Our
tropical Whitsundays shakedown cruise was over and we arrived back in our home base in East Coast Marina in
Brisbane’s Manly boat Harbour. For us it’s hard to believe that was five months
ago because the time has just flown. We
had really not been looking forward to life at the dock again but in reality we
were so busy splitting our days between spending time with family and friends
back in our home town of Ipswich 50 kilometres away and being on the boat
working to get her ready for our next adventure, we didn’t have a chance to
think about it much.
So
how did we spend five months?
Karen
embarked on a serious sewing program making good use of both her Sailrite
machine and parents garage to transform Our Dreamtime’s interior and produce a
range of new bits and pieces topside.
Recovering all the upholstery in the salon transformed below. Karen did an awesome job as always. |
A nice new helm cover |
New covers for all our jerry cans that get stowed on deck |
New spray dodgers for the stern tidied up the look |
Our Dreamtime is now much cooler below with her new sunshade over the decks |
Rob
embarked on projects such as removing our non-working washing machine from the
boat. We considered swapping it with the near new similar machine we had
sitting in storage at our daughters house but decided against it. Firstly
without a generator on board the washing machine is useless unless we are connected
to shore power in a marina and we had no plans on being in marinas much once we
got underway again. The second slightly more serious problem is that we could
not work out a way to remove the old machine in one piece let alone get the new
one in. We measured, remeasured and remeasured again every path out from where
it was located in the companionway to our aft cabin. The maths simply did not
work. The washing machine was more centimetres wide, deep and long than any
possible exit. We surmise it must have been brought onto the boat when the
cockpit floor was out through the engine room when the motor was not in
place.
Washing machine deconstruction 101. |
Rob
literally dismantled it in place and removed it piece by piece. Even when we
were left with just the light metal casing, it would not fit out until he cut
it into bits.
The
good news is Karen now has a lovely new locker in its place which is the perfect
home for the Sailrite, all her sewing gear and art supplies. She also has a new
set of 20 litre buckets with lids as her new washing machine. Very energy
efficient and environmentally friendly.
During
our time at the dock Karen returned to part time work a couple of days a week
which covered our marina fees and Rob was also able to pick up some work in his
field of motorsport commentary. It was like old times with him flying off to
Perth and Sydney a few times as well as events at the local raceway. It’s great
to put some extra dollars in the cruising kitty but he also loves the job.
Rob waiting for the cue to interview driver Steven Reed at Willowbank Raceway |
We
also embarked on trying to fathom the intricacies of Our Dreamtime’s non-operational watermaker. When we first inspected
the boat as prospective buyers, we were surprised to discover the watermaker as
it was not mentioned in the inventory. The broker explained the owners didn’t
want it listed as it hadn’t been used in four or five years and they didn’t
want to go to the trouble of recommissioning it. Basically if it wasn’t on the
inventory we weren’t paying for it so couldn’t complain about its condition.
Hopefully our watermaker should be operational soon |
We
had left it alone until now but decided to investigate if it could be made
operational at a reasonable cost. The issue was that we had no information on
exactly what it was and the previous owner had made it a very custom
installation with different components all hidden away in various obscure nooks
and crannies, some of which we didn’t even know existed. The upshot was we think
we have worked it out thanks to info emailed to us by the former owners and the
advice of a number of fellow cruisers. A complete seals and refit kit for the
high pressure pump is on its way from the U.S. at the moment, we have a new
high pressure vessel and membrane ready to go when the pump is rebuilt and it
should be operational again before we head offshore. Fingers crossed.
In
April we travelled south to Berrima in the New South Wales highlands for our
daughter, Felicity's beautiful wedding to the love of her life Daniel or, as they referred
to the occasion, the ‘Oberg-Cooper Merger’. We gained three fantastic new grandchildren
out of that merger as Daniel’s Bailey, Tahlia and Darius joined our family
Our beautiful bride |
Tahlia, Darius, Bailey and Kristian dressed and ready for the family merger |
We even found time to check out the Bradman museum at Bowral before the wedding. |
Jobs came in all sizes like fitting new drink holders at the binnacle. They work well at sundowners time too. |
$5 from Aldi but adapted to a much better use. |
The BBQ was remounted to be over the water rather than deck. Much less mess now. |
Our
Dreamtime’s recalcitrant refrigeration took up plenty of time and money during
our layup only becoming operational the week before our departure date. Our
frozen food is currently rock solid and the wine and beer is cold. Let’s hope
it stays that way.
Grandson, Kristian spent three weeks with us on the boat while Mum and Dad enjoyed their honeymoon. |
Rob celebrated a milestone birthday in April with lots of friends at the Manly Deck, a cruisers favourite. |
We also celebrated our eldest grandson Caleb's 18th a few days later. |
One
of the final items we purchased and fitted for our next adventure was an
IridiumGo satellite communications hub. This will allow us to stay in contact
anywhere in the world and far beyond the reach of mobile phone coverage. It
acts as a wifi hub connected to the Iridium satellite system through which we
can use our phone to make voice calls and send-receive SMS messages, send-receive
emails on our I-Pads and, most importantly, receive weather information
regardless of location. There is also an excellent tracking app through which
people will be able to see exactly where we have gone and our current location.
It was expensive but will be invaluable
when we head offshore.
Last minute sewing to finish a sun shade for the aft deck before departure |
The
final weeks were very full days crossing off items on the to do list only to
add more at the bottom. Provisioning for extended cruising is a mammoth job as is finding storage holes
for it all and making sure everything is listed on an inventory with where to
find it. Believe us, you could never remember it all.
What
now?
Well
that’s the next blog but if you are a follower of our Facebook page you’ll
already know.
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Wow - you guys got some serious project work done! Karen did an amazing job on the sewing projects - I'm feeling inspired to get some more stuff done on my Sailrite.
ReplyDeleteCheers - Ellen | thecynicalsailor.blogspot.com
Thanks Ellen. Our Sailrite has certainly paid its way. Good luck with your sewing projects.
ReplyDelete