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100 years of naval aviation
Steve 02/14/2011, San Diego Bay
Saturday the U.S. Navy celebrated the 100th anniversary of Naval aviation by putting on a large flyover above San Diego Bay. My good buddy Frank came by and we took the dink out on the main bay and met up with Mark on Jennifer K. As usual Mark had a boat full of pretty girls and with the weather in the low 70s it made for a very nice afternoon...the flyover was not quite what we had expected, however it was still interesting to see all of the different planes and helicopters flying overhead. We were having so much fun we decided to continue celebrating the naval aviation anniversary over at Jimmy's and then on to Si Bon, we probably celebrated a little longer than we should have....but what the hell ya only live once. This pic is of a refueling plane simulating refueling two helicopters in flight.
02/15/2011 | Tera
That airshow looks Kool
It looks like your ready to go Spares, spares and more spares
Steve02/12/2011, Shelter Island
Most people who have been cruising in Mexico will tell you not to over provision the boat with food, believe it or not they do actually have grocery stores in Mexico. The things that they may not have are filters for your watermaker, or a fuel filter for a Westerbeke diesel engine, or a ....well you get the idea. Over the past year I have been slowly accumulating spares of many different parts, over the past month I've kicked it into high gear, ordering spare pumps, spare snatch blocks, spare anchors, LOTS of spare filters for the watermaker, generator, outboard and of course the main engine. I have spare shackles, spare hoses, spare water lines, even a spare halyard, spares of this and spares of that. I would like to tell you that this pic is of all my spares...but it's not, there is no way I would be able to fit all the spares in a picture, but it does give you an idea of what I have. I have this funny feeling that even with all the planning I won't have a spare of something when I need it...you know Murphy's law (turns out Murphy was a sailor). Gotta go now and figure out where I'm going to put all these spares.
02/12/2011 | Phil Anderson
Wow.....don't even know you yet reading all this stuff it's like sharing in the adventure of it all....amazing....do you have a spot for crew from Cabo/LaPaz to PV ?
Wheels for the dink
Steve02/11/2011, Sun Harbor Marina
OK....so I know you're thinking, boy Steve is really getting carried away with this "the dink is you car" thing, now he's gone and put wheels on his dinghy. No I haven't gone completely crazy (mostly crazy, not completely) when you are beaching a dinghy (dink) with an outboard motor on it, it is very hard to get the motor in the up position and to drag it on and off the beach, the motor gets stuck in the sand, and the whole thing is heavy and awkward. Yesterday I installed the dinghy wheels that my friend Ric gave me (thanks again). The way the wheels work is that when you know you will be beaching the dink you get the wheels out of storage, you put them onto their brackets in the up position (pic), as you approach the beach you remove a couple of pins, rotate the wheels to the down position, and you motor right up on the beach, the wheels are taller than the motor shaft so the back of the dink is now high and dry and you can wheel it up and down the beach with very little effort (I hope).
02/11/2011 | amber
i know i am sailing deficcient but how are you supposed use the dingy in the water with wheels????
02/11/2011 | Ashley Cook
thats actually one of the coolest things I've seen pops!
02/12/2011 | Steve Cook
The wheels just hang below the dink Ambi, I don't think you would want to go very fast or far with them in the down position, but on my test run I left them down from the beach back to Si Bon, going slow and had no problems, and I knew you would like them Ashley ;-)
02/14/2011 | ShayBo
looks like those flip flops could use a good washing :)
Going away party
Amber and Ashley02/10/2011, Sun Harbor Marina
The day has finally come for our favorite "white collared" man to trade his suit in for a pair of boater shoes, his car in for a "dink," and his house for a 41 foot sail boat named Si Bon!!!
To blog or not to blog?
Steve02/06/2011, Shelter Island
One of the first things to go through my mind when I found out I was going to be stuck in a marina for 2-3 weeks (now more like 3-4) waiting for my Max-Prop to be reconditioned was, damm, what am going to blog about from a comfortable slip?
02/09/2011 | catherine
I never asked, what inspired your dream to go sailing? And is there anything you still need? I know someone who got a glass sailboat sculpture for a going away present when they left to go cruising. The didn't even know what to say.
02/09/2011 | Steve Cook
Not sure what inspired this crazy idea of mine, travel, adventure, submersion into other cultures??? Don't really need anything, BUT I DEFINITELY DON'T WANT A GLASS SAILBOAT. LOL
Crew update
Steve02/04/2011, Sun Harbor Marina
Going down the Pacific coast of Baja is an adventurous undertaking, it is a pretty desolate coastline with very few ports. There are plenty of people who single hand it....but I don't want to be one of them. One of the things I learned when I did my heavy weather course in Sausalito was that I really wanted a minimum of three crew members to do the San Diego to La Paz leg, this allows you to avoid the fatigue that would come with only two people. While doing some of my local cruising over the past year I decided to try to line up four people if at all possible, although the boat will be slightly more crowded, four people allows you lots of options for watches and cat naps between watches.
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