Ooh baby baby...
Listening to Change in the Weather by John Fogerty
So it goes...
Here at Boat Bits Central we still get a lot of mail asking why no fishing and cooking stuff anymore...
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RLW
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Friday, October 29, 2010
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RLW
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Thursday, October 28, 2010
Labels: Blogs, Boatbuilding
There are times when you find yourself saying silly stuff...
"I'm the white boat out in the anchorage with the blue sail-covers"Only to realize as you say it, that you've just described all forty or so boats in the anchorage who ALL have blue sail covers and are white! Which, when you think about it, is some kind of odd considering that boat folk tend to think of themselves as stone cold individualists who walk a different path...
"No way I'm like other guys, I'm a sailor"...Who just happens to have the exact same paint scheme as everybody else. To a certain extent you might consider that a certain nautical God, Nathanael G. Herreshoff once said...
"There are only two colors to paint a boat, black or white, and only a fool would paint a boat black".Then again he also hated fiberglass and said it looked like "frozen snot" so he can't be the problem...
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RLW
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Wednesday, October 27, 2010
It's been pretty low on the excitement meter here on "So It Goes" of late. Instead of just getting to it and finishing the dead eyes and simply dealing with the mayhem that milling aluminum in the cockpit always seems to cause, I've been trying to work up a fiendishly cunning plan (Yes, THAT cunning)!
Nah, not really... In truth it's simply a means to avoid just doing it and hoping that the Deadeye fairies would get with the program and do it for me...
Which we all know is simply not going to happen, so color me just doing it and making a mess!
Listening to Dedicated Friend
So it goes...
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RLW
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Tuesday, October 26, 2010
Labels: life on board, Projects
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RLW
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Monday, October 25, 2010
Some stuff of note that you should be aware of...
The Alberg 30 Sailboat project is a must read for Alberg 30 owners but lots of great DIY goodness for anyone fixing up a boat...
Seriously scary tales of batteries that will keep you up nights and make you wonder if sealed and leakproof batteries were such a good idea...
Hisse Et Oh is an excellent resource from France and well worth doing the BabelFish thing if you don't speak French...
Attainable Adventure cruising talks about their engine...
Me, I'm going to try out my new lobster snare!

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RLW
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Sunday, October 24, 2010
Labels: Blogs
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RLW
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Saturday, October 23, 2010
Labels: Boat Design, Cruising, Money, Zombies
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RLW
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Friday, October 22, 2010
Whenever possible I prefer to buy gear outside the marine industry as on one hand, there is that mark-it-up-till-their-head-explodes pyratical bent and on the other, a lot of backpacking or climbing gear is simply built better...
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RLW
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Thursday, October 21, 2010
Labels: gear, Good stuff, Money, Things that work, Tools
I'm never quite sure who comes up with those quasi holidays such as National Waffle Day (August 24), National Beer Day (Aug 7) or National Kick Butt Day (Oct 11) but hey I'm all for a reason to take off from work for a good cause.
As it happens today is something of a biggie in our holiday calendar as it is National Monster Mash Day and the ghost of Bobby "Boris" Pickett has most certainly entered the building...
As he points out in the video he may have only had one hit but he outlasted Elvis...
A bit of Monster Mash trivia as you may not be aware that Leon Russel (Yes THAT Leon Russell) was was one of the original "Crypt Kickers" when the song was recorded.
Face it, you know you want to listen to The Monster Mash...
Listening to (wanna guess?) my favorite cover of the Monster Mash!
So it goes...
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RLW
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Wednesday, October 20, 2010
Labels: Music
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RLW
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Tuesday, October 19, 2010
Labels: Blogs, Boatbuilding, Good stuff, Schooner
One of the places I've considered as a site to build the next boat is the Philippines as there is an abundance of good wood and a supply link is already in place for epoxy and composite materials. Throw in the fact that the Philippines is something of a cruisers dream (so many islands so little time...) and so far, the zombie scourge of bareboating has not yet taken hold nor appears to look like it will...
And, have I mentioned that growing up in LA in a neighborhood with a lot of Filipino families that Filipino food is one of my favorites?
Gotta be a catch...
One thing I'm not so big on is that they get hurricanes just like we do, though in the Pacific they call them Typhoons and Luzon was just hit by a category 5 storm with sustained winds of over 200 MPH...
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RLW
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Monday, October 18, 2010
Labels: Boatbuilding, Destinations, The "H" ting, Weather, Zombies
Over at the never ending discussion about whether you can cruise on $500 a month, I caught this gem... A new potable water pump I needed was US$500 in the boat parts store while the rebuild kit was only US$100. But I had to be willing to take the old pump apart and rebuild it. Hiring a "professional" to get and replace the pump would have probably cost near to US$1K (pump and labor/time).
Actually, not a bad point as it shows the advantage of doing your own work and saving money in the process. Which I think you'll agree is no bad thing in the grand scheme of things as being DIY capable cuts the costs of cruising radically.
Of course, for us in the cheap-seats universe, the idea of a water pump that costs $500 is akin to gold plated toilet seats... Ain't going to happen!
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RLW
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Sunday, October 17, 2010
Labels: Boat Systems, DIY, Money
Back when I was a kid, my brother and I started our version of a lemonade stand... Since we lived on Catalina, instead of making lemonade we did the next best thing and started catching fish for salt-water aquarium folk.
As things go it was actually a pretty successful business enterprise for a couple of kids. Once we moved from simply using an aquarium net to home-built slurp guns we actually started making money.
The downside was being the greedy kids we were we'd find ourselves festooned with plastic bags containing little fish all thrumming with danger danger Will Robinson vibrations which attracted sharks who thought someone had just rang a dinner bell. The worst were young adolescent Tiger sharks who would rip the bags off our belts and come back for more... Coming home from a hard day catching critters, the difficult part was having to explain to my dad how I wound up looking like I'd lost a fight with a belt sander.
Have I ever mentioned I used to be young and stupid?
Over the years while spearfishing and surfing I have had no shortage of up-close-and-personal experiences with a variety of sharks who never seem to have been interested in eating me but they have had some serious interest in fish I've speared and my surfboards...
Which is why I perk up when folks mention shark repellents as anything that makes sharks less interested in my upcoming dinner or surfboard would be no bad thing!
Shark Camo out of OZ is making a large decal you put on the bottom of your surfboard that says to sharks don't bother...
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RLW
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Saturday, October 16, 2010
Labels: Diving gear, Safety, Spear Fishing, Surf.
As today is Blog action day 2010 and the subject is clean water, I'd thought a repeat of this post would be no bad thing...
One of the first things that living on a small boat teaches you is your place in the eco-system... Unlike most land dwellers, you know exactly how much stuff you consume, how much waste you generate, how much electricity you use and how many hours of sun/wind or generator used to replace it. In other words, living on a boat gives you a clue (which I guess makes most land-dwellers clueless?).
Water for most newbies on boats is something of a panic-attack inducing conundrum as the wasteful practices ingrained in the resource wasting land dwelling model is very hard to break and trying to make these ingrained bad habits work on a cruising boat... Well, that way lies madness!
On the other hand, water IS serious stuff. We need water to live so it is something that does need to be factored in terms of how much you use, how much you actually need, how to obtain it, and how to keep it.
Throwing money at the situation with something like a watermaker or turning your boat into a sailing tanker truck seems to be the two most popular initial answers to the problem of having enough water. The real answer is getting in touch with the need/want equation and begin using what you need, rather than what you want or think you need or, in other words, get smart and waste less...
Speaking of waste and water, here is a great presentation on a perfect example of silly waste/being dumb where water is concerned and a great example on how what we think is true, simply is not.
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RLW
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Friday, October 15, 2010
Labels: Green, Living Aboard, Thought
One of the problems we have in the doing-up-a-boat-and-sailing-away-gig is that most folks don't pay enough attention to the world outside a very small confined orbit... I'm lucky coming from a climbing, backpacking, and cycling background so realize the answer to all questions is not always over-priced marine gear.
For instance, not too long ago I pointed out that a figure eight descender made a reasonable boom brake for around ten dollars instead of a "marine" boom brake for hundreds. Of course, I'd never have realized you could use one to stop a boom if I had not arrested a 230-pound climbing partner's 80-foot zipper fall on Half Dome. Face it, it makes sense to look outside at what other sports use from time to time...
But it's not just the gear we need to keep an eye on as an even more valuable resource is keeping tabs on what other sports and activities are up to in terms of head-space. What are they thinking?
Left to the CruisingWorld/Sail consumer yachting world it's all about buying things and comfort or ever increasing luxury as the norm for what is needful on a sailboat. Not too long ago, the people who still are heroes to most of us sailed without engines, furling gear, refrigeration, EPIRBs, computers, watermakers or onboard washers/dryers... Hardly seems possible if you only read the sailing rags of today. What is even more surprising to some, is most of them had a pretty good time doing it!
Which is one of the reasons it's good to read blogs like "A Path Less Pedaled". It gives you a different viewpoint and makes you realize just how comfortable in the grand scheme of things a 1970's era classic plastic sailboat can be compared to riding a bicycle across the USA. A whole different head space for sure! Their post from today really is a must read if only to tweak that urge for yet more and more expensive gear/toys that the sailing rags tell you ya gotta have...
Listening to Dexys Midnite Runners
So it goes...
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RLW
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Thursday, October 14, 2010
Labels: Cruising, Cruising.Culture, Simple
Good stuff from The Anarchist Yacht Clubb...
Hold Fast from Moxie Marlinspike on Vimeo.
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RLW
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Tuesday, October 12, 2010
Labels: Media
As I peruse the cyber online marine world and shopping for a couple of needful bits for "So It Goes" I happened on to a couple of products that engendered serious WTF moments...
Being that I have been planning to get an iPad, anything of a marine and iPad nature triggers my attention and lo and behold I see that the Outback Marine Store is selling a panel mount system for an iPad. Being a lazy fellow I look closer because avoiding getting out a bit of plastic, scrap teak or cypress, and the router to build a trim ring involves work and, like all lazy folks everywhere, I do try and avoid that four-letter word whenever possible.
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RLW
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Monday, October 11, 2010
Labels: Boat Systems, Marine Trades, Money, Pirates, Snake Oil Libation
Back in the 1600's they thought the world would be different too...
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RLW
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Sunday, October 10, 2010
Labels: Trends
I've spent months researching various inflatable kayaks and so far most have come up short in one way or another. So far, when all is said and done, they all seem to take up just too much space in the cockpit locker to make them a better choice than a real tortured plywood sea kayak. Inflatables cease to have an advantage if you have to keep them stowed on deck.
This one by Innova
however, looks promising...
I'm pretty sure I can find that kind of space!
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RLW
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Saturday, October 09, 2010
Labels: Boat Design, Inflatable dinghy, kayak, Small spaces
The rain down here for the last few days has been... well, the word biblical does come to mind...
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RLW
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Friday, October 08, 2010
Labels: Cruising, Living Aboard
This makes a lot of sense and if you find a waterproof box instead of a cigar box seriously boat friendly!
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RLW
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Thursday, October 07, 2010
Labels: Boat Systems, DIY, Electronics
We have been having no shortage of rain and the Lewmar hatches are both trying to out leak the other but hardly surprising that the one over my head is a clear winner and is doing a quite passable imitation of a SuperSoaker!
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RLW
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Wednesday, October 06, 2010
Labels: life on board
We have pointed out, from time to time, that learning at least the basics of the languages spoken where you plan to cruise is no bad thing and even suggested that Esperanto would be an awesome lingua franca for boat folk and a smart thing for the rest of the world... Of course that suggestion triggered a flood of emails to Boat Bits central suggesting that there was already a lingua franca and it was ENGLISH and that Esperanto was some sort of commie plot.
Sigh...
Whatever the readership thinks I still think that if you learn to speak at least the basics (please, thank you, could you direct me to the nearest ATM) you will be a happy camper more often than not.
But what about when you are beyond the comfort zone of civilization and visiting the lost isles of the fire god or other places that you won't find cruising guides for? What if you were about to enter an island mostly populated by zombies for instance... Would English alone do the trick?
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RLW
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Tuesday, October 05, 2010
Labels: Books, life on board, Zombies
The most excellent Interview With A Cruiser Project has been doing a great job of spreading good information and today's interview with "Velella" is no exception... While you're at it you should check out Velella's website which is a mine of great info!
Then again, I am much more likely to perk up and show interest when someone in a less than 36 foot boat (Velella is 31feet) is talking than someone with a Deerfoot or suchlike.
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RLW
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Monday, October 04, 2010
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RLW
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Saturday, October 02, 2010
Labels: Bikes, Boat Systems, Sweet rides
Jay Fitzgerald, author of "Sea-Steading: A Life of Hope and Freedom on the Last Viable Frontier" and sustainable farmer these days has some ideas about how to solve his local economy...
Makes as much sense as anything coming out of Washington these days!
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RLW
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Friday, October 01, 2010