Sorting things out

We have been in La Rochelle 2 days now and Sea Star is slowly coming back to a state of acceptable cleanliness. We are moored next to Blue Hour, which is a Westerly 49, the same hull as Sea Star, but a few years younger. Blue Hour has been at sea for nearly a year with Jonathan, Nina, Joni Jonas from Canada, so is completely lived in and comfortable. We are working on Sea Star’s scruffiness (apart from anything else, we have friends coming soon, so we need to look ship shape) and will soon look good lying next to her. They have a 6-7 month old greek hare hound called Sirius who they picked up in Greece, who has instantly become Toby’s best friend.
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Sadly, they are off today, sailing North with talk of Sweden, Norway and Scotland, some of which they visited on their way across the Atlantic via Greenland and Iceland. Sounds amazing, sailing amongst icebergs and polar bears and whales and eskimos, but we would need to ensure the heating on the boat is working before we venture north.
We are preparing to go south rather than north so are focussed on biminis, aircon and sun hats, but in the meantime, we have the washing machine, engine, generator, lights and, and … to test and prepare. After a couple of days of unsettled weather, the sun has appeared which meant breakfast on deck, which Toby thought was very interesting, as everything was in reach. We need a plan for that!
So today is teak deck day. For those who have not encountered teak deck management, they are lovely to look at when clean, but six months wintered up, even in a mid France climate, with fresh water falling from the sky, rather than salt water from sea, a curious green algae starts to propagate. You have to remove this with care, as the deck needs to last another 20 years, which all takes a little time.

Despite all the planning

It is the way with boats that despite all the planning and preparation, it is guaranteed that the one thing you have not planned for, nor expected will happen, normally at the furthest point from assistance and just as a pod of dolphins visits the boat, you find yourself in the engine room with a concerned look on your face and a significant void in your brain.

Just to get into the swing of things, all packed, suitably mellowed by a liquid dinner at the local pub, we return home for an early night before the 4AM alarm to find that the sewers are blocked. Well we can’t leave the house until that is fixed … So sleeves rolled up and on with the rubber gloves and out with the drainage rods.

Sparing the detail, we resolve the blockage and free flow resumes, enabling a shower after the alarm.

Phew!!

Last Day at Work

Almost all meetings done and almost all reports filed. My last day at work tomorrow and we are off, except for a pitstop at the New Inn on Friday; which might be a bit of a long evening. I have to say here that the support that I have received from the team at Dell has been absolutely amazing, so I suspect they want me back. I know for many of you reading this, that may be hard to believe … Anyway BIG thanks to Dermot my manager, for allowing some time off and indeed to everybody else and I hope everything moves in a positive direction over the summer so that I can return to a steady ship … but we will now try not to mention work any more for a few weeks. But on the subject of ships; home for the next few months looks something like this. IMG_1558Sea Star is her name; MMSI 235106866, VHF call sign 2HUZ9 for anybody who would like to track our progress on http://www.marinetraffic.com. Coastguard, please take note :-); if we suddenly disappear from the screen, it probably isn’t because we have turned the transponder off; please come and get us. Anyway, three bedrooms (cabins) two bathrooms (heads), sitting/dining room (saloon), kitchen (galley) and engine room (engine room), fully equipped with hot and cold running water, fridge full of beer and freezer full of other things.

So we leave Padbury, first thing on Monday morning for a ferry to Cherbourg and drive down to La Rochelle, where we hope to find Sea Star in a habitable state bar a good airing and a hose down. All that cleaning to come; so looking forward to that, but before that .. packing. All in a good cause.