Showing posts with label marina life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label marina life. Show all posts

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Goodbye to Florie and Lew...


Once again, I am forced to say my goodbyes and it's not getting any easier.  Florie and Lew have been here just over a month and I am going to miss them very much. 

Lew, I can't tell you how much fun you've been to us (especially Max) and I'm so pleased that the Silly String fight went over so well.  You are a fantastic person and I'm very glad that I had a chance to meet you.

Florie, you've been a true comrade at arms!  You are hard to say goodbye to.  I have truly enjoyed the time I spent with you.  Not only did I find someone that was creative and didn't mind getting pulled into some of my adventures (Christmas Eve was fun:-), but a truly lovely person with a good heart.

I can't wait for you guys to come back in the Spring to share your winter adventures.

Pamela

Sunday, January 2, 2011

Boating dogs King and Lady...

King, giving his standard greeting:-)

So every time I tell someone I live on a boat, the first questions asked is (of course), "With the dogs?".  Well, yes...with my dogs.  I can't imagine NOT having them on the boat~lol

Well, for all our friends that think we are crazy... I am pleased to present another couple of "crazies":-)  Meet boating dogs King and Lady.  They are on a sailboat that's only 2 feet longer than Mystery.  These two are absolute characters!  Both are very vocal and happy dogs and Bert and Lady have had a couple of great play dates.  I'm very glad they are part of our little marina here now... 

Yep, someone else has German Shepherd Dog's on their sailboat...


King, 10 year old male German Shepherd Dog

Lady, 1 1/2 year old German Shepherd Dogs

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Hello all...

So I took a brief rbeak from the blogging while friends were in town.  I'm so glad Jim and Kathy made the trip up from Nettles Island for the day.  We did have the honor of watching Jim present Kathy with her new to carrot (yes, I did spell that correctly) ring this morning.

Jim called me last week and asked if I could make a 2 carat ring for Kathy...I told him no.  At least until he explained that he wanted a ring with two tiny carrots~lol  I did warn him that I would attend him funreal after he gave it to Kathy and he assured me that Kathy would love it, so I agreed.


Of course, I bought the ring blank, two tiny doll house carrots and plenty of glitter and resin and set to work.  Thankfully, she laughed like crazy when Jim gave it to her this morning.  (You really dodged the bullet on that one Jim~lol).

I would like to say that the ring went over much better than I ever thought it would!  So far, I've taken a few orders for identical rings~lol  Who would have thought that this little joke would go over so well?!?!

Thanks again for the visit Jim and Kathy!  I really enjoyed seeing you again and can't wait for the next round of visits.  This time, I think I'll drive your way for the day:-)

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Busy day...

Fountain in downtown St. Augustine this morning...
Today has been a busy day of letter writing, web design (for yet another person) and label printing.  WHEW!  I'm finally finished for the day and am back on Mystery with the heater cranked.  Hopefully I'll be able to find a good movie and we'll settle in for yet another night of frigid temps.  There is a promise of warm weather on the horizon though (brief, but warm). 

Here's hoping that everyone has a wonderful evening...

~Pamela

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Seasonal musings...

OK, it's the Christmas Season (you can also read Hanukkah, Kwanzaa...whatever you believe in) and everyone is supposed to be cheerful, but where ARE the cheerful people at?  So here's the story...

Stopped at T@&g*t to pick up a few things for Max's Christmas and had a woman actually yank a toy out of my hands...

Me:  "Merry Christmas to you too"

Her {mumbling under her breathe}:  "bitch"

Me:  "It's obvious that you need that more than I do.  Enjoy"  {as I walk away}

So, I wasn't a very happy camper after that little episode.  I proceeded to the check-out, only to be told that an item I had in the buggy was "not on sale".  Wait....stop just a minute...

Me:  {pulling out the weekly ad}  "It's listed right here at XX.XX, can you check the price again"

Check-out girl:  "My register scanned at XX.XX"

Me:  "Can you please call a manager to check the price"

Check-out girl:  "Seriously?"

Me:  "Never mind, just put everything back.  Thanks anyway"

Check-out girl:  "Seriously?"

Me:  "Merry Christmas"

You see where I'm going with this, right?  Why does everyone seem to be in such a bad mood right now?  I thought Christmas was supposed to be a happy time of year. 

~Completely unrelated to the above, but still seeming to fit the theme~

So I've been trying to tell Max about how Christmas was when I was a child.  I can remember barely being able to go to sleep because I was SO excited on Christmas Eve and sneaking down the steps to see what was under the tree before anyone else in the house was awake.  Even as I get older, I still carry that strange feeling of expectation that I experienced as a child. 


Mom on Christmas morning

It wasn't always the presents that I so looked forward to, though they did play a big role (more on that later), but spending time with my family.  Daddy and I sneaking cheese straws and sausage balls from the dining room when we thought mom wasn't looking.  My family spending time together (and actually enjoying it).  Christmas movies and James Bond adventures (a post-Christmas event).  My daddy (and everyone else, except mom I think) trying to hide presents and be the last one to open a gift.  I have to say, daddy took the prize on that one~lol  He found one he had hidden and forgot where he'd put it on Easter one year.


Daddy and the Stetson Susan gave him.  He loved that hat:-)


Bob, my brother and his ex-wife. 
My mom and dad

Mom, admiring her present

The "stuffed to overflowing" tree

Saturday, December 11, 2010

Running water and leaking pipes...


So, for those of you who dont already know, last week we got a new battery charger.  Having the battery charger meant we had running water (electric water pumps on the faucets) for the first time since moving aboard Mystery. Talk about a celebration~lol

This morning, we noticed that the settee next to the sink was wet.  Well... not really wet, but soaked.  Bob immediately went on the search for the source of the water.  Turns out that the fittings under the galley sink are cracked.  That means that the galley sink is simply pouring water into the cabinet (and everything else) around it.  Grrrr. 

As always, living on the boat is a challenge and changing the fittings is not going to be as easy as I thought.  It's going to involve several small pieces being fit together to make the "big picture" work properly~lol  Thank goodness Bob seems to know what we'll need to get the sink usable again:-)

A warm, dry boat...

This is what we feel like right now~lol


So I am obsessed with keeping warm the past few days.  Yes, I know that we live in Florida and that it isn't nearly as cold here as up north, but I'm cold and 27 degrees is simply more than my bones can stand.  Add to the cold, everything in the boat seems to be damp.  Clothes, the walls, etc.  I know that condesation is the problem, but what is the solution? 

I started doing searches on the internet about heating a boat and found an article that  thought was informative and thought I'd repost it here.  It's from Loose Moorings and was posted by Nathaniel.

~Pamela

a warm dry boat


I bought this book that this post is named after because we had problems with moisture, problems that in the end we were able to cure on our own with a little thought and experimentation. i don’t like spending money because as an artist i don’t have much to spend, and because it’s a philosophy of mine to minimize the need for external resources. but water dripping onto my face at night from an aluminum hatch frame seemed to be a problem worth paying for a solution.

as usual when I put my mind to the problem I can usually figure it out myself, but sometimes it’s hard not to be lazy and pay for someone else to find solutions to my problems; it’s what makes the world go around, at least in this economy.

anyway, I got the book last week, and it was a waste of money. the solution to achieving warm, dry boat is good ventilation and a good heater, (and in the author’s mind your heater and stove should be diesel), which wasn't exactly a revelation.
I did learn about the energy content of various fuels, and some details of different appliances on the market, but that’s not what I was looking for.  all the author's examples are for large power boats, and the physical arrangements of these boats are very different from a sailboat. the principles are the same, but I already knew the principles. oh, well. if anyone wants the book I’ll gladly pass it along, but I recommend you work on your own solutions.

I already guessed that tracy and I put out a lot of moisture via breathing, and that cooking and boiling water also pumps a lot of water into the boat. warm air holds a lot of moisture, and when that air comes in contact with cold surfaces like hatch and port frames, and uninsulated hull surfaces inside lockers, water will condense out.
since I can’t heat these objects, I can either insulate them from the interior air, move that warm moist air outside, or both. of course it’s raining out and the humidity is 100%, but 6 degree air at 100% humidity has a lot less water in it than 22 degree air at 80% humidity, so fresh air in and warm, moist air out, is key to fixing the problem.

the v berth was the worst for condensation because it is small, far from the heater in the salon, and we were both in there for 9 hours out of every day.
1st problem to deal with was that the locker had no insulation in it and our clothes were getting wet from condensation. i lined it with the bubble wrap used for hot water tanks and no more wet.
the next issue was being dripped on at night and wet hull. opening the hatch meant getting rain inside, so we experimented with different objects, and found if we put a clothes peg in the hatch frame, it left it open enough to let our breath dissipate but kept rain from getting in. the final step was getting the 120 outlet in the v berth working (the po had wired it incorrectly to the gfi outlet in the galley). I then put in a small cube-type heater on low, which is sufficient to keep the space warm; I can’t tell you how cold those sheets used to be when we crawled in there at night; it would take an hour for my feet to finally warm up.
this got rid of 95% of the moisture. there is still moisture accumulating in the bed foam where it touches the hull, and I think the only way to get rid of this last bit is to install a vent in the v berth, because we can’t open the hatch further without getting rained on.

we now slide open the companionway hatch when cooking in the galley, and judging by all the water on the inside of the enclosure, we are keeping a ton of moisture out of the boat itself. remember that propane releases 1.5 lbs of water for every pound of propane burned. that’s just shy of 1 ½ gallons of water!
we also have a small portlight that opens into the cockpit, and we usually open that to varying amounts depending on the outside temps; a lot of air comes in through it despite the full cockpit enclosure.
a po had installed a muffin fan and vent above the galley, but the way the vent was installed, the passage was effectively blocked and the fan didn’t do anything but churn air around. I changed the install and now the fan blows out a lot of the moisture while we are working on the stove.
I also occasionally turn on a small fan we have mounted on our ceiling to circulate air through the boat and push the warm air towards the cold sole.
before these few steps, we would have moisture beading up on all the portlight frames and locker hull surfaces. not any more. once I put an additional vent in the v berth I believe that we won’t have any problem at all with moisture.

To summarise: circulate a lot of fresh air inside the boat, find a way to duct moisture out that is produced by cooking and showering, and provide enough heat to warm all parts of the boat. pretty basic. the details will depend on your own boat, so you will have to find a custom solution for your own unique living environment. the interesting part to the above is that it didn’t cost anything, just a bit of thought and experimentation.

Friday, December 10, 2010

Photo Fridays...

So maybe I'm getting a little lazy, who knows?  But, I've decided that Fridays seem like a good time to post a few random pics (either new or old) from now on:-) 

Enjoy!

~Pamela

Bert, too lazy to keep his eyes open

Are we leaving?
I SO love this little lamp at Pirates Plunder!



Thursday, December 9, 2010

The simple things...

Be still my heart...we're getting new picnic tables!
So I went to take a shower and was floored when I saw the new picnic tables being assembled.  Seriously, the tables we use in the pavilios are about 8 years old and are murder on your elbows (ok, who doesn't put their elbows on the table at some point?).  The marina is having all new tables built y the resident wood-worker.  Talk about feeling spoiled!  Hand-built tables just for us?!?! 

Pitted and falling apart old picnic table


I know this sounds like to stupid thing to be so thankful for, but trust me, splinters, wood pitted from one to many power-washes and stains that defy the most stringent scrubbing and bleach have plagued me since we moved here.  New, beautfiul picnic tables just waiting for me to eat (and bead) at are big news here~roflol

Like I said, it's the simple things...

~Pamela


Stains that defy elbow grease and straight bleach...I really don't want to know

New picnic "legs" waiting and ready for assembly


BONUS!  Scraps for the bon fire:-)

Our top 10 reasons to live aboard...

So with winter sweeping in and making us all miserable, I need to remind myself of exactly why we live aboard now~lol
  1. Saving money!  Moving out of the house and onto Mystery is saving us money (in theory still, but give us time).  Our monthly expenses were cut by 75% and with me cleaning, by closer to 85%.  Of course, we are still catching up on bills and such, but we are getting caught up and are actually able to put more into the 401 than before.
  2. Spending more time as a family.  Yes, we all lived under the same roof in the house, but Bob, Max and I are much closer now.  We actually spend more time and do more together than when we were in the house. 
  3. No more yard work.  Yep, we no longer have a pool to maintain (if we really want to swim, we'll jump over the side~lol).  No more grass to cut.  No more worrying about tree limbs or that poor dead oak in the side yard. 
  4. No more clutter!  Well, there's still some clutter on the boat, but it was SO liberating to get rid of a house FULL of things and just let go.  I have to admit, I really don't miss anything that was given away or put into storage...except my winter coat~lol
  5. Beach property without the hassel of a house:-)
  6. We can pick up and go anywhere we want...after we get an engine of course *sigh*
  7. We can live our deam instead of just "thinking" about what we want.  How many people actually just "do it"?  Not as many as you would think!  If we had waited until the "timing" was right, we'd probably be waiting still in 10 years.
  8. Life is simplified and we appreciate the small things (like running water~lol) instead of searching for the next "big thing".
  9. We have a better appreciation for what we have.  There's really no need for the tv, dvd player, etc.  We can actually read a book and enjoy it just as much.
  10. We leave a smaller "foot print" now.  Not only has our use of power and water gone down severly, but we now use less of almost everything:-)
~Pamela

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

QwickCast.com...

So I'm checking out average temps and record high's and low's for the area and I'm a little disheartened to see that QwickCast.com has the average temp for St. Augustine as 58 degrees with the average low at 48.  That means that we are running slightly cooler than normal...again.   I'm really "stuck" on the temps lately~lol  I guess that I'm a warm weather type of girl and I'm stuck in a cool weather environment right now.  I promise to stop obsessing over the weather...as soon as it gets a little warmer...

~Pamela



St. Augustine, FloridaElevation: 10 feet      Latitude: 29 57N   Longitude: 081 19W

QwickCast Link

Monday, December 6, 2010

Cold weather...

So the weather man is calling for freezing temperatures for the next few days.  I was a little worried that the heater wouldn't keep us warm enough, but we were rather toasty in the cabin last night and I'm feeling a little better about the rest of the week.

Bob's still feeling wander-lust after watching all the other boaters heading further south the past few days.  He's still surfing Craigs List looking for a bigger bat boat that is sail worthy now~lol  He's also been surfing You Tube watching videos of people cruising to the Bahama's and Bermuda.  I have to admit, with it being so chilly outside and listening to the wind whistling through the rigging, I'm almost feeling a little wander-lust myself!

Bert and Sara are enjoying the cooler weather and I can't believe how playful Sara is getting.  She's only wanting to play for very short bursts of time, but she's actually wanting to play fetch and taking Bert on if he gets too close to her stick~lol

I really don't think she know's that she isn't as fit as she used to be.  I was worried that the cooler weather would have an adverse effect, but it seems I was worried about nothing...  Let's hope it stays that way!  Bob and I are both worried that we'll have to make a difficult decision before too much longer.  As long as she's comfortable and happy, we'll work with/around her though:-)

Hope everyone stays warm...

~Pamela

Friday, December 3, 2010

The simple things in life...

For those of you who didn't know, when we moved onto Mystery, she had been "pirated" while at anchor and we had no way to charge our batteries with all the solar panels taken.  Electrician Pat was nice enough to help us out with a battery charger, which Bob hooked up today:-)   

We have running water for the first time since moving aboard Mystery.  Our faucets are electric and run off battery power, so dead batteries means no water.  Thanks you! Thank you! Thanks you!

It's so amazing that sometimes it's the simplest things that make you happiest.  Now...if only I had a head on the boat...

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Many thanks for my warm feet Jim...

Yes, I know that Jim and Kathy left yesterday, but thanks to Jim I have snuggy, warm feet:-)  Jim was kind enough to give me a pair of his hand-knitted socks.  Let me tell you, I am very thankful for them tonight!  The temperature has already dropped down to 42 degrees and it's to get down to 36 by morning.  I've already had to take them away from Bob once~lol

More good-byes and exotic ducks...

Paul and Salty
Patrick
This morning broke a little bitter-sweet.  It's very windy and a little cloudy and today I have to say good-bye to Paul and Claudia on the trawler "Peeples Choice" and to Patrick, our dock neighbor.  Both are leaving today for warmer waters and a view of the sunshine.  Paul and Claudia will be returning in the Spring, but I'm not sure about Patrick.  He does have family near here, but I have a feeling he's going to love the Bahama's and stay longer than the others.

I was a little surprised to see these little ducks right off our stern.  They may not be exotic, but I've never seen any like this before so they were photo-worthy.




Paul and Claudia leaving on Peeples Choice

Peeples Choice heading up the river 

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

There's a chill in the air...photo update...




Sara was more than a little chilly this morning~lol  She decided that it was too cold to sleep by herself and attempted to sleep with me.  Trust me, she didn't stay this way for long!  After she woke me up, she was sent to the quarter berth with her blanket:-)

~Pamela

Saying Bon Voyage...

Jim and the Dilligaf
This morning I helped cast off the lines for Dilligaf, Jim's sweet little trawler.  I hope Jim and Kathy both have a safe and fun journey for the winter and I can't wait to see you again in the Spring.




Kathy, getting ready to catch the lines

Jim, happy that the anchor was "un-stuck" so he can continue the trip





*Photos to follow soon...ran out of photo storage and had to buy more~lol  Waiting for it to load:-)

~Pamela