on our maiden voyage. I pointed the boat in the right direction, and Sarah kept me plied with tea. We soon got to the Astland lamp, a marker at the confluence of the rivers, turned to starboard and began to head up the river Ribble towards Preston.

We were now heading almost downwind, so up came the Genoa, and we motor-sailed nearly all the way to Preston. It really was fantastic, I occasionally cut the engine to listen to the near silence as the boat cruised downwind, but knowing that I only had so much time to play with because of the tide, kept having to fire up the engine again to keep the speed up.

Actually, before I continue with the story I’d better explain Preston marina. The marina is built in what used to be Preston docks, a once busy shipping venue that’s now bordered by large DIY and leather shops, supermarkets, fast food places and on the oposite side, posh (ish)flats. The marina populates about a third of the docks, and the rest is an open area for berth holders to sail about in as they like, regardless of the tide. To get into the docks requires the passage through the outer lock doors, accross the outer basin, past the debris boom and into the inner lock, wait for the swing bridge and then finally, into the docks proper.

So here we are, about 1/4 of a mile from the outer lock, which we could now see was open. Not long passed before we dropped the sails and motored in through the lock. Now, the following may sound entirely stupid to people who have sailed for years or indeed know Preston at all, but I really had no idea. Since this was just a day trip, the objective of which was a quick coffee then return to the Douglas, I turned left (sorry, to port) immediately after entering the outer lock, the intention being to moor up along the wall and walk to the marina for said refreshment. Well, it turns out that only a channel directly from the outer lock to the inner is dredged, and the rest of the outer basin is full of mud, hidden by a couple of feet of water. Needless to say, Jalina was aground. I quickly spun the forward only outboard around 180 degress and began to try and reverse the boat off the mud, but it wasn’t working, so I turned the outboard from side to side to ‘wiggle’ her stern a bit, which did the trick and she was back afloat again. Around about that time, the outer lock started to close, which really confused me since I thought it was always open…see, there’s the stupid bit. The only place that was left to go was through the now opening inner lock, so faced with little choice I headed into it and tied the boat up. Shortly after climbing up the ladders and out of the lock, a guy from the control building walked over and was obviously thinking ‘what the fuck is this moron up to’ but politely asked what I was doing and why I hadn’t answered his radio calls. “Oh, it’s not switched on” I replied “I don’t have a license to use it”. He looked a bit miffed, but was still very polite and explained he was going to move the swing bridge for me and let me into the marina in about ten minutes after the train crosses (there’s a steam railway that shares the road bridge). Ten minutes passed, the train puffed it’s way accross, and the bridge opened, which made me feel quite special, I mean, they stopped the traffic and swung open a 100ft bridge just for me in my little Leisure 17. Wow!

I moored up on the visitors pontoon and went to the marina shop to proclaim my stupidity. To be fair, they were really cool about it and gave me a coffee while I filled in the paper work to keep my boat there for a week… as it turns out, the lock doesn’t open regularly until summer unless somebody prebooks it, so had I arrived on any other day at any other time, the outer lock would have been closed and I would have gone back to Hesketh without a problem. Sods law would have it that somebody else had booked a ‘locking’ on that day, and the guy in the control building had seen me heading up the river so held the outer doors open just for me, presuming it was my intention to come in – fair enough, why else would I be that far up the Ribble?

Since I was at work the rest of the week I had to book the lock for the following weekend and pay for a weeks mooring, which at that time cost as much for a week as a month did at Hesketh. Still, a lessoned learned, and I did get to spend a few evenings down on my boat at the marina, which was now moored next to some very expensive yachts and motor cruisers. I’m not sure me pissing in a bucket in the cockpit went down ever so well though.

Ships computer

July 16th, 2008

I’ve not posted for a while, mainly because not an awful lot worth mentioning has happened in that while, but I’ve conjured up a little sub project now the bulk of the work on the boat is complete and had to shout about it.

I’ve decided to build up a boat PC to run all the onboard navigation. I realise this is perhaps a bit of overkill for a 21ft Corribee but that’s the nature of the Nathan I’m afraid.  I design software for a living, computers are just what I’ve grown up with, so building a computer to run the entire boat seems like a cracking idea to me. Between the facts that I’m not too bad with a soldering iron and can also write software in a whole host of different languages, there’s a huge possibility to what I could do, but for now I’m keeping it simple. It will be a small laptop, probably an Asus EEE PC since they are tiny and consume little power. The laptop will be plugged into the handheld GPS I already have and run the chart plotting software.

So there we have it. This is going to be the most hightech and well equipped cruising Corribee ever built :)

Sailing Solo

July 8th, 2008

I’m in a bit of a pickle.

I want, for personal satisfaction more than anything, to sail my boat the distance from Essex Marina to St Katherine’s under my own command. Captain Nathan conquers the East Coast! Unfortunately, as might b apparent from the introduction at the bottom of this blog, I’m not the most experienced sailor in the world, or East Coast, or the office I’m sat in right now.

Which brings me to my pickle. Do I just do it, knowing I don’t have the experience required, or shall I bite the bullet and get an experienced skipper along with me? If I do it myself I’ll get to savour that addictive feeling of accomplishment, but at the risk of suffering that woeful feeling of embarrassment as my little Corribee sits quietly on a sandbank in the Thames.

Oh, I forgot to mention although drop a hint above, that I’ve settled on a place to launch Kudu from. She’s being towed down to Essex Marina by a friendly towing type chap from Preston, Nick Lancaster, then from there we’re heading up the river, around the sand and back west until we get to Tower Bridge.

The little Corribee will sit in the yard at Essex Marina for a couple of days while I antifoul her and sort last minute things out, then into the water for another two days, then on the Saturday the maiden voyage will commence.. or not. Her 8HP outboard looks like it has had a very easy and well looked after life, but I have a distrust for outboards ever since one gave up on me in the river Douglas, about a minute after the bore hit the bow of my inflatable. I had no choice but to go where the water sent me, which was backwards. Luckily the Douglas is a lovely quiet river, but the Thames is quite the oposite. I suppose I at least have sails on this occasion though.

Cushions!

July 6th, 2008

As I walked around Tesco on Saturday evening I had a Eureka moment. Cushions! I need cushions.

The thing about cushions is that they make a space into a home. I don’t know the science behind it, but you’ll know what I mean if you chuck a few cushions and maybe a throw in your garden shed. It suddenly feels homely, even if you do have to share it with spiders and mice.

Thankfully Kudu doesn’t have to house spiders nor mice, so more the better! Anyway, enough nonsense from me, have a look…

I also got a brown throw which I’ve tucked in to the seating cushions in the part of the boat formally known as the bow, now christened ‘cushion palace’. We seem to be developing a cream and brown colour scheme on Kudu too. Accidental, I think.

Here’s a pic looking aft from within cushion palace.

Friday update

July 4th, 2008

I finished all the jobs on my list, great! But I did find some new one’s to re populate it with.

The big news is that the rudder is back on, which was my last major job. Unfortunately I’ve cocked up the sealant on the galley so that will need redoing at some point. It was the first time I’ve ever used Silastic and, foolishly, thought I could just scrap it off to trim when it was set. You can’t do that, and it now looks a bit crap. I think maybe next time I might go for transparent sealant.

New jobs on the list are… I’ve painted the bilges, and started varnishing the cabin floorboards. I’ve also come up with the idea of wrapping the mast compression pole in pipe lagging, then making a cover. It’ll soften up the cold metal pole and provide some collar bone protection in rough weather ;)

Three days progress

July 1st, 2008

I’ve got a week off this week and have been making the most of it. I have to really since it’s the last time I’ll get to spend working on the boat until the last week in August, when she should be going in the water!

The weather today has been absolutely cracking and I’ve had a really productive day. In fact, I’ve had a really productive three days after ariving at the old parents’ on Saturday night.

I’ve posted a few pics below to highlight what I’ve been doing, but I do plan on going into each of the tasks in a bit more detail in separate posts.

We have power! I’ve installed the power inlet and shore power distribution box, as well as a socket. The box is located under the sink, which is in the companion way steps, and the socket is in the side of the steps. I’ve also rebuilt and painted all the woodwork in the galley which has finally gone back in. I’ve got a surprise up my sleeve to finish that off so watch this space :D

The power inlet is actually a 32 amp inlet, I’m never going to use that much, in fact most marinas are limited to 16amp, but I ordered the wrong one accidentally. Oops. Only £72!!!!! It does look nice though, don’t you think? ;)

Finally, the rudder, that’s been a cause for concern for a while but I’ve finally got it (almost) finished.

Shore power box is in

So, there it is. Three days of working on the boat. I’m going to post detailed descriptions of all the jobs purely because they may be of interest to other Corribee owners, but for now, I’m happy with how it’s all looking. The fact that I’m going to be living on her still hasn’t fully sunk in, so I’m not too nervous at the moment :p