We’ve made a good deal of progress with aquatics over the past week:
- The Ranger 20 is now tipped on its side and ready to have its keel worked on. It has a number of abrasions, meaning it must have run aground repeatedly in its past life. Those nicks and dings have to be patched before it goes back in the water, or the water might soak into the fiberglass and ruin the whole keel. Brian is coming up next weekend to do that.
- All of our torn sails have been mended.
- We finished towing the 12’ by 32’ float to camp. We had taken it directly back to the marina at Pleasant Harbor when we towed it from Port Gamble two weekends ago, because it was already approaching nightfall by the time we were in view of camp. Chris and Antone had the privilege of meeting Jim’s boater-friend Ralph, in all his salty splendor. Ralph is the skipper of the trawler that we used to tow the float.
- Chris rigged up the Holder 12, which, thanks to a new drainscrew, is seaworthy once again, for the first time in several years. I got a chance to sail it in pretty good winds on Saturday evening. It's really a fantastic little boat.
- Jim managed to get two very nice-looking floats donated to us from the Point Whitney Shellfish Lab.
- I finished painting the Thunderbird design on the pier sign—now I just need to touch up the white areas around it.
- Tom Rogers completed the two-week-long rigmarole to get on Alaska Air’s approved cargo-shipper list. Once he's squared away, he'll be able to fly our new Hobie 21 CompTip from Florida.
- Lastly, I just got a message from Jim saying that Brian came up today to raise the 750-lb. ship’s anchor that he found on the east side of Jackson Cove and move it somewhere near the pier. That’s what’s going to be holding down our massive new float.
Things are just cruising right along.
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Ken picking up the Ranger 20 and shifting it on its side to give us access to its damaged keel. |
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The Thunderbird design on the newly repainted pier sign. Just some touch-up work is needed before it'll be good as new. |
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