Saturday, April 26, 2008

We are the Borghuahua

After hearing about the couple who had 800 chihuahuas in there Arizona home, Laurie and I speculated on the how and whys of it. As total Sci-fi geeks we naturally went to the bizarre. Here's my interpretation:

Project of Best Intention


I delivered an oversize Four Winns cruiser to Essex, Maryland, late last year and was able to bring this San Juan24 back with me as my company was "dead-heading" me home.

I purchased it on e-bay actual sight unseen, but with several pictures the owner had posted and a previous SJ24 restoration behind me, I thought I knew the boat, what it need, and the weak points needing attention. The price was extremely right.


At first glace it didn't look too bad.



I got back home late and unloaded it onto my triple

axle trailer I built for Our 1964 Pearson Vanguard.

The Vanguard has been on a cradle for a few years and the trailer has not been used till now. I almost sold it a while back, but decided against it. Good thing as the SJ24 looked at home on it. I was wondering at the seemingly perfect fit of the Vanguard when I first brought her home from Ontario.

I bought this SJ24 so we could have a trailer sailer as the Vanguard project seemed still years away from completion, and Laurie and I were hungry for the water.

My first SJ24 project is happily sailing down in Lake Monroe, Indiana. Where to my suprise I found several over 40 foot ocean capable sailing vessels in winter storage. Tack - come about - run off-come about- repeat?

I should have keep that boat, but we were building the war chest to pursue a boat rehab buisness, but that's another story.

Once home and under closer inspection the delamination of the deck was most obvious. The hull itself was delaminating and the whole thing was flexing and pushing in. Nothing short of complete deck removal and much much labor was going to put this boat into what I considered sea worthy shape. I could doctor it up, but whose life was I willing to risk?

I've taken a half dozen ugly ducklings and made swans of them and felt pretty cocky about what I could accomplish with resin, glass and paint. This boat is my reality check - not the boat appaiser I thought I was. Faced with the reality - I convinced Laurie that we were not heading to the sea in this boat and savage was the better part of humiliation.

All in all it was a break even deal. The tally?: Wasted time; Vanguard still not finished; Lost lbs' loading and unloading; discovered new combinations for all the words The Navy had taught me while removing the 1600lb lead keel; had the joy of seeing my wife's hands to mouth reaction as the soggy SJ24 partially stripped, keel-less and chained to a tree, hung in mid air, released from its earthly bonds, as I engaged the S-10 Jimmy's 4 wheel drive and jammed the pedal.

We have a few acres here and could use a pond..........




Friday, April 25, 2008

36 Foot Winsor Craft






First I want to show the beautiful wood work on a 36 foot Winsor Craft I hauled from the Boston Boat show to Ft Lauderdale.





Genmar Transportation employes me to move any and all boats the parent company, Genmar Marine, builds and sells. We haul our own boats and also contract to move any other commodity that will fit on our trailers. I've loaded boats, trailers, arch towers, engines, and even lumber from the Pacific Northwest.

I had recently delivered a 35 foot Larson Cabrio to a dealer in Laval, Quebec for the Montreal Boat show and was dispatched to pick up the Winsor Craft. I seldom see the boats uncovered so it was a treat to see the fine varnish wood detail of this beauty. This was the first Winsor Craft I moved. Genmar Imports them from Turkey and has dealer support throughout North America.

While strapping down after the crane crew expertly positioned it, several of the Boston Convention Center crew told me that the two Winsor Crafts on display were the most popular attractions. I've never had so many drivers slow down while in transit and look at a boat before. The pictures don't do it justice
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To Blog or not to Blog

I used to have a web page running with boat projects, but found the format too time consuming to update with my busy schedule. My wife Laurie, has a blog page to inform her friends and family and to journal my kidnapping her to the apparent wilderness of Michigan (Bear tore down three bird feeders last week.)

I'm planning to post picture of boats I've hauled for myself and my employer, and some project updates on my renovation of a 1964 Pearson Vanguard sail boat; Which seems to be somewhat slower than the earth turning coal into diamonds.