Kaimusailing

s/v Kaimu Wharram Catamaran

Vessel Name: Kaimu
Vessel Make/Model: Wharram Custom
Hailing Port: Norwalk, CT
Crew: Andy and the Kaimu Crew
About: Sailors in the Baltimore, Annapolis, DC area.
17 April 2024 | St Marys, GA
07 April 2024 | St. Marys, GA
02 April 2024 | St. Marys, GA
21 March 2024 | St. Marys, GA
01 March 2024 | St. Marys, GA
23 February 2024 | St. Marys, GA
15 February 2024 | St. Marys, GA
11 February 2024 | St. Marys, GA
06 February 2024 | St. Marys, GA
26 January 2024 | St. Marys, GA
14 January 2024 | St. Marys, GA
09 January 2024 | St Marys, GA
23 December 2023 | St Marys, GA
10 December 2023 | St Marys, GA
25 November 2023 | St. Marys, GA
17 November 2023 | St. Marys, GA
17 November 2023 | Somers Cove Marina, Crisfield, MD
03 November 2023 | Somers Cove Marina, Crisfield, MD
26 October 2023 | Somers Cove Marina, Crisfield, MD
17 October 2023 | Somers Cove Marina, Crisfield, MD
Recent Blog Posts
17 April 2024 | St Marys, GA

Dinghy Skeg

I was suffering with what seemed like a cold and also had allergy symptoms. I awoke and felt fine. The green pollen that was coating everything was gone. Maybe it will return.

07 April 2024 | St. Marys, GA

Clammy Hands

Items came in from TEMU, the Chinese cut rate retailer. One was a nice little drone that cost about twelve and a half dollars. It looked like an easy thing to play with while I coughed and sneezed. I was fighting a summer cold, even though it is not summer elsewhere, it seems like it here. A nice [...]

02 April 2024 | St. Marys, GA

Sun Doggie

After laminating the cedar strips onto the gunwales of the dinghy I found the screws I used wouldn’t come out. The epoxy had seized them. The screw heads were stripped so I cut a straight slot in the heads with the cut off wheel. The cedar smoked when the screw heads got red hot. I could remove [...]

21 March 2024 | St. Marys, GA

Just Add Water

The rainy weekend started off with overcast and fog but no rain. It looked like I might be able to get something done on the D4 dinghy. I wanted to change the bow seat which is really the bow deck. The sailing option uses the deck to hold the freestanding mast. I didn’t like how the deck looked, [...]

01 March 2024 | St. Marys, GA

D4 Dinghy Alternative Seats

The rain event was more wind than rain, strong winds with gusts up to 44 mph. We drove into town to see what the harbor was like. There was a small sailboat that had dragged anchor and was sitting close to shore. The tide was out. We left and played with Bleu at Notter’s Pond.

23 February 2024 | St. Marys, GA

D4 Inside Seams

Day two of the dinghy build started out with me finishing wiring the hull bottoms together on the centerline of the bottom panels. This was much easier than the wiring of the chine edges of the bottom panels and the side panels.

SS Kaimu Flightdeck

27 July 2014 | Bodkin Inlet/Chesapeake Bay
Capn Andy/Summerlike
The respite from the heat continued with daytime temps only up to about 80. A small bit of repair was done on the medicine cabinet. The rear panel was shot, so a 3/16” ply panel was put there instead, epoxied. Work continued cleaning up the pile of tools and debris from the plumbing and electrical work. The port hull was vacuumed with the shop vac right down to the bilges. Water was pumped out with a portable bilge pump powered by one of the “brick” batteries. The remaining water was vacuumed up with the shop vac (wet/dry). The shower sump was tested to see if the float switch was operating properly. All worked OK, but water pressure at the head faucet is not enough to take a shower.
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The news that came in was that Webb Chiles, now in Apia, American Somoa, was getting ready to sail off again. He's only got about 5,000 miles into his recent voyage.
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The sparrows under the cross deck have fledged and the youngsters are either hopping about on the edges of the mast I-beam or off taking flying lessons. It is remarkable how fast they develop and leave the nest. Now we can leave the dock without drowning the little ones. The picture is of the Kaimu flight deck. There are about a dozen of these little fellows.
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The galley pump is on the fritz again. The port hull pump seems to run fine, but the hot water tap in the head produces nothing but gurgling. The water heater is not in service yet, so it isn't a problem, yet. The heater will have a solar hot water system circulating through the heat exchanger coils. The port hull seems to have no drips or leaks from the plumbing system after the recent repairs.
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