Fulmarboy
New Member
OWNING A BOAT
Dry Bilges?
The boat was taken out of the water in November to allow it to dry out a little. I went down in February to check her out and the melting snow has somehow found its way into the bilge and there’s more water there now than there ever is when the boat’s moored. So, I pump her out, then sponge the remaining, cold, oily soup into the special ‘blue’ dirty bucket. To do this properly I have to empty the starboard locker and get under the engine. This means removing the fenders (3 round, 8 long), the red and the yellow buckets, the mooring lines, the shorelines, the anti-snubbing devices, the hose, the bag of hose fittings, the bag of ‘useful’ cordage, two boathooks (one ash handled, one hickory), the oars for the dinghy, the step for the dinghy, the fuel tank dipping stick, the container that catches the overflow from the hot water tank pressure valve, the outboard fuel container, the spare engine oil container, bits of old rag that I know I didn’t put in there, and a shrimp net. 3 nearly empty bottles of teak oil, a tub of oxalic acid, a bottle of meths, a bottle of fibreglass cleaner, a lead-line, a heaving line and two small anchors suitable for mooring the inflatable but never used.
Now the locker is clear I can get at the panel that gives me access to the underside of the engine. The panel is removed (and put in the cockpit with all the rest of the gear) and I can at last start sponging out the remains of the muck. Olga Corbett could have done this easily .....I force myself into the required position (upside down with one leg under the diesel heater and the other behind my back) and manage the whole clean up in less than a minute.
While I am sponging, I notice the screw top of the engine anode. The anode needs replacing; in fact there is nothing left of it. I don’t have a spare…. I need to order one. Whilst pondering this dilemma I notice the gearbox dip stick. Not sure I have ever seen this before however the oil needs topping up. I don’t have any…. I need to buy some.
Neither job gets done.
Before I go home I have to pack all the doings back into the locker and, strangely, drive the 40 miles home feeling a sense of achievement.
Last weekend I returned to the boat with a new engine anode and some gearbox oil and started again.
Is this typical of owning a boat?
Dry Bilges?
The boat was taken out of the water in November to allow it to dry out a little. I went down in February to check her out and the melting snow has somehow found its way into the bilge and there’s more water there now than there ever is when the boat’s moored. So, I pump her out, then sponge the remaining, cold, oily soup into the special ‘blue’ dirty bucket. To do this properly I have to empty the starboard locker and get under the engine. This means removing the fenders (3 round, 8 long), the red and the yellow buckets, the mooring lines, the shorelines, the anti-snubbing devices, the hose, the bag of hose fittings, the bag of ‘useful’ cordage, two boathooks (one ash handled, one hickory), the oars for the dinghy, the step for the dinghy, the fuel tank dipping stick, the container that catches the overflow from the hot water tank pressure valve, the outboard fuel container, the spare engine oil container, bits of old rag that I know I didn’t put in there, and a shrimp net. 3 nearly empty bottles of teak oil, a tub of oxalic acid, a bottle of meths, a bottle of fibreglass cleaner, a lead-line, a heaving line and two small anchors suitable for mooring the inflatable but never used.
Now the locker is clear I can get at the panel that gives me access to the underside of the engine. The panel is removed (and put in the cockpit with all the rest of the gear) and I can at last start sponging out the remains of the muck. Olga Corbett could have done this easily .....I force myself into the required position (upside down with one leg under the diesel heater and the other behind my back) and manage the whole clean up in less than a minute.
While I am sponging, I notice the screw top of the engine anode. The anode needs replacing; in fact there is nothing left of it. I don’t have a spare…. I need to order one. Whilst pondering this dilemma I notice the gearbox dip stick. Not sure I have ever seen this before however the oil needs topping up. I don’t have any…. I need to buy some.
Neither job gets done.
Before I go home I have to pack all the doings back into the locker and, strangely, drive the 40 miles home feeling a sense of achievement.
Last weekend I returned to the boat with a new engine anode and some gearbox oil and started again.
Is this typical of owning a boat?