You would think that the best bit about renovating an old
boat would be launching and sailing her after all that hard work. So did I. In
fact I was so eager to use the boat that last summer that I sailed her even
though the cabin was still pretty much a slum, a place to be tolerated rather than enjoyed. Last year we had an endless
autumn, and until Christmas at least the weather wasn’t so bad – so renovation
time lost due to summer sailing was easily made up.
Recently though, the weather has become more wintry - high
winds and driving rain rolling in from the Atlantic
with depressing regularity. I shouldn’t complain too much though because, for
the main part, the worst of the storms have tracked north, blasting the UK and leaving this corner of France in
relative comfort. There is a bonus too, because this winter most of the jobs I
need to do are located inside the cabin where it’s warm and dry. The harbour is
five minutes away and everything I need is there. Shore-power for tools,
heating and lighting, a stove to keep the coffee-pot warm, an endless stream of
good blues music and I even have an old guitar on board for use whenever the
mood takes me. After all those months of sanding, polishing painting and
varnishing – the tasks are smaller and more interesting – choosing and fitting
door handles, making a surround for the charcoal burning stove, fitting out a
toilet and hanging locker - life is good! I’ve been going to the boat almost
every weekday.
Weekends are different of course. Weekends are about car
boot sales, garage sales and second hand shops – anywhere where there might be
a chance of finding useful boaty bits and pieces for less that retail prices.
Every event has treasure. To date, among other things, I have bought a VHF
radio transmitter/receiver, a Silva steering compass (as new, still in box) Two
brass portholes (for decoration) and porthole mirror, an oilskin boat bucket,
and a Swedish gimballed brass oil lamp. Nothing cost me even a quarter of the
retail price. In fact, the oil lamp (currently on sale via the internet at
200E, cost me 4E – yes four!
Best buy of all though – i.e. the one thing that has contributed
most to my comfort and well-being – was a 2x3 Metre tarpaulin which stretches
across the boom and makes a cockpit covering tent. It protects the wooden hatch
and washboards and keeps the rain out of the cockpit – best of all though, it
allows me to stay dry and work in the cabin with the hatch open – cost? Two
Euros. Is this the most enjoyable phase of the renovation project – you bet!
Seaward
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