I keep thinking that I have nothing to post. Suddenly I find the list of things to share has grown almost too much. So...once again....I should have posted sooner :-)
Over a decade ago, I started fasting to detox. Reading up on nutrition. Finding out what a person should be eating. I was still active but beginning to realize that I had been burning the candle at both ends. I finally ended up taking time off driving to get everything the way I wanted. I spent 3 months eating very healthy and riding bicycle as many miles a day as I could stand(fortunately, I do like riding). I was 203 pounds with no gut what-so-ever when I returned to work. A couple short months later I got hurt. Everything went on hold as I was slammed into survival mode.
Jump ahead almost 10 years and some of the things I was wanting to do back then are in motion.
I just finished a twenty day fast. Down a solid 25 pounds after eating was back to normal. Have cut out wheat. Cut out almost all dairy. Just some cheese and some cottage cheese. Eating much more vegetables. Much less meat. No hotdog or bologna type products. Cut way back on sugars and basic snacking. Sounds busy....but there is more. Much!!!
I taught Vivian how to sprout when we met. I had learned how during my winter stay in Thompson Falls, Montana.
I had also bought a soymilk machine in Montana. I made lots of soymilk. It also had settings for soup making. I just tried that setting a couple weeks ago. Have used rice, potatoes and onions as an alternative to a creamed soup made with dairy. Liked it. Old machine died. I bought a new one. A gourmet(brand name).
It works great!
So I ate my first tofu with Vivian. Miso soup. Pretty good. Still deciding about tofu. I think it is fine if not eaten every day. But...what is tofu made of? Soymilk. I decided it was time to teach myself that particular skill. It took two small batches to figure it out. Then I made 4 quarts of soymilk for a big batch.
It did look like a lot but the machine made the milk.
So finish heating to °180 without burning. Add coagulant. Let set 10 minutes or so. Put curds in cheescloth lined press. Mash water out.
And four quarts of milk makes a 9oz. brick. Now I see why they say,"once you have had fresh tofu you will not buy it again". Nothing but fresh soymilk and coagulant. It is way better. I will be perfecting the process.
Along with the soup making. I bought a spatzel maker.
I used to make egg noodles but it was way too time consuming and messy. Spatzel(like dumplings) is so much easier.
I made the first batch of spatzel with skim milk and general purpose flour like recommended. Turned out great!
Next batch was made with almond milk and rice flour. It was every bit as good. I followed my rule. Make it per directions the first time. Easier to trouble shoot that way.
Have made it a few times now. Much better than one would think!
Next on the agenda was fermenting vegetables. I first heard about this a long time ago. I could go into a big spew about the gut flora and the affects of all this food that is essencially dead due to modern food processing. the better bioavailable vitamins, etc. But I suspect if you really want to know, you will google it. Many people have written much on the subject.
So I decided to do saeurkraut first. I shredded my cabbage.
Sliced up some parsnips, turnips and onion to go with it. Made my brine.
Jarred it up. A day and a half later we tried a little bit. It was just a little tangy, but certainly fermenting. I plan to end up with about 12 quarts of different vegetables going at varying stages of ferment. We will eat about a half cup each at two different meals each day. Once you research it for yourself...you will wonder why you have not been doing it.
I finally got the cupboard doors made and hung in the garage. Can you remember when I built those cupboards?
Doors were needed.
Have doors now. I will take them down a one at a time and paint white. Trust me....it is better that way.
We have a lot of sorting to do. I can build more cupboards, but in the end, We really do have a bunch of stuff out there that is not being used.
We tried to discourage a dove from building a nest in the top flower box by the door.
We were unsuccessful. The dove laid her eggs there in the dirt. We thought she would go elsewhere when we chucked the partial nest twice.
Didn't take us seriously and laid the eggs in the dirt. Now we felt bad.
I had a picture of the two eggs. I think it was on the file I accidently deleted on the phone.
So anyways. I went out and found some fake green grass to put around the edge of the box. It gave the dove a little more privacy so we were not always scaring her off the nest. Then when the rains came. I felt bad about the bird and eggs laying in the wet dirt(remember I tossed a partial nest?). I built a roof.
One egg hatched.
You can just see the brown momma behind the little one.
I am sure I forgot some stuff. Went down to finish some things on Mary Lee last weekend. Forgot the keys. It is almost an hour and a half drive.
Last for this post. I have started applying for a trucking job again. I will likely have to wear a back brace, but I really do not care. I need to fill the coffers again and driving is something I can do anywhere. I can drive half the year and boat the other half. Besides that, I have plans that require my working if they are ever to come to fruition.
Saturday, September 5, 2015
Sunday, August 9, 2015
I meant to post a little sooner. I forgot to finish the last post and it just got left as a draft. Then I deleted a folder of pictures off phone. Gotta love android phones. They help us remember and find things, but one slip-up and something is lost forever :-)
Well Mary Lee runs. I have yet to make it down to finish the mechanical fix. The shop did a great job with the new bracket. It will not break soon. Of course I have no pictures of that.
I did have a picture that shows part of the problem
The replacement for this is much nicer, if I had a picture.
As I was cleaning up the oil(scrubbing the bilge, I realised that the previous owner left me another little gem. The hose that runs off the bilge is 3/4 inch. He must have bought a used pump to replace the old one. It has a one inch output. So he just shoved the smaller hose into the bilge output and called it good. I have to put a picture of the repairs in the next post.
Mary Lee has a dripless driveshaft or I would likely have found that sooner. Amazing as it seems. The bilge pump seemed to be working just fine until I lifted it up and the hose fell out.
I am on day fourteen of a fast. Down 24 pounds this morning. I am going 30 days on this one. Maybe more. Will see how the rest of the weight comes off. I am really going to concentrate more on portion control and snacking when I start eating again. I weighed 205 pounds when I got hurt. I have used snacking as something to help take my mind off pain. I did not always eat the healthiest things. Vivian is a vegetarian. She does eat some seafood, cheese and eggs. She does not mind me eating whatever I like. I am going to adopt a diet more along the lines of what hers is.
So on a fast I generally go through cookbooks and watch cooking shows. This time I am still doing that. But I am learning to make new things.
Crepes
This one browned a bit much because the skillet was too hot when I poured the batter in. I liked the color so it is the only picture I took. This is eggless. Next batch will be with a non-wheat flour.
I posted a while back about a new way to do hard-boiled eggs. I improved on it.
Now the shell slides off each egg in one piece. Even if it cracked while cooking and had some seepage.
So what have I been practicing this skill on?
Deviled eggs. With a twist. These are not you basic deviled eggs. I had someone tell me they were the best she had ever had. Vivian says they are great. With the eggs being so easy to make, it takes no effort to make these. We will have them often.
So basically. Most red meats and wheat will be cut out of my diet. Sugars cut waaaay back on. We have decided that it will be best if I make something sweet on the times we want it. If it is not just laying around being easy to pick up then we are not likely to have it.
A lot more is happening. Good things. But until I know more I will save them for later. Remember that rose bush I fertilized with the wrong stuff? It had gone dormant. I watched it do almost nothing for a couple months. Finally thought"what if I just fertilize with rose fertilizer?" Would it change the soil enough to make it grow?
It did!
It has really been something to watch.
Well Mary Lee runs. I have yet to make it down to finish the mechanical fix. The shop did a great job with the new bracket. It will not break soon. Of course I have no pictures of that.
I did have a picture that shows part of the problem
The replacement for this is much nicer, if I had a picture.
As I was cleaning up the oil(scrubbing the bilge, I realised that the previous owner left me another little gem. The hose that runs off the bilge is 3/4 inch. He must have bought a used pump to replace the old one. It has a one inch output. So he just shoved the smaller hose into the bilge output and called it good. I have to put a picture of the repairs in the next post.
Mary Lee has a dripless driveshaft or I would likely have found that sooner. Amazing as it seems. The bilge pump seemed to be working just fine until I lifted it up and the hose fell out.
I am on day fourteen of a fast. Down 24 pounds this morning. I am going 30 days on this one. Maybe more. Will see how the rest of the weight comes off. I am really going to concentrate more on portion control and snacking when I start eating again. I weighed 205 pounds when I got hurt. I have used snacking as something to help take my mind off pain. I did not always eat the healthiest things. Vivian is a vegetarian. She does eat some seafood, cheese and eggs. She does not mind me eating whatever I like. I am going to adopt a diet more along the lines of what hers is.
So on a fast I generally go through cookbooks and watch cooking shows. This time I am still doing that. But I am learning to make new things.
Crepes
This one browned a bit much because the skillet was too hot when I poured the batter in. I liked the color so it is the only picture I took. This is eggless. Next batch will be with a non-wheat flour.
I posted a while back about a new way to do hard-boiled eggs. I improved on it.
Now the shell slides off each egg in one piece. Even if it cracked while cooking and had some seepage.
So what have I been practicing this skill on?
Deviled eggs. With a twist. These are not you basic deviled eggs. I had someone tell me they were the best she had ever had. Vivian says they are great. With the eggs being so easy to make, it takes no effort to make these. We will have them often.
So basically. Most red meats and wheat will be cut out of my diet. Sugars cut waaaay back on. We have decided that it will be best if I make something sweet on the times we want it. If it is not just laying around being easy to pick up then we are not likely to have it.
A lot more is happening. Good things. But until I know more I will save them for later. Remember that rose bush I fertilized with the wrong stuff? It had gone dormant. I watched it do almost nothing for a couple months. Finally thought"what if I just fertilize with rose fertilizer?" Would it change the soil enough to make it grow?
It did!
It has really been something to watch.
Monday, July 20, 2015
So Mary Lee made it almost halfway to Charleston before we ran into trouble. There we were....squeezing past the low water by McClellensberg just a couple hours before low tide. Doing fine...Sloooww...but okay. 3.5 miles south of McClellensberg, the engine suddenly slows like it is throttling down....and quits. Oh Boy!!! I run forward and drop the anchor.
Guessing we were already blown over into the mud before the anchor hit bottom. So the next step was to gander at the engine. Alternator bracket had broke. Knocked a hole in the oil filter and of course, oil everywhere. Great!!! A couple of weeks before I moved her to Johnson's marina, Georgetown landing had called, someone wanted to buy her. Don't think I never thought of that.
It is what it is. While waiting for tow boat U.S.
We took a selfy. What else can you do?
While waiting for our two. We watched a storm roll in from the south. Noticed the leading edges swirling a lot.
Our tow boat was a couple hours late. They ended up outrunning a cyclone and beaching the boat.
Eventually we got dropped off at Leeland Marina in McClellenberg.
Vivian made a friend.
Who made sure I tied off correctly.
Turns out we really enjoy the people here. Small town and down to earth.
View off the stern was of the shrimp boat fleet.
Vivian truly is a good sport. Neither one of us has had a lot of boating enjoyment out of Mary Lee yet.
So instead of sailing on July 4th....we drove up to Georgetown and watched the fireworks before going home. We have had quite the heat wave. Working on boat would need to wait a bit.
So...I did a little research. It turns out that Universal engines are notorious for the alternator brackets breaking. The advice given was to replace with better or buy a new engine.
I went back down to clean the oil out of the bilge and while there I changed the filter, refilled the oil and the engine started. Could not run more than a minute or so until all put back together. It was a little rough at cold idle but seemed to smooth out okay when throttled up. I may have got lucky.
While at it...
I get to fix the bilge pump hose. Turns out the previous owner must have found a second hand bilge pump that took 1" inner diameter hose. Hose on boat was 3/4 inch inner. He just shoved the smaller hose into the larger hole and called it good.
That has been all the hold up on Mary Lee. I have found nothing that was not cobbled together on the whole boat. Every single thing worked when I bought her. Every single thing was cobbled together in a way that made the fact that anything worked kind of a miracle.
You have heard the saying about opening up a can of worms? I bought one. Not complaining. I was in much pain and on really strong pain pills when I bought her. It was about fighting to get my life back.
I have come a very long ways. I know quite a lot about the different systems on a boat. Eventually we will move up in size. I will never trust a surveyor again. I have had two surveys. One when I bought her. The other when I got boat U.S. insurance. They both missed several things. But...I did get to see how they do their job.
I will survey myself when we eventually move up in size. My rule. I do not care so much that a boat needs some things freshened up...or even an engine built. The price will reflect that. But if I spot cobbling caused by an owner slapping something together wrong just to save money.....I walk away.
So hopefully I get Mary Lee to Charleston next weekend. One together, I will fire her up. Put in gear and throttle up. She can stay tied to the dock for no less than an hour while running. Hopefully I am not building another engine. Likely have less than a hundred hours on this rebuild. Funny thing is. If I had opted to stay in Baltimore for one last winter, I could have done some sailing right after engine build. Then sailed most of the next summer before heading south.
I would have been sailing...but would not have met Vivian. There is no question that she has filled a hole in my life.
Maybe someday I can take her sailing?? ;-)
In the meantime... Have you ever seen a monkey fist knot?
They are used for tying a weight on the end of a line to help one throw a line up to a ship from the dock. Of course, a lot of people think that using a one inch steel ball in it and a long lanyard is the modern equivelant of a mace. A sap??
Whatever. I thought they make a nice keychain. Heavy weights wear out ignition switches. I mostly just wanted to learn a new knot.
Learned it. Mine have a rubber ball in them. Well...the big one is a baseball. The larger white one has a ping pong ball. I did a couple with an unbreakable fishing bobber.
I found these motion activated owls in dollar tree. A box full of obnoxious sounds.
Thought Vivian would distribute them amongst her co-workers. Nothing doing. They are boxed up in closet :-)
Guessing we were already blown over into the mud before the anchor hit bottom. So the next step was to gander at the engine. Alternator bracket had broke. Knocked a hole in the oil filter and of course, oil everywhere. Great!!! A couple of weeks before I moved her to Johnson's marina, Georgetown landing had called, someone wanted to buy her. Don't think I never thought of that.
It is what it is. While waiting for tow boat U.S.
We took a selfy. What else can you do?
While waiting for our two. We watched a storm roll in from the south. Noticed the leading edges swirling a lot.
Our tow boat was a couple hours late. They ended up outrunning a cyclone and beaching the boat.
Eventually we got dropped off at Leeland Marina in McClellenberg.
Vivian made a friend.
Who made sure I tied off correctly.
Turns out we really enjoy the people here. Small town and down to earth.
View off the stern was of the shrimp boat fleet.
Vivian truly is a good sport. Neither one of us has had a lot of boating enjoyment out of Mary Lee yet.
So instead of sailing on July 4th....we drove up to Georgetown and watched the fireworks before going home. We have had quite the heat wave. Working on boat would need to wait a bit.
So...I did a little research. It turns out that Universal engines are notorious for the alternator brackets breaking. The advice given was to replace with better or buy a new engine.
I went back down to clean the oil out of the bilge and while there I changed the filter, refilled the oil and the engine started. Could not run more than a minute or so until all put back together. It was a little rough at cold idle but seemed to smooth out okay when throttled up. I may have got lucky.
While at it...
I get to fix the bilge pump hose. Turns out the previous owner must have found a second hand bilge pump that took 1" inner diameter hose. Hose on boat was 3/4 inch inner. He just shoved the smaller hose into the larger hole and called it good.
That has been all the hold up on Mary Lee. I have found nothing that was not cobbled together on the whole boat. Every single thing worked when I bought her. Every single thing was cobbled together in a way that made the fact that anything worked kind of a miracle.
You have heard the saying about opening up a can of worms? I bought one. Not complaining. I was in much pain and on really strong pain pills when I bought her. It was about fighting to get my life back.
I have come a very long ways. I know quite a lot about the different systems on a boat. Eventually we will move up in size. I will never trust a surveyor again. I have had two surveys. One when I bought her. The other when I got boat U.S. insurance. They both missed several things. But...I did get to see how they do their job.
I will survey myself when we eventually move up in size. My rule. I do not care so much that a boat needs some things freshened up...or even an engine built. The price will reflect that. But if I spot cobbling caused by an owner slapping something together wrong just to save money.....I walk away.
So hopefully I get Mary Lee to Charleston next weekend. One together, I will fire her up. Put in gear and throttle up. She can stay tied to the dock for no less than an hour while running. Hopefully I am not building another engine. Likely have less than a hundred hours on this rebuild. Funny thing is. If I had opted to stay in Baltimore for one last winter, I could have done some sailing right after engine build. Then sailed most of the next summer before heading south.
I would have been sailing...but would not have met Vivian. There is no question that she has filled a hole in my life.
Maybe someday I can take her sailing?? ;-)
In the meantime... Have you ever seen a monkey fist knot?
They are used for tying a weight on the end of a line to help one throw a line up to a ship from the dock. Of course, a lot of people think that using a one inch steel ball in it and a long lanyard is the modern equivelant of a mace. A sap??
Whatever. I thought they make a nice keychain. Heavy weights wear out ignition switches. I mostly just wanted to learn a new knot.
Learned it. Mine have a rubber ball in them. Well...the big one is a baseball. The larger white one has a ping pong ball. I did a couple with an unbreakable fishing bobber.
I found these motion activated owls in dollar tree. A box full of obnoxious sounds.
Thought Vivian would distribute them amongst her co-workers. Nothing doing. They are boxed up in closet :-)
Thursday, July 2, 2015
The end of a very busy week.
When I rebuilt the engine on Mary Lee, there was much rust from a cracked exhaust spraying water and apparently the raw water pump had also been spraying salt water on the front of the engine. It was a chore getting the oil pan and timing cover off. The bolts were rusted so badly that the heads no longer had flats for a wrench to attach to. Mostly used vise grips. Some had to have flats ground on to them so the vise grips had something to work on. Penetrating oil was needed for most of it.
So what does that have to do with this week?
Oil pan developed a leak after 2 years. At first I thought I had a problem with the rear seal. Oil seemed to slowly drip from back side. (Turned out it was slowly oozing and running to back of pan before dripping)I have felt almost sick from the physical therapy for so long it was beyond me to mess with it. Stopped therapy a couple months ago and am feeling much better. Gazelle seems to do a good job of working out knots in lower back. As long as I get on it before the pinching gets out of hand. Certainly not negating what the therapist did for me. He gave me a big jump on getting my life back.
So it turned out, all that rust I thought I had eliminated when putting engine together was not gone. A pin hole developed behind the oil plug. I cleaned it up very well, after draining oil. Then applied this fantastic epoxy by jb weld. A friend had used it on an engine block years ago and it was still holding.
So I bought some.
And after using the drill to wire brush the paint and rust off. Deep cleaning with acetone and sanding a little bit. I put it on. Three days later after running engine up to operating temperature. There is no leak. It got a coat of rustoleum yellow to match. The picture is taken with a mirror under it to show repair. That was one job this week.Truthfully, I like the idea of a new oil pan. Not pulling the engine to do that unless this patch does not work.
I also pulled the exhaust out to see how it was holding up. I had built one out of 1-1/4 inch galvanized pipe in Baltimore. It had a break back when the original bent prop was still on it. New prop and cutless flange cured the evil vibrations that caused the break. Exhaust was good to go. That job was about peace of mind on the trip.
Yesterday I rebuilt toilet.
It was not flushing very well. Who knows when it was ever rebuilt before.
I brought it home when I saw how scored up the cylinder walls were. It needed some honing.
I used my wheel brake cylinder hone and a bucket of water. Not much different than honing a cylinder on an engine block except on the engine you use a squirt bottle to spray soapy water into cylinder while honing to keep the stones clean and lubricated. The end result is the same. The score marks need removed if you expect a good seal. It turned out well. Finished clean up and assembly.
One more project successfully finished.
Vivian bought a small power washer for washing boat and stuff around house.
Boat cleaned up nicely. But that brings up a project. I have debated on doing new canvas in the same blue Mary Lee has had since new.
Or red. My phone has an app that allowed me to see what red would be like.
I think it may look better in sunbrella basil green. Plenty of time to consider it.
On the high side. We leave for Charleston harbor at the crack of dawn. I am finally feeling well enough to enjoy sailing and Mary Lee's long list of projects/repairs is nearing completion. I still need to splice a couple haul down lines and the reef lines. Will adjust tension in sails with halyard. The tack is fastened. I need sails up to study how everything needs to go. Everything on Mary Lee is supposed to be set up to work from the cockpit. When done right there is no reason to leave the cockpit. These lines were non-existant when I bought her and I have not found even one picture of how it is supposed to be set up. I could just do haul down lines, like a sloop has, but it will be a waste of rope if something needs done differently. I envision having these new lines spliced too short for the job.
So...Mary Lee will sail this weekend!! :-) I will have everything needed to splice lines as I figure them out. I am sensing a trip to Marathon this fall.
There have been many little jobs done on Mary Lee that never made the blog. Replacing screens in ports. Rewiring things. Broken rivets etc. Much scrubbing and general cleaning. But as I was laying on top of the engine putting the exhaust back on. I remembered the wiring mess I had initially found in the engine compartment. Years of exhaust soot build up that I scrubbed out, etc, etc, etc. While looking everything over and reminiscing, I felt a sense of pride in what I have accomplished.
I bought a boat that had been neglected for a long time before being put on the hard for 5 years. previous owner(s)would not pay to get things fixed right. Cobbled them together in a way that spelled disaster sooner or later. About the time it was put on the hard I was hurt and put out of commission. In four years I have mostly rebuilt Mary Lee and myself.
The help when I needed it and the friends I have made along the way are priceless to me. I won't lie, there were times when I almost admitted to biting off more than I could chew.
I would do it all over again. The good times do not out weigh the hard times yet....but they will as I move ahead. Certainly the fight to rebuild me will continue. But now I get to start enjoying some of the fruits of my labor.
I better get moving. Vivian has already got her gear ready for this weekend and I am sitting here blogging :-)
Fate certainly smiled on me when Vivian and I met. She is something else.
When I rebuilt the engine on Mary Lee, there was much rust from a cracked exhaust spraying water and apparently the raw water pump had also been spraying salt water on the front of the engine. It was a chore getting the oil pan and timing cover off. The bolts were rusted so badly that the heads no longer had flats for a wrench to attach to. Mostly used vise grips. Some had to have flats ground on to them so the vise grips had something to work on. Penetrating oil was needed for most of it.
So what does that have to do with this week?
Oil pan developed a leak after 2 years. At first I thought I had a problem with the rear seal. Oil seemed to slowly drip from back side. (Turned out it was slowly oozing and running to back of pan before dripping)I have felt almost sick from the physical therapy for so long it was beyond me to mess with it. Stopped therapy a couple months ago and am feeling much better. Gazelle seems to do a good job of working out knots in lower back. As long as I get on it before the pinching gets out of hand. Certainly not negating what the therapist did for me. He gave me a big jump on getting my life back.
So it turned out, all that rust I thought I had eliminated when putting engine together was not gone. A pin hole developed behind the oil plug. I cleaned it up very well, after draining oil. Then applied this fantastic epoxy by jb weld. A friend had used it on an engine block years ago and it was still holding.
So I bought some.
And after using the drill to wire brush the paint and rust off. Deep cleaning with acetone and sanding a little bit. I put it on. Three days later after running engine up to operating temperature. There is no leak. It got a coat of rustoleum yellow to match. The picture is taken with a mirror under it to show repair. That was one job this week.Truthfully, I like the idea of a new oil pan. Not pulling the engine to do that unless this patch does not work.
I also pulled the exhaust out to see how it was holding up. I had built one out of 1-1/4 inch galvanized pipe in Baltimore. It had a break back when the original bent prop was still on it. New prop and cutless flange cured the evil vibrations that caused the break. Exhaust was good to go. That job was about peace of mind on the trip.
Yesterday I rebuilt toilet.
It was not flushing very well. Who knows when it was ever rebuilt before.
I brought it home when I saw how scored up the cylinder walls were. It needed some honing.
I used my wheel brake cylinder hone and a bucket of water. Not much different than honing a cylinder on an engine block except on the engine you use a squirt bottle to spray soapy water into cylinder while honing to keep the stones clean and lubricated. The end result is the same. The score marks need removed if you expect a good seal. It turned out well. Finished clean up and assembly.
One more project successfully finished.
Vivian bought a small power washer for washing boat and stuff around house.
Boat cleaned up nicely. But that brings up a project. I have debated on doing new canvas in the same blue Mary Lee has had since new.
Or red. My phone has an app that allowed me to see what red would be like.
I think it may look better in sunbrella basil green. Plenty of time to consider it.
On the high side. We leave for Charleston harbor at the crack of dawn. I am finally feeling well enough to enjoy sailing and Mary Lee's long list of projects/repairs is nearing completion. I still need to splice a couple haul down lines and the reef lines. Will adjust tension in sails with halyard. The tack is fastened. I need sails up to study how everything needs to go. Everything on Mary Lee is supposed to be set up to work from the cockpit. When done right there is no reason to leave the cockpit. These lines were non-existant when I bought her and I have not found even one picture of how it is supposed to be set up. I could just do haul down lines, like a sloop has, but it will be a waste of rope if something needs done differently. I envision having these new lines spliced too short for the job.
So...Mary Lee will sail this weekend!! :-) I will have everything needed to splice lines as I figure them out. I am sensing a trip to Marathon this fall.
There have been many little jobs done on Mary Lee that never made the blog. Replacing screens in ports. Rewiring things. Broken rivets etc. Much scrubbing and general cleaning. But as I was laying on top of the engine putting the exhaust back on. I remembered the wiring mess I had initially found in the engine compartment. Years of exhaust soot build up that I scrubbed out, etc, etc, etc. While looking everything over and reminiscing, I felt a sense of pride in what I have accomplished.
I bought a boat that had been neglected for a long time before being put on the hard for 5 years. previous owner(s)would not pay to get things fixed right. Cobbled them together in a way that spelled disaster sooner or later. About the time it was put on the hard I was hurt and put out of commission. In four years I have mostly rebuilt Mary Lee and myself.
The help when I needed it and the friends I have made along the way are priceless to me. I won't lie, there were times when I almost admitted to biting off more than I could chew.
I would do it all over again. The good times do not out weigh the hard times yet....but they will as I move ahead. Certainly the fight to rebuild me will continue. But now I get to start enjoying some of the fruits of my labor.
I better get moving. Vivian has already got her gear ready for this weekend and I am sitting here blogging :-)
Fate certainly smiled on me when Vivian and I met. She is something else.
Thursday, June 25, 2015
Life goes on. Moved Mary Lee back to Johnson's family campground and marina on June first to get her cleaned up and looked over before going down to Charleston harbor for the rest of the summer.
If you read the last post then you understand the hold-up. Also.
Vivian's mom came to stay. It was Jon's graduation from Soccastee(sock-us-tea)High.
The group,off to the ceremony.
Vivian and I also posed. Someday I may even remember to comb my hair first....maybe?
The two of them got some crafting done.
So this week I have been doing boat chores.
Drove orca down(we nicknamed the van, there is more to that story, but it is too much for the blog).
blue canvas in the middle of the picture. Exciting to finally have her ready to sail and me healthy enough to enjoy it.
Got a couple pictures of the last week we will have Mary Lee here. Hopefully the last of Georgetown.
Leaving for Charleston on the first of July. Possibly the third....depends on the weather and whether or not Vivian wants to boat down or drive down. She has the third, fourth and fifth off. The vehicle is necessary to return on Sunday. So, If she boats, we need someone to come pick us up.
I found a hobby I may want to persue just for fun. I decided to do something with an old stained tee shirt.
The airbrush is a pretty cheap model as my expensive one broke. This airbrush is the wrong one for spraying acrylic enamel....also will not adjust fine enough. But that was my first scenery effort. I enjoyed doing it. It never hurt my back. Tools and paint take very little space. I need to replace my good airbrush first, but I took a couple pictures of some pictures I would like to try.
But that will happen in Florida this next winter.
If you read the last post then you understand the hold-up. Also.
The group,off to the ceremony.
Vivian and I also posed. Someday I may even remember to comb my hair first....maybe?
The two of them got some crafting done.
So this week I have been doing boat chores.
Drove orca down(we nicknamed the van, there is more to that story, but it is too much for the blog).
blue canvas in the middle of the picture. Exciting to finally have her ready to sail and me healthy enough to enjoy it.
Got a couple pictures of the last week we will have Mary Lee here. Hopefully the last of Georgetown.
Leaving for Charleston on the first of July. Possibly the third....depends on the weather and whether or not Vivian wants to boat down or drive down. She has the third, fourth and fifth off. The vehicle is necessary to return on Sunday. So, If she boats, we need someone to come pick us up.
I found a hobby I may want to persue just for fun. I decided to do something with an old stained tee shirt.
The airbrush is a pretty cheap model as my expensive one broke. This airbrush is the wrong one for spraying acrylic enamel....also will not adjust fine enough. But that was my first scenery effort. I enjoyed doing it. It never hurt my back. Tools and paint take very little space. I need to replace my good airbrush first, but I took a couple pictures of some pictures I would like to try.
But that will happen in Florida this next winter.
Tuesday, June 16, 2015
June 8, 2015
The day my little brother(Robert Eugene) Bob lost his fight with cancer.
Bob was really a great guy. He deserved much better than he got. He was a man amongst men and he always walked his own path.
He was just 48 years old.
I am going to have great difficulty with the fact that he is no longer a part of my life.
I always assumed that Bob was going to make it. I even expected him to outlive me.
I erred in thinking any part of life is predictable.
Happy trails Bob.
You are loved!
The day my little brother(Robert Eugene) Bob lost his fight with cancer.
Bob was really a great guy. He deserved much better than he got. He was a man amongst men and he always walked his own path.
He was just 48 years old.
I am going to have great difficulty with the fact that he is no longer a part of my life.
I always assumed that Bob was going to make it. I even expected him to outlive me.
I erred in thinking any part of life is predictable.
Happy trails Bob.
You are loved!
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