Saturday, December 31, 2011

The shape is the thing...

A bit of holiday cheer from the 99% choir, where's the climate leadership, and a cool way to get to the store...

So, we were talking about sharpies and sharpie questions, were we not? As it happens, the second most asked question about the sharpie experience is "why would anyone want such an inefficient hull form?"

Well... Is it really?

Rodger Martin mentioned recently in an email to me about his "Presto!" sharpie...

"We’ve done 13.5 knots in Presto! and hull # 2, Thorfinn,  has done 15 during the Fort Lauderdale to Key West race earlier this year."
Hmm... Doesn't exactly sound like an inefficient hull form does it?

Here's a question... When did you last see a round bottomed surfboard?

As someone who started surfing as a kid it just seems natural to me that a surfboard is a very efficient hull form. If you want to go fast the less shape in the water the better. Take a look at what a modern surfboard hull form by Hydrodynamica looks like...


Listening to Blackie & The Rodeo Kings

Have a great New Year!

So it goes...

Thursday, December 29, 2011

Warning, clown content ahead...

A notable death, Lefsetz asks a question, and, apparently they do mud wrestling at Easter...

Looking at my mailbag this morning I notice that not everyone agrees that a sharpie makes sense as a cruising boat.

Now, I actually get that as sharpies (or scows/whatever) are just that little bit different and folks don't generally like things that either makes them think about how things work or interfere with their slavish devotion to conformity and nothing I can say will change those folks minds so I'm not even going to try... Life, as they say, is simply too short.

On the other hand, several readers have written and asked a couple of questions...

The answer to the most popular question is... Nope, you do not need a keel for ballast purposes. A keel is mainly about providing a lateral plane to allow the boat to sail to windward but other forms of lateral planes work just as well (centerboards and lee boards come to mind) and, while it is true that using the keel as a handy place to put ballast is no bad thing, it is not the only way to skin a cat... Don't believe me?

Back when I was a kid I had a Bozo punching clown and the physics involved in punching the clown taught me everything I need to know about internal ballast and the fact that it works just fine.

Hit him once and he pops back up. Hit him a bunch of times and guess what... he still keeping popping up. Wrestle him to the floor and hold him down till he cries "uncle" (hey, I was an imaginative kid) and as soon as you let him go up he comes...

Throw him in the pool and invert him so his head is pointing to the bottom and let go... Guess what happens!

Like I said, internal ballast works just fine!

For those folks who like their facts without the clown element, Wooden Boat Magazine had a great issue about sharpies a bunch of years back and you can buy issue 114 as a digital download for $3.50 (just a warning but our Bolger Loose Moose 2 design was a featured sidebar).

Tomorrow we'll tackle another question about sharpies...

Listening to LLB

So it goes...

What's on my desk...

A simple solution, Dave makes a strong point for flat bottom boats, and something worth watching about free speech and Firefly...

Speaking of flat bottom boats, I've been spending a lot of time recently rethinking the advantages of sharpies and the fact that my next boat will, more than likely, be a sharpie based on our old Loose Moose 2...


If I go this route the new design would have a lot of small changes or "tweaks" in the construction aimed at making it easier and faster to build, some rearranging of the interior as our needs have evolved, and a couple of big changes which I'm still working on... But, more about that later!

Listening to the Tedeschi Trucks Band

So it goes

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Well of course he's nuts though not crazy...

The return on some investment, government Enron style, and rebuilding East Baltimore...

"Without deviation from the norm, progress is not possible."
                                                                                          Frank Zappa

Sven Yrvind is a man with a plan.

Admittedly, most folk would take half a look at Sven's agenda and the words bugfuck and crazy very likely would come to mind... Now, here on the good ship "So It Goes", we have developed a great appreciation of things Yrvind over the years and, while I'll admit to a WTF moment, I have no doubt that if anyone can pull off a non-stop round the world circumnavigation in a ten-foot sailing vessel, Sven is just the guy to do it.

Crazy has nothing to do with it...

Personally I'm going to be paying close attention to this project as to make it work Mr Yrvind is going to go all cunning-plan-on-steroids-creative and the spillover is going to improve my cruising to no end. The how and what of those improvements are a mystery at the moment but they will happen... Maybe a better/simpler/less expensive water maker or maybe something so out in left field that I can't even imagine it but there will be spinoffs and they will be good for all of us who sail long distances in small boats...

How cool is that?

Listening to Los Lonely Boys

So it goes...



apres Holidaze reading material...

Tenth amendment rights sure, just the facts ma'am, and if you were thinking of reading the latest Tom Clancy novel...

Speaking of reading...



My Holidaze are now complete!

Listening to The Band Perry

So it goes...





Sunday, December 25, 2011

So the question...

So the question is...

Did you get what you wanted for Christmas?

We've been waiting on a new dinghy which, I suppose, is this year's Holidaze present to ourselves but it would seem to be taking the slow boat... Maybe we'll get it by New Year's Eve?

Growing up in a fairly outdoor oriented family, there were many years that the idea of firearms under the tree was a much looked forward to possibility.

I can't quite recall how old I was when I got my first gun (a BB gun by Daisy) but that pretty much settled the fact that every couple of years as our prowess and maturity with things that go bang increased there would be guns... A Benjamin pellet rifle, a single shot Savage 22, a 410 shotgun by Mossberg and more were all the stuff of the holidays and an ongoing education of guns and their associated responsibility...

It's interesting that I remember every gun I ever owned (though the same could be said for guitars) and I would be lying if I said I did not look back on those days of guns with some fondness... That said, those were different days and the gun culture of my youth is a far different animal than the gun culture of today and the changes are not pretty ones.

Which is not to say that we were unaware that guns had a dark and ugly side. It was a fact drummed into us constantly by my parents, various shooting instructors, and coaches... We knew where the line was and, looking back, it would seem a lot of the reason we had guns at all was simply to show us where that line was and how to stay on the right side of it. Not so much these days as it would seem current gun culture is all about embracing the other side of that line...

The last time I wandered into a gun shop, the first thing I noticed was that it simply felt wrong as if this was a place that no good would come from and folks drawn to such a place were not people you wanted to be around or come across after dark... Not unlike some of those broken perverted "things" Stephen King writes about.

Truth is, I have no idea why these thoughts are going through my head today other than I was once that kid in the ad and about that age I received a pump action Winchester Model 1890 and it made me really happy and I'm more than sad that those days are gone...

Listening to David Bowie

So it goes...

Saturday, December 24, 2011

A message of import...

A preface to a book worth reading, not your run of the mill holiday special, and if cupcakes are the tools of terror, could it be the cure for terrorism can be found in... Snow cones?

Christmas is upon us and here is hoping that all of those who read Boat Bits have a happy, safe, and (hopefully) zombie free Holiday...

Listening to John Stewart

So it goes...





Friday, December 23, 2011

Not much going on...

Government and big business the graphs say it all, something of a connected nature, and who would have thought cupcakes were a threat?

I really should be installing our new solar panels but getting anything done right before the Holidaze weekend is some kind of problematic... Plus, I really wanted to re-route the other panel wiring so it is a fairly involved affair and should wait for Boxing day or even the day after.

So, my plans are to do some baking (a pineapple cake seems called for) and kick back with a good book or fiddle with some boat design ideas I've been working on...

Listening to Laura Love

So it goes...


Thursday, December 22, 2011

"So It Goes" gets an early Holidaze present...

Crooks and Liars says something important, L,G,& M points out the benefits of child labor, and in the rarity department, some good news from Mr Krugman.

I've been wanting a bit more solar power for "So It Goes" and have been keeping an eye on solar panel pricing in the 40-75 watt zone as I don't have room for anything bigger. Sadly, the niche I'm looking for seems to be way too price stable as I keep seeing big panels come down in price while the smaller more boat friendly ones remain quite pricey at cost per watt...

The other day, we actually decided to just bite the bullet and simply buy a pair of 50-watt panels and actually found getting folks to take my money and ship panels to the USVI was no easy task.

Looking at panels on Amazon, we discovered a 50-watt panel for $99 and they did not seem to have any hassle with shipping two panels to the Caribbean via US Mail for less than $25... So we bought a pair and five days later (we ordered last Friday afternoon and received them Wednesday) have them on our boat... YOWZA!

Just a quick aside to say how Mr Zip is the cruisers friend and for those US voters who read this should all drop a line to your Rep and Senator and tell them the US Postal System is a good thing.

The panels are quite nice and construction is excellent. The first thing I noticed was the frames were even nicer than our existing BP panels which makes mounting them a lot easier.

Now, for $99, the actual cells are not cutting edge state of the art but they are not visibly old tech either. I'm guessing they are last year's tech which is just fine as far as I'm concerned because 50 watts is, after all, 50 watts!

Listening to Warren Zevon

So it goes...






Wednesday, December 21, 2011

A sign of the times...

Something fishy about that pipeline, politics as usual, and Krugman hits the nail on the head...

The other day I was watching the local USCG boat hovering about and the thoughts going through my head were going down the checklist of required bits the Coasties are going to be looking for if the hovering turns into a "safety inspection".

Flares... Check!

PFDs... Check!

Fire extinguisher... Check!

Horn... Check!

Thru-hulls closed... Oops, I've got a composting head I don't have no stinkin thru-hulls! Er, check!

Placards... Ummm maybe?

Fact is I know they are on the boat but with the remodeling of the galley I'm not sure I could find them in a hurry... So I need these babies and I need them in a hurry!

Listening to Quicksilver Messenger Service

So it goes...




Tuesday, December 20, 2011

and on the subject of Skink...

The Girls' Guide to Surviving the Apocalypse makes a pretty good point, something worth watching, and nothing like this could ever happen at home... could it?

I'm currently re-reading "The Riddle of the Sands" again and it still happens to be my favorite sailing book... Of course, reading it on a Kindle (it's a $1 download at Amazon) adds just a bit of an odd "time marches on" vibe to the whole arrangement.

Fiction and sailing is something of a bad mix in most books I've read. Either they don't get the sailing right or, in those very, very few books that actually do have a passing understanding of sailing and boats, don't seem be able to tell a story you actually might want to read. Which is kind of surprising as you'd think sailing and cruising would lend itself as a vehicle for contemporary fiction...

Can you imagine the sort of books Robert Crais might do? I'm pretty sure Elvis Cole would be sailing a cherry CAL40 but I honestly don't have a clue about the sort of boat Joe Pitt would be sailing except you just know it's going to be wood and some kind of awesome...

Or, how about Randy Wayne White? Doc Ford's sari wearing cosmic cowboy sidekick  Tomlinson has a Morgan and, all things considered, he'd be a lot of fun to buddy boat with!

James W. Hall is most of the way there, as his mayhem magnet Thorne character spends a goodly amount of time on the water, knows his way around boats, and could easily support himself while cruising by tying flies.

On the other hand, the character I'd most like to see out sailing and cruising would be the  roadkill eating ex-Governor of Florida Clinton Tyree otherwise known as "Skink"  from various Carl Hiaasen books...  I'm pretty sure he'd know exactly what to do to that big sports fisherman that just waked us...

Listening to Distorted Penguins

So it goes...



Monday, December 19, 2011

Simple Monday and a few words on anchoring... Part three

Why you might want to think twice before eating that shrimp cocktail, Bob Perry talks rudder, and, apparently, Hart over at "his vorpal sword" wants the same thing I do for Christmas...

Truth be told, I'm not very good at anchoring in tight places because 99.9% of the time there is simply no need to. On those rare occasions when I do, the operative word is C-A-R-E-F-U-L-L-Y.

As I have mentioned before, if a boat has any kind of decent scope out the chances are that they are pivoting on their chain rather than their anchor and that makes it very difficult to ascertain exactly where someone's anchor happens to be...

For instance, yesterday in the anchorage we were all pointing in very different directions as it was a current/swell/wind nightmare. Later as the swell died down and all the boats were pointing (more or less) into the wind I realized that for a boat just coming in to the anchorage it was the anchorage from hell but did not look like it was. Our anchor was about thirty feet behind us while the boat behind us was sitting dead on top of theirs and for the rest the only thing I could say for sure was nobody's anchor was anywhere near where you'd expect them to be.

Which is why that inviting hole in the midst of a bunch of boats can be anything but inviting.

So, the prudent and simple thing to do is to anchor at the back of the pack... Fact is, we never ever anchor in front of boats and, as many years as we have been doing this, we have never found ourselves in a situation where we could not anchor aft of the pack.

On the other hand, most times when we come into an anchorage where lots of boats are sardined in a section we'll find there is plenty of room because the "anchorage" is often much larger than the area actually being used by boats and we do ourselves a disservice when we assume otherwise simply because boats are bumper to bumper in a particular corner.

Listening to Dirty Heads

So it goes...


Sunday, December 18, 2011

Holidaze...

Just when victory is all but assured an idiot steps up to bat, lemmings go with climate change, and some seriously scary shit...

Speaking of brain eating bacteria and suchlike, what better time to dust off our favorite Holiday video?

Do I smell pie cooking?



Listening to David Bowie

So it goes...

Saturday, December 17, 2011

An anchor story...

Tell me again why idiots are driving the bus, some interesting notes on weather, and a rising tide is no bad thing...

I noticed the other day that "Claw" anchors seem to be out there for seriously cheap money these days...

The "Claw" anchor, as you all know, is a much maligned anchor and happens to be a dead on copy of the "Bruce"... The Bruce is also a much maligned anchor but used to be the Next-Gen flavor of the month and was considered by most to be the best anchor around for a couple of decades or so.

For those who need visual aids the Bruce looked like this...

The "Claw" as made by/for Simpson-Lawrence looked like this...


Hmmm... Kinda looks the same! The SL Claw was a nearly exact copy with the only difference being it was cast in China using actual Bruce anchors as the pattern.

There is a very large mythology concerning "Claw" anchors where accounts of breakages and suchlike are concerned. It seems just about every cruiser you run across has a great story about a Claw breaking/failing which he heard from a guy who knew a guy who knew a guy who had one. I use the word mythology as I have endeavored to find actual first person accounts of failures of the Simpson Lawrence (now Lewmar) Claws and have yet to find one.

For what it's worth, my experience with the SL Claw is that I used to work with a marine store and we sold hundreds of Claws and never had a single one return. A slightly related fact was at the same time we also sold lots of the Fortress anchors which came back on a regular basis due to breakage reasons to the tune of about 25%. So, I have to ask the question why is the Fortress respected while the Claw is a pariah?

Right now I see SL/Lewmar Claws in the  33 and 44 pound size selling for right around $100 which, in a world where the current 44 pound flavor of the month anchor costs around $700 or more, it certainly makes the Claw something very much worth researching and considering...

Anyway, the point is, when making a decision on which anchor to buy, keep in mind that there is a lot of misinformation, rumors, and just plain lies floating about where ground tackle is concerned. If you want information on an anchor, the best way to research it is simply to find someone actually using the anchor in question and ask them.

Listening to Distorted Penguins

So it goes...

Thursday, December 15, 2011

A scowish surf aspect...

LAPD vies with NYPD in the hearts and minds sweepstakes, confessions of a child janitor, and since we were speaking of hearts and minds, a little something to leaven the holiday season...

I've always felt that the Mini-Simmons surfboard was, just maybe, the perfect board for a cruising sailor...

A board way ahead of it's time in the 50's and currently having something of a well deserved comeback. It seems there are Mini-Simmons boards everywhere these days...



It has not escaped my notice that the Simmons boards have a certain "scowish" aspect and just today one of my favorite surf sites, Hydrodynamica, did a post with an evolved Simmons called the Golden Mean Machine...



Sure looks like a scow to me...

Listening to R.E.M.

So it goes...




The dread secret of electric propulsion...

Some timely advice for rich white guys, if this is a significant achievement we just may be doomed, and, on a cheerier note, the Girls Guide to Surviving the Apocalypse (always a good read) is doing a daily "Christmas Music for the Apocalypse"!

Several readers have asked why I no longer seem to write about electric propulsion...

Well, to be truthful, the subject has become somewhat boring and it's really hard to write about a boat system that works so well. Seriously, what's interesting about a simple system that simply sits there and works? Hell, I can't even bitch about the cost of a marine system if my only outgoing expense is the occasional bottle of water for the batteries...

It almost makes me wish I still had an internal combustion engine because then I'd have all sorts of blog fodder like chasing down expensive Racor filters, contaminated diesel, engine repairs in too tight places, transmission problems, changing oil, alternator problems, the high cost of marine mechanics... a pretty endless list and every problem on that list a potential blog post or rant!

Sigh...

Face it, my Electric Yacht drive simply works way too well to add any real drama to Boat Bits... I mean, how can my adding water to my 48V battery bank compete with a blog title like "Lost engine 100nm from La Paz"? or "Volvo MD2030D Heat Exchanger - oopsie" so why should I bother?

Now, for those who want to read about electric drives, there is an excellent series in the making over at Odda Sea on the whole electric propulsion thing where Daniel has not quite yet learned the dread secret of just how boring an electric drive can be...

Listening to Girls, Guns, and Glory

So it goes...



Wednesday, December 14, 2011

New stereo goodness aboard "So It Goes"...

On the fact that Krugman just used the "D" word (warning some seriously scary shit), the sort of film that deserves support, and I wonder if this is available with a rail mount?

On "So It Goes" we tend to go into consumer mode around the holidaze...

Part of this is that as it is the end of the year, we have a pretty good idea of what is affordable in the grand scheme of things and partly because there are a lot of sales about we can take advantage of.

So at the moment we feel quite rich with a lot of unread books on the shelf (and in the Kindle), loads of DVDs, and lots of bits and pieces for various ongoing boat projects stowed away.

One item we just picked up was a test replacement for our stable of iPod Mini's which in the last few weeks have sickened and apparently decided to go to that great iPod dock in the sky to be with Steve Jobs... Sad to see them go as we loved them and listening to music is such a big part of what I do...

The replacement we found was the Sansa Clip+ which seemed to have all the features of the iPod Shuffle with the added features we wished the Shuffles had... Considering that the Clip+ was a chunk cheaper it seemed too good to be true.

Now that I'm actually using the Clip I find it has a better sound than the iPods. Its ability to use micro SD cards for additional memory means that I can put an additional 8 gigs of music, audio books, radio shows, or whatever on the player when needful. Since we have a lot of SD cards floating about it's easy to have various playlists and musical types on hand to plug and play.

So, having put the test unit through its paces and finding it works, we will be buying a couple more and being it is the holidaze season I may just splash out for a couple of "skins" to go with them...

Listening to Ezra Furman & the Harpoons (Most played song this week)

So it goes...


Tuesday, December 13, 2011

The apparently shocking truth...

How to win young hearts and minds the NYPD way, TechDirt makes a comment of import, and Kunstler makes an excellent point on what Obama's job should be (the money quote is "His job was to lead an epochal re-set of the economy to a very different disposition of things, smaller, finer, more local.")...

My mention yesterday that I thought that electric windlasses were a bad idea apparently shocked a couple of people but I'll stand by my feelings that if your ground tackle is too big/heavy for you to deal with using a manual windlass, it's just your body saying you should be looking for a smaller boat (or maybe some exercise with a personal trainer).

Brian Toss has an excellent little article on the subject of lazy jacks over at Three Sheets Northwest and he touches on the whole electric winch thing...

"An increasingly common consequence of people failing to do this is that they come to rely more and more on electrics and hydraulics, and then find themselves unable to make things work when the machinery fails. Machinery also tends to isolate us from events, so that we can become both less appreciative of the beautiful things that are happening and similarly, less likely to notice when things are going wrong. In the latter connection, I could just about fill a book with (often horrific) stories about interesting side effects of electric winch use."
One of the reasons I like a manual windlass is the fact that when I am using it the chain tells me stuff... Chain talks to you and it vibrates a certain way when the anchor has set, vibrates in a different way when it does not, and tells you what sort of bottom you're in but all of that is lost when you have a motor in the mix.

The other reason I'm not a huge fan of electric windlasses is that they are at best a problematic system and we know far too many people who have this sort of ongoing saga where electric windlasses are concerned...

Listening to Skadaddyz

So it goes...

Monday, December 12, 2011

Simple Monday and a few words on anchoring... Part two

Lab rats with empathy (I wonder how Wall Street brokers/bankers would fare in this experiment?), this is interesting, and L,G,&M pretty much sum it all up...

So, you've come into an anchorage, found a place as far as humanly possible from others, and you are saying to yourself "How would "So It Goes" drop their anchor?

Well, to that question the operative word would be slow!

For a start, since we don't have a powered windlass (a really bad invention in my point of view), doing things slowly is no bad thing. Our usual method of dropping the hook is to come to a complete stop then let out just enough rode so the anchor hits bottom and as the boat drifts back we let out chain s-l-o-w-l-y... The idea is to avoid piles or clumps of chain on the bottom and let the force of the boat and its windage slowly dig in the anchor and lay out your chain on the bottom...

The main reason I do it this way is simply because after watching many anchors dig in (or not, in a lot of cases) underwater, I've noticed that they tend to dig in and set a lot better when pulled very slowly on the bottom and that the faster an anchor is pulled the harder it is to set.

The other reason I do it slowly is slow equals less sweat and I'm a sorta/kinda lazy guy. I should also point out it is quite pleasant to sit at the bow and let a few feet of chain out every once in awhile while getting a feel for the new anchorage and its denizens.

Now, astute readers may have noticed that I'm not actually using a motor as part of the process and they would be right.

Once I've got about a 4/1 scope out it's time to make a pot of coffee... The anchor will continue to dig in and the time spent making coffee, and then sitting in the cockpit drinking coffee allows the anchor to do its thing and for me to relax...

When the coffee is finished and providing my little coffee and biscuits session has not been interrupted by the scenery changing more than I'm comfortable with, I amble back to the bow and let out a bit more chain so I have about a 6/1 scope.

The next step is to jump overboard and take a look at the anchor... What I expect to find is the anchor chain laid out at a mostly straight line to the anchor which will be oriented the correct direction and will be set... That seems to be the case 95% of the time. The other 5% I may find that the anchor is sitting on something I'd prefer it not to or that the anchor may in fact be not oriented in the proper direction. For those rare occurrences I simply manhandle the anchor by hand because I'm too lazy to do it with the boat/manual windlass.

Back on the boat, if happy with the anchor, I then continue to let out rode till I have out enough that I will sleep secure knowing I'm not going to go walkabout at 3AM... Right now I'm sitting on a 10/1 scope which is certainly more than needful but it does let me sleep without worry and what's the point of having all that chain in the locker if you're not letting it earn its keep?

My mantra for anchoring is "Too much is just enough" and it always seems to work for me.

Next Monday more about anchoring where room is in short supply....

Listening to Dobie Gray (sadly no longer with us)

So it goes...

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Hors piste...

Krugman makes a very good point, this kid gets taught a lesson (though not the one his mom intended) and a surf film project that deserves a hand...

I just heard that Italy seems to have a new tax on things that float that will have something of a negative impact on cruising boats visiting the area...

Now, an extra $9 to $16 a day is not as bad as some places but it does add up. For instance for "So It Goes" it adds about $290 per month to the budget and then you still have to pay anchoring fees/marinas/etc... Not a pretty picture is it?

Of course, those of us on a budget will take one look at the tax, do the math, and, as a result, plot a course that takes us somewhere else. The problem is, as time goes on, there seem to be fewer and fewer places to go without having to leave the comfort zone most folks find in the various milk runs and same old same destinations.

On the positive side, when you have a chance to think about it, hors piste makes a finest kind mantra!

Listening to Leslie and the Badgers

So it goes...


Saturday, December 10, 2011

Rain, rain, and more rain...

A little irony with your morning coffee, some lessons that will come in handy for the future, and Abigail Borah just made my favorite people list...

A film I'm really looking forward to...


FISHING WITHOUT NETS - TEASER from mynameisCutter.com on Vimeo.

Listening to The Band

So it goes...


Friday, December 09, 2011

A Friday interview with Rodger Martin...

How electric propulsion creates a new dynamic, a page from the war on common sense, and a sorta/kinda boat friendly garden system...

A while back I heard on the Sharpies anonymous (Hi, I'm Bob and I have a serious sharpie problem) coconut telegraph that there was a new hot sharpie design coming out as a production boat...

A lot of sharpie fanatics were excited but being older, somewhat jaded, and with a deep distrust of the marine industry, I expected that the new much anticipated boat would be a sharpie in name only and, at best, we'd be lucky if just one element of what makes a sharpie a sharpie was part of the mix. Later, when I heard that they planned to call the new boat "Presto" you would have been able hear the sound of my falling expectations from here to Mars. When the marine industry uses a famous boat name it is seldom a pretty picture and as the "Presto" is something of the Holy Grail of Sharpiedom... Well, I'm sure you can understand my feeling of unease.

Then I heard that the designer was someone whose work of the go-fast-race-around-the-world-in-a-hurry sort I admire and knowing that Rodger Martin was part of the mix all of a sudden I dared to hope... and, when the boat left vaporware damned if it was not a real honest to goodness (if somewhat evolved) sharpie...


Really!

So, let's talk to Rodger about some boat bits...

Why are you designing boats?

It’s a compulsion. I’ve been doing it since I was three. Also cars and planes; things that have free movement. I have notebooks full of bad sketches with a few refined to represent boats that have been or could be built. Dissatisfaction with boats I have sailed brought out the designer in me to draw them the way I thought they should be. When you do that it is very encouraging to see that the ideas you have thought about work in practice.

It could be said (well I say it all the time) that yacht design is somewhat hamstrung because designers don't really design better boats but design to a few small niche communities (racing, the wealthy, bareboat charter industry, etc) and, as a result, it's hard for new ideas or real innovation to take hold... How do you manage or work around that?

I find it hard to do the same thing twice, although that’s the easy route to ‘success’. I have to be interested in the concept to take on a design. I’m passionate about the boats we design. We have brought two widely different boats to the point of sending them out for bids and for different reasons (not the cost) those clients decided not to build the boats. There’s a period of mourning!



Having said all that, I’m pragmatic and we have to make a living. Perhaps the only useful saying I’ve minted is this: Being ahead of your time is simply bad timing. We are usually responding to a request from a client, and it helps that the clients come to us because they know we’ll give them what they want instead of (the ‘successful’ formula) giving them what we want. You have to have the client in on the experiment if you want to try something new and different. We don’t play around with client’s money.


Your new Sharpie design has become very popular... What's the appeal of the Sharpie and shoal draft... ?

After a while you question keels, especially deep ones, on cruising boats. Sharpies are very seaworthy if well-designed. They allow for adventurous exploring in places where even cats & tris can’t go. If you take a calculated chance at running an inlet in a Sharpie, and hit the bottom, the board bounces. If you do so a keel boat you have a shipwreck! It becomes a safety issue. I feel it’s essential to combine low-centered rigs with the concept as they keep the heeling arm low. Of course we’ve also designed boats drawing 15 feet, though they are ‘Round the World racing boats.

You have a new larger sharpie in the works... Could you tell us about it?

Yes, that’s exciting, it’s a 42 footer. The clients are from a major East Coast boatyard and this is a new direction for them. They’ve seen how badly the East Coast is served by shoal water boats. Much of Chesapeake Bay, the New Jersey coast, Great South Bay (Long Island, NY) and the Florida coasts, for example, are near high population areas but are inaccessible to most sail boats except for sharpies and some multihulls. The SolarWind 42 is a perfect family cruising boat with two double cabins, for long distance or short-term cruising. You can dry her out upright. She draws 18” with appendages up and can motor in 33” of water.




What do you feel is wrong with design today? What do you see as negative trends?

The concept that a cruising boat should have a detuned replica of a race boat’s high aspect sloop rig. This rig is essentially designed for speed upwind. As soon as the wind comes aft it is inefficient without the addition of hard-to-fly sails.


 What trends do you find positive and exciting?

I’m excited that the America’s cup is being raced in fast boats at last! Isn’t that what racing is meant to be? Fast?

What at the moment is your favorite design you've done and why?

A couple: Outward Bound Hurricane Island 30s because they’re giving hundreds of kids a year their first sailing adventure, and it’s not racing. If I’d been forced to race in a racing program as an 8-year-old I’d be doing something else today. Yet I love to go fast and to design racing boats.
Another is our own Presto!, the first Presto 30, in which we have good friends as partners. Presto lets us cruise the way we like and reminds me of happy summers alternatively drifting and tearing around in centreboard dinghies as a boy in South Africa.
         I have a fondness for many of our boats, often in association with their owners.


Which of your designs do you like the least and why?

I’m sorry you’re breaking up!

What boat do you wish someone would ask you to design?

Two boats:



 1. A simple 60 foot Presto-type (round-bottomed) tandem-board sharpie for Caribbean racing and ‘Round-the-World cruising.



2. The successful replacement for the Sunfish so every resort on water would have a fleet!

When did you go sailing last?

Last February, for a couple of months. And a few times this Summer.


Who are your favorite designers?

Nigel Irens; William Garden; Cyrus Hamlin; Ralph Munroe; Alan Gurney; Renato ‘Sonny’ Levi.

Something else that you have a burning need to answer?

How can we teach kids to just mess about in boats and have fun adventuring and experimenting as I was allowed to instead of bringing out their (and their parents) aggro by regimenting them in racing programs? I don’t have the answer but the situation begs for one. We should be training adventurers!

Hopefully some more from Rodger in the not too distant future...

Listening to Johnny Clegg and Savuka

So it goes...

Wednesday, December 07, 2011

A really nice hatch...

A dollar here, a dollar there, and just where the hell was the boatfolk contingent in this years Zombie Safe House competition?

Some time ago, Chris Morejohn on "Hogfish" anchored next to us in St Martin and I spent a lot of time stealing ideas for the next boat...



Is this a great hatch or what?

Listening to Rod Stewart

So it goes...



Nada...

Some cheery music for those who will be flying this holiday season, how justice works in the real world, and Reich gives a play by play...

Can't think of a thing to write about today, so...



Listening to the Alabama State Troupers

So it goes...

Tuesday, December 06, 2011

Did that mans head just explode?

The why of OWS, something about those numbers, and I'll admit that this story brought a smile...

I've been on something of a scow schooner binge recently in my reading and various discussions with friends of a similar mindset and one thing comes to mind as a result...

Change is no easy thing!

I've always had trouble with folks of the "Old Gaffers" ilk who love the gaff rig but who also hate the idea that you might want to evolve the rig, even a little, with higher tech line because low stretch non-three strand line is not traditional and if you even mention the idea of a lightweight carbon composite "yard" to a gaffer his head will explode... I've actually seen this happen and trust me it is NOT A PRETTY SIGHT so take my advice and never ever use the words carbon fiber around an "Old Gaffer" dude.

But, I can actually understand their thinking as evolving a traditional boat form is no easy task, requires talent, and more than a little like hard work if you want it to look the way most people expect a boat to look like or at least an acceptable evolved form that has a certain continuity within the greater grand scheme of things... In short, it is somewhat crazy making or worse (your head just might explode) so it's understandable how some folks just might want to live in the past and pretend no one has invented things like Dyneema, NACA foils, CAD, or carbon fiber.

Which is not to say that going in the other direction is the way to go either... No need to throw the baby out with the bathwater. There is a lot to be said for little steps and little changes which just might add up to big changes without (hopefully) making any heads explode in the process...

Listening to Ten Years After

So it goes...


Monday, December 05, 2011

Simple Monday and a few words on anchors... part one

Where words matter, an apocalypse of a different sort, and someone making some sense...

I actually put a lot of effort into avoiding talking about anchors and anchoring... Face it, it's not really a sexy subject, folks have seriously crazy deep seated opinions on anchor stuff, and discussions can get heated enough to inspire mild mannered owners of Bendytoys to go all Berserker on your ass (something of a nautical tradition as it happens).

Most of my education involving anchors and anchoring has really been from the fact that I spend a lot of time underwater diving various anchorages and seeing how anchors behave where fluke meets the bottom which can be very instructive and I highly recommend you do it as well, if for no other reason to see up close and personal how real world anchoring seldom looks anything like the hype folks who make anchors throw around.

So, I won't go into actual anchors but simply the methodology of putting your anchor down with the best chance of avoiding those embarrassing inadvertent changes of scenery of the dragging kind...

When coming into an anchorage my first thoughts are simply to put my boat and its anchor as far away as possible from every other boat. I'll be the first to admit that part of this is simply because I'm not a real sociable fellow but the main reasons are it gives me the ability to put out more scope and not have to worry about having to worry about going bump in the night, with the added bonus of not having to listen to some boat playing Barry Manilow.

In the real world of anchoring, scope is your best friend and beats next-gen super expensive anchors all to hell in the holding sweepstakes. If that scope is all chain it's even more effective though there is nothing wrong with rope and chain rodes if the chain part is at least the length of the boat (or better yet round up to the next significant number... In our case with our 34-foot boat I'd think 50 feet is the next significant number) and more is always better. Think of chain as being a lot like money, more is ALWAYS better...

Going back to being the underwater observer, most folks in an anchorage are mostly pivoting on their chain and not pulling on their anchor at all... For instance, where we are anchored at the moment, we have about 100 feet of chain out and for the last week or so we've been pivoting on the anchor chain about one third of the chain length or about 30 feet off our bow...

Which actually brings up an important point... Since most folks pivot on their rode instead of their anchors the actual location of the anchor can be quite surprising and right now our anchor is maybe 30 feet off to our side by nearly a boat length. This, of course, means anyone trying to anchor parallel to us might be in for something of a surprise, yet another reason to anchor as far as physically possible from other boats other than the avoidance of my rather intense collection of Captain Beefheart played at ear numbing volume at 3:00 AM...

Next Monday we'll talk about getting the anchor wet!

Listening to Sons of Bill

So it goes...

Sunday, December 04, 2011

On being a person of contrary opinion...

A podcast worth listening to, at least one state seems to be doing the right thing, and the word for today in intervention...

I've mentioned that a friend of mine is in the process of building a new catamaran and, as it happens, he has been dropping me various notes regarding stuff he wants for the boat and boatbuilding process...

It's not easy giving advice on that level and I take it quite seriously because anything I may say could possibly affect the build of his boat, how long it takes to build, and the cost of the finished product.

That said, I know that he will (in fact) NOT take a lot of my advice on various issues but that my cog in the machine is simply that of being a contrary opinion that forces him to find the kernel of logic he needs to do what he wants. Which, I might add, is OK as it is his boat and he has to live with it...

Truth is, when I get around to building LM 4/4/4 I'll be looking for just such a person to disagree with me on a regular basis to force my brain to jump through some hoops in the various need/want conundrums as I come to them...

Speaking of need/want conundrums... A blog I read just posted some thoughts on why he has decided, for the moment, to refrain from having advertising on his blog. It's a good read and for any bloggers out there it is something of a must read.

I've spent quite a lot of time wrestling myself with the pros and cons of advertising on the blog and the conundrum of promoting a real world budget cruising and boatbuilding experience while at the same time profiting from an industry that far too often also rips us off...

For me the important factor is there is nothing wrong with commerce or the act of making a profit but an educated buyer is the solution because as soon as folks quit buying products at stupid prices and refrain from buying needless items, we once again take control of our budgets...

The various companies that you'll find on Boat Bits (and our sister projects Fishing Under Sail and Island Gourmand) are all companies that I buy from myself, have excellent after sales service, good community footprints and when I point out a product it is because I think the product has merit, utility, with no obscene profit margins, and comes in at a reasonable cost... The fact is, there are any number of companies and products that would provide more and better income to the blog but don't quite pass our standards.

While we, of course, appreciate the small amount of income that comes to us by folks buying stuff through the blog we sincerely hope that folks only do so after running the purchase through the full-on need/want stress test.

Since it's the first day of Zappadan we're listening to Frank!

So it goes...




Saturday, December 03, 2011

Some cheap happy making stocking fillers...

I'm glad to see I'm not the only one who's noticed this, Dmitry has t-shirts with Hogfish goodness (xmas being just around the corner and all!), and Crooks & Liars pretty much sums it all up...

Since the subject of xmas has raised its pointy little head, maybe it's time to talk stocking stuffers...



Face it, everyone on a boat needs a knife and the Fury clone of the Myerchin sailors tool (I just bought one and it is now my go-to boat knife) is easily this year's best bang for the buck...

Since I notice that so many sailboats I happen to come across have rigs seriously out of tune (and many so-called pro riggers apparently suffer from cranio-rectal syndrome) Brion Toss's DVD "Tuning Your Rig" just might be a very useful sort of gift that would save someone a lot of money...

As long as we're on the subject of Brion Toss, may I say that "The Complete Rigger's Apprentice: Tools and Techniques for Modern and Traditional Rigging" really belongs on every boat...

Really!

While it might not have a lot of romance, a tube of my currently preferred goop would not go unappreciated and always comes in handy...Trust me, boatfolk love practical stuff that works!

Speaking of things that work... One of these belongs in every inflatable dinghy or life raft kit...
If your favorite sailor has a Honda 2000, he/she would love to find an oil drain thingy in their xmas stocking...

What can I say, practical makes all kinds of sense on a boat!

Listening to Dawn Landes

So it goes...


Friday, December 02, 2011

and the rants just keep on coming...

Actually, the question is... what would Zombie Attack Barbie do to the sports fisherman that just blasted through the anchorage TWICE in ten minutes pulling a six foot wave?

A pre-Xmas shopping rant......

Brilliant at Breakfast makes some good points, so do these folks, and a resource we should all be reading...

As someone who has something of a history of ranting and roaring about the cost of boat and cruising stuff, maybe I should rant a little more...

Of course, as a fairly conservative person (let's just say midway between an Ike Republican and a Johnson Democrat) I both understand the need for a reasonable profit structure and actually think profit is a good thing... So rest assured that I'm not going to go all Bolshoi on you.

A while back I ranted a bit about the silly prices that some marine shops were selling Dyneema slings for, as an example of what an unacceptable markup or profit margin exists in a lot of sailing gear and how the climbing industry by comparison was selling the same item for a fraction of the cost while making a pretty good profit...

Like I said, profit is a good thing! But, at what point does profit left unchecked become something else? We might also factor in that as some companies in the marine sector continue to grow by acquiring other companies that the outcome can be pretty damn close to a monopoly situation where price fixing is the order of the day...

Being a DIY kind of guy, I'm lucky as it gives me a grounding in what materials cost and how much labor goes into stuff. I've also worked in manufacturing and design of products in the mountaineering and ski industries so have a passing acquaintance with what stuff costs to manufacture in bulk and how much it costs to put on the shelves of your local shop. So, if I come across a product that contains $200 worth of material and a few hours of labor that is selling for nearly $6000, well you might say my "Spidey sense" goes into Danger! Will Robinson, Danger! mode...

The thing is, most of us have that consumer "Spidey sense" and if you're shopping for gear and something in your head is telling you that it's "too fucking expensive" there is a 99.99% chance that the product is in fact actually too fucking expensive and, just maybe, you'd be a lot better off not buying it.

Listening to The Pogues

So it goes...

Thursday, December 01, 2011

a shippy little stove...

Some scary numbers, today's phrase is "scenario fulfillment" and then there's always this to worry about...

A while back I think I mentioned I was looking for a solid fuel heater and for the last year or so I've been doing the research and asking friends in places like Alaska, Iceland, and Finland (where they understand the reality of COLD) about various cunning plans to keep "So It Goes" toasty...

One thing I have noted in my ongoing research is that most solid fuel heaters are just silly expensive...


I'll admit that, like a lot of folks, I really like the "Sardine" stove made here and there by various folks... It's cute, small, and, you know, kind of shippy. It also costs nearly $1100 and that's for the bare bones no option model. Throw in the fact that you also need to buy a stove pipe and other bits and pieces which will bring the whole shebang close to...well, a lot more than this cheapseats boy is willing to spend!

Luckily several folks who actually use their boats in places where the word "frigid" has nothing to do with the word "sex" have recommended an alternative...

The Nu-Way 965 is a very compact (12" x 7" x 15") boat friendly solid fuel heater that one might deem affordable at roughly 1/10 the cost of the Sardine... You might even say it looks somewhat shippy as well!

Listening to Little Feat

So it goes...