Tag: Boat Maintenance

Tips, tricks and advice on maintaining your boat in paradise.

It’s Time to Clean The Bottom Again!

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New clean bottom paint. Look at all those acres!

As you may or may not know, Dazzler recently had her bottom painted last August in Puerto Peñasco. There comes a time a few months later that you need to jump in the water to wipe down the underbelly of your cruising home. You can break out your wallet and pay the guy at the dock if you want. You know that well-meaning diver that is looking to get paid for scraping the bottom with steel wool or a paint scraper. Most boaters understand the cost of having the bottom of their vessel painted. If you are anything like me, I expect to get the maximum use from the paint. The first several times Dazzler’s bottom gets cleaned will be by me with a soft white pad. The metal parts usually have some stubborn marine growth requiring a bit more scrubbing.

For the painted surfaces, I like to wipe them down with a white 3M pad that isn’t supposed to have any abrasion fibers in it. But, I have heard that a small carpet square will work also. For those stubborn areas like the prop, I use a flexible blade putty knife about 2” wide, a stainless wire brush and some stainless scrubbing pads.

A long time ago when Dazzler was docked in Marina de Rey and I was still working for a living, a professional diver, Bob Williams, passed on some sage advise for cleaning the hull bottom of a boat. First he sited cleaning the bottom more frequently required less scrubbing and less time underwater to complete the job. He also indicated that the organisms that like to attach themselves to the exposed metal parts and other places on the hull have less time to get a strong foothold on the surfaces they attach themselves to. Secondly, Bob, provided me with a pattern that he deploys while doing regular bottom cleaning jobs. He would divide the bottom into sections. Port and Starboard, front to back or back to front, waterline, hull and keel.

The first time I had jumped in the water to clean Dazzlers hull was many years ago. I was overwhelmed by the size of the area needing to be wiped down. Keep in mind the magnification factor while being underwater. It was huge, gargantuan and looked like forty acres. It didn’t look that big when Dazzler was hauled out during the survey when I bought her in 2003. I can remember wiping down the hull in pretty much a random pattern. After about 30 minutes I thought to myself that I was sure that I had wiped down the section I was currently doing. Nope! The first time seemed to take forever.

Bob and I had become good acquaintances over the first few years I owned Dazzler. If he happened to come by the boat to clean Dazzler’s bottom while I was on board, I’d make him a sandwich or I might have been barbequing hot dogs and I’d share lunch with him. After speaking with Bob a few times, I understood the need for a cleaning pattern while underwater. Bob also described the tools that he used and how to use them without taking the paint off the bottom.

The next few times I dove down to clean Dazzler’s bottom, I had a plan of attack. I first did the waterline on one side by starting at the stern and working my way along the side to the bow. All the time reaching down as far I could reach, without dropping my cleaning pad, between the waterline and the top edge of the keel. I had to learn about that don’t drop or let go of your pad thing a few more times before I got it right. Ha! Ha! Ha! The next step was the hull. So, I’d start at the bow wiping down the side of the hull. This task started out pretty easy, but by the time I had gotten to Dazzler’s beam I found myself having to split the area into two swaths an upper and a lower area. After the hull was done, I’d wipe down the rudder and then her full keel. With that side done, I would move onto the other side. Just like the shampoo bottle indicates, “Rinse, Lather, Repeat,” so too I would now do the other side of Dazzler in the same fashion.

Once I completed the painted surfaces, I would get my metal scraping tools and start for the propeller. Dazzler’s propeller is a three blade fixed prop that sets inside an aperture between the trailing edge of the keel and a cutout area approximately in the middle of her rudder. I found it easiest to start on the forward facing surface and clean one blade at a time. Depending on whether your prop is a right or left hand pitched prop, I found the forward and aft facing surfaces were easier to clean while on one or the other side of the keel. While at the prop, I’d give the sacrificial zinc a check and determine if it needed replacement.

Next, cleaning the thru hulls was fairly simple with a sacrificial long bladed standard flat blade screwdriver. I use the word sacrificial because accidently dropping your favorite Snap-On screwdriver into the briny deep hurts. You can dive down next to the bottom if you like to look for things, but I am here to tell you that a layer of something floating next to the bottom is like entering a dense green fog that seems to blanket the bottom and blocks out all possible sunlight and thus hiding anything concealed by its eerie science fiction cloak. I heard that a diver went into it once and was never seen again until the next Taco Tuesday at the local watering hole. I’m not a scaredy-cat when it comes to most things, but why tempt fate. Go into it or don’t go into it. I can get another screwdriver.

That is it!

I will add that the waterline tends to be one of the tougher areas to clean as all the floating things in marinas and anchorages like scum, oils and whatever else is floating by likes to cling to the area of the hull just above the mean waterline. More frequent cleaning of the waterline will help keep it in check. If you chose to hire a diver to clean your boat watch what they use at the water line. You will be surprised to find that they are using a stainless steel scrubber to clean the waterline. This technique will surely chew the bottom paint away from the hull. The divers use this scrubber because it is easier faster for them to get their job done. It doesn’t bode well for your paint.

A thought about holding your breath, using SCUBA or a surface air supplying Hookah system. In my early days of bottom cleaning Dazzler, I used SCUBA and wore the equipment. It was not a big deal, because I lived in the land of plenty and in Marina del Rey dive shops to get an air fill were plentiful. While getting ready to depart for Mexico, I wrestled with the idea of whether to get a dive compressor of a surface air supply Hookah system. In Fact, I left the states on my first trip into Mexico without either.  A dive compressor took up too much room and Dazzler just didn’t have the real estate. After trying to find a reputable dive shop in Mexico to get a clean fill without water in it was difficult. So I purchased an Air Line Diving System that was 115 volt system.

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Earlier in the summer, In the water getting ready to clean the bottom in Punta Santa Domino in Bahía Concepcíon before the new bottom paint. Go Go Gadget!

Dazzler’s Honda EU2000 generator could easily run the system. I got one 60 foot hose and regulator to make cleaning Dazzler’s bottom a lot easier. The additional benefit was no cumbersome dive equipment, easy setup, clean and store and most importantly, I didn’t have to be tethered to a dive shop or friends with dive compressors on their vessels.

Yes, I know it may sound like I am advocating cleaning the hull more frequently and to those that don’t dive their own boat I leave you with this story. A friend of mine, left Banderas Bay last year to travel to Mazatlan to leave his vessel for the summer. Upon his arrival he hired a diver to clean the bottom of his boat. The diver wasn’t underwater very long before he returned to the surface to tell my friend that he had a very bad problem. I’m not sure anyone wants to hear those words. His boat was a Hunter with a fin keel and a spade rudder. As the shaft exits the hull of the bottom it is indexed and secured in position by a Vee-strut and cutlass bearing. The lower end of the strut has a tube welded to it and holds the cutlass bearing in place and thus keeps the shaft aligned. The tube that houses the cutlass bearing and the shaft had broken free of the strut. My friend indicated that he had his boat dove in Paradise Village before he left. He had experienced some larger swells on his way to Mazatlan. He had no idea where the break occurred, but he was so thankful that he made it to Mazatlan before something bad happened. He later discovered that electrolysis was the culprit and the stray current was coming from his wind generator. Insulation from one of the wind generator wires had worn through and it was energizing all the bonded metal on his vessel.

Divers hired to clean the bottom of your boat, here in Mexico,  have differing levels of experience and understanding of the parts attached to the hull. In many cases far less than we boat owners. Their job is to clean the hull and move onto the next boat. While I’m diving Dazzler, I inspect and look at the thru hulls, shaft, prop, zinc, Dynaplate, and raw water intake to name a few. That way I don’t get surprised by any of the things that can happen under the water. I like seeing first hand what’s going on down there. The old adage of an ounce of prevention being worth a pound cure isn’t too far off the mark here.

Boat maintenance! We all have it and we pick an chose those things that we are good at and shy away from the things we don’t particularly like doing. No one ever said life on a boat was easy or cheap. But there are some awesome tools out there that can make it easier. Pay for a diver or do it yourself, this is one job that should be done regularly. If for no other reason than to go faster when you see that other sailboat out on the water. Because we all know that if there are two boats on the water in the same area at the same time…..It’s a race!

I chose to don my 3mm suit and jump in the water with a Hookah air supplied hose and regulator to keep up on this regularly scheduled maintenance on Dazzler.

Until Next Time, Cheers!

Captain Dan
SV Dazzler

Hauling Out In Puerto Peñasco

A great friend of mine, Roger Sutton, keeps telling me the first rule of boating is to keep the boat in the water and the water out of the boat. Of course that’s how we normally like to roll but there are times when you must pull the boat out of the water. This was one of those times. The hull needed new bottom paint and we had a thru hull to replace as well as a packing gland. So, as much as we hated to do it, the time came to make arrangements for the haul out.

Now to know my Dan is to know he doesn’t do anything he hasn’t thoroughly researched and this was no different. Hauling your boat for painting and repairs is a costly proposition at best. It’s not something you just jump into without preparation and thought. After months of research and talking with other cruisers Dan made the decision that we would haul out in the Northern Sea of Cortez at the Astilleros Cabrales Boatyard in Puerto Peñasco, Mexico. This turned out to be an excellent decision. img_1083.jpg

We arrived in Puerto Peñasco three days before our haul out date. We stayed at the Marina Fonatur just across the way from Cabrales. It’s certainly not like the typical marinas we usually stay in as it’s very commercial. We were surrounded by shrimp boats and party cruise boats but it did the job just fine. The morning of the haul out we moved from our dock at the marina over to a dock just in front of Cabrales. Salvador (one of the owners) came to the boat before we moved to the ways and boarded to assist us with positioning and lines. I’ve never been on a boat during a haul out before so this was a bit nerve racking for me. We had our lines and fenders ready to go and the time came to move. I was on the starboard side at the bow. My first job was to get my bowline up to the guy on the wall. My most important job was to make sure I kept us pushed away from the rock wall on the starboard side. Ironically enough I wasn’t worried at all about keeping us away from the wall. I had the boat hook ready. I was, however, a bit uneasy about getting my line to the yard worker. He was standing about six feet above me and we had wind pushing us a bit. With rock walls on three sides of you there is little room for error. Fortunately I hit my target the first time. “Whew! Thanks God”, I say under my breath. Now all I have to do is grab the hook, keep us off the wall and my job here is done.

Dan’s an amazing captain and he certainly knows Dazzler. He slid her right into the spot perfectly. All lines were now on the wall with the yard workers and the lift started to pull us out of the water. Dan and Salvador tied lines between the sling straps to keep them from sliding as Dazzler was lifted. Once the lines were tied and the bow pulpit was raised high enough for us to get off, we all climbed off the boat. Not being extremely graceful, my next worry was that I’d fall in the water on my way off the boat. That would have been very ugly! But, Dan and Salvador were right there helping me onto the wall.

From here the crane started pulling Dazzler out of the water. She wasn’t up very far when everyone started to have a little concern about the strap placement. Salvador had the crane driver stop and we began to assess the situation. After a bit of conversation and some advice from Salvador’s father it was decided that Salvador and Dan would get back on the boat and move the straps a bit closer to the center. Once that was done she came out of the water with no hassle at all.

When you are watching your home sway back and forth as it is being rolled through the boat yard, across the street and onto the hard it can be a bit stressful. And, it’s a painfully long process. From the moment she was out of the water to the time she was on the hard, fully secured with jack stands in place was a little over an hour and a half. I’m pretty sure I now hold the record for the longest time anyone has ever held their breath. Don’t get me wrong. I had complete faith in Salvador and his team but it’s still a pretty tense time. You go in with the understanding that once the boat is out of the water just about anything can happen. After all it’s 16 tons being held above the ground with two straps on a rolling crane. There’s an inherent risk that goes along with this process and you just have to accept that. Once she is set it place she is balanced on a few railroad ties and six metal jack stands. I say a few because when I think of 32,000 pounds being held up by a handful of metal stands and a couple of railroad ties it just doesn’t feel right. At least not for this girl.

After Dazzler was secured on the hard they brought stairs over so we could get on the boat, work and get things we needed for the motel. Being the fearless gal I am, I didn’t waste any time getting up the stairs and onto the boat. That’s when fearless was no longer an adjective I would use to describe myself. The moment my feet hit the deck I was almost paralyzed with fear. There I am standing about 15’ above the ground on a boat that is being “balanced” on some metal stands. A boat, mind you, that is no longer swaying and rolling in the water. One that is as stiff and still as it gets. All of the sudden I could feel myself getting weak and very freaked out. I told Dan I couldn’t do it and I had to get off. Of course he thought I was nuts but I didn’t care. I made a mad dash down the stairs and onto the safety of the yard. It took about five or ten minutes for me to regroup. I knew I had to be able to get up there. After all, we have work to do while she’s here and I still needed to pack my clothes for the hotel. Time to put on my big girl pants so I took a deep breath, climbed back up the stairs and just tried to focus on the tasks at hand. Realizing that I wasn’t feeling very comfortable with the situation, Dan made certain that we didn’t stay there long. We got our things and headed up to the office where we waited for Doug, the motel manager, to pick us up. I couldn’t wait to get to our room and make a cocktail. It had been a very long, hot and stressful day and it was only about two o’clock in the afternoon.

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Our motel was truly delightful. We stayed at La Palapas Condos & Casitas. It is quintessential Méxicano. The courtyard/parking lot surface is covered in gray rock and it is fenced in with a large iron gate at the front. We were greeted by the most adorable puppies, Lilly and Reina and a couple of older dogs, Yogi and Bob. These sweet canines became my buddies over the next couple of weeks. When things got stressful or we were tired from a long day, I sat at the outside table, under the palm frond thatched roof and enjoyed a cocktail and some sweet puppy lovin’.

The casita itself was lovely and very clean. Best of all, the A/C worked…almost too good! We opened the door to an ice cold blast of air that was so welcome after the hot day we IMG_1151had at the yard. There was a nice little kitchen that boasted a refrigerator, sink, stove, small table and chairs and all of the basic kitchen utensils and cookware we could possibly need. The floor was Mexican tile and the walls were painted with a rustic, rag finish that included hand painted vines and flowers around the door. The bathroom had a huge shower and big counter top. I know the guys could care less about that but to a woman, a place to spread out inIMG_1139 the bathroom is priceless, especially when you are used to living on a boat where you barely have room for a toothbrush and toothpaste.

Yes, our temporary home was perfect! It was walking distance to the boatyard and Doug was more than accommodating and helpful. Of course the puppies were a wonderful distraction from all the work and chaos we experienced as well.

IMG_1141Boat on the hard and us settled in our room, it was time for a few beers and a little down time but not for long. The following day we had to go back to the yard to do some work on the boat. I was dreading getting up on her but I knew I had to do it.

After a refreshing and enjoyable afternoon we were both ready to head to the yard the following day to get our projects competed. We decided that we would install the new packing gland and the thru hull ourselves. I swear there is nothing Dan can’t do! I don’t really do much. I just stand by and hand him tools as he needs them but he says that’s doing a lot. I think he just wants me to feel useful but either way, I do what I can to help.

**A little side note here. I had expressed my concerns over how boats are stored on the hard to Salvador the next day. He gave me some very helpful information. He asked if I had ever been on a motorcycle and having owned a Harley I, of course, said, “Yes”. He asked how much it weighed and I told him it weighed about 800 lbs. He then said, “And you held that up by just balancing on two feet?” It was then that I started to understand the physics of the process and that made me feel a hundred times better about getting on Dazzler on the hard. In fact, from that point forward I rarely even noticed the difference. Much thanks to Salvador for helping me through that little dilemma.

Check back for our articles on our stay in Puerto Peñasco and the final splash down!

Until next time…

Jilly