Tuesday, April 29, 2025

Homework

 We're back home now after a mildly productuve couple of weeks on Herbie.  The worst of the roof rust is now removed, treated and overpainted.  Still plenty more to do of course but things look a lot better along the starboard side of the roof at least.



Then I did a trial of the fixing screws I bought to fix the wooden handrail to the steel beneath.  Here's what the screws look like

The pointy bit is supposed to act like a drill through the steel (in my case 4mm thick) then the thready bit self taps into the hole. All screwed in from the wood above. Well it didn't go as easily as I had hoped at first.  The pointy bit was very reluctant to make a hole in the steel, so instead I first drillled a pilot hole with a normal drill bit.  After that it all went rather well with the self tap working nicely and the countersink part nicely burying itself into the wood surface. All on an old piece of the old handrail of course. Then I unscrewed it apart to check it out.


So now I feel confident to order the timber. 

Meanwhile at home I can prepaint the new cratch window trim mouldings and then set about making the replacement rain diverters (see previous post).

I don't know if Gertie the cat is glad to be home or not.  She thoroughly enjoyed her time at the marina. 

I should stay away from home more often. Our garden has once again proven that it gets on far better without me.  Many would call it overgrown but I think of it as natural. At least 75% of the plants have arrived uninvited like the bluebells in the border.  There are some primroses in there too but they've got submerged in hellbores and pulmonaria and wotnot. Mostly I just let it get on with it.


 The clematis on our holly hedge is a complete mystery to me, I don't know where it comes out of the ground. Another half of it grows and flowers a good forty feet up a monster holly tree just outsid ethe fence.



While we were away our huge lime tree has burst into leaf (leaving bucketfuls of little bud husks everywhere). One of the few things I have actually planted is my little herb garden which threatens to outgrow itself.  How do you stop oregano from going berserk? It threatens to take over my parsely like Trump and Canada. I think I might try to freeze some of the mint leaves for use in winter.


Lastly our lilac tree has grown so tall that only the next door neighbours get a good view of the flowers but at least we can smell them.

 We'll be back for more Herbie work before too long I hope.




Friday, April 25, 2025

A bit of progress and an upcoming event

 We eventually got all the black Fertan streaks off the side of the boat (that was a couple of hours work I hadn't planned for) and at last I was able to bring out the paintbrush and a tin of Hammerite No1 Rustbeater and painted the top of the handrail. That was a quick job and felt good.  The surface is still pitted but it'll have a wooden rail glued and screwed on top of it so that doesn't matter.


You'll no doubt notice the scruffy band of red paint on the left hand side just below. We've rubbed that down ready for a fresh coat of red paint which will also be what we paint the wooden rails with.

Today I thoroughly cleaned the bits of roof I had sanded back and painted those bits too. Tomorrow, hopefully I'll paint a wide border along the front half of roof edge.  I quite like this hammerite paint, it goes on nicely and it is supposed to convert underlying rust although I hope I've got rid of 99% of it.

Another job is to replace the two rainwater divertors which stop the runoff from the roof reaching the rear deck. 

These cunning devices were put in place by Roy, Herbie's previous owner.  Roy didn't like metalwork so he made them out of wood and now they're past their sell by date.  I'm planning to make new ones out of aluminium angle which I will attempt to elegantly shape.  And there's more.  Tomorrow I hope to replace the beading on the cratch window and repaint the beam beneath.


It might turn out to be Sunday when I do it actually because tomorrow is the marina's Open Day with stalls and food, live music and (real) beer, so we hope to spend an hour or two showing our support.  I think the idea is to attract new moorers. I've no idea how many they hope will show up.

There is masses more to do but it feels good to have made a start. We'll be heading home after the weekend and I may well sit in the garden and watch the grass grow.  

Tonight we treated ourselves to a meal at the Old Auctioneer in Banbury. They do brilliant steak fajitas although they're not cheap when you add £6.80 (I know!) for a pint on Neck Oil and then add 10% service charge on top. Having said that, I doubt you'll get better anywhere.



Wednesday, April 23, 2025

A Setback! Plus Gertie falls in!!

 After my optimism of yesterday, fate had other ideas. My fault really, I should have remembered that Fertan when it is working produces a sooty deposit.   Well last night it rained heavily and made a good job of dribbling little rivers of sooty deposit all down the side of the boat.  


What made matters worse was that it wouldn't wash off by normal means.  In the end, after trying plain water then soapy water then white spirit, all to no avail, I had to resort to cream cleaner and a nylon scouring pad.  It took ages and left a white  deposit on the paint which I will try and remove with hot water tomorrow.  I suppose the saving grace is that we intend to repaint that side of the boat anyway, so as long as we get it properly clean, any damage to the paint surface won't matter. In fact it seemed to act a bit like T Cut, so it might be beneficial I suppose.  Hey ho, tomorrow's another day.

Meanwhile Gerttie has been practising acting as the ship's figurehead by sitting on the prow.


STOP PRESS

Just as I was finishing this post I looked out of the boat window to see Gertie peering in from the gunnel outside, then there was a loud splash as she slipped off and into the water.  We rushed out to see her swimming strongly for the bank and scrambling up over the newly cut rushes.  So now we know she's a strong swimmer which I suppose makes the event worthwhile.  She's bedraggled but none the worse for her first dip it seems.






Tuesday, April 22, 2025

An Easter treat and some progress on the roof.

 They say the sun shones on the righteous. Well they must have got that wrong because it shone all day on us yesterday, which was great as we had a short cruise with our daughter Claire and grandkids Grace and Jacob. Up 3 locks to the winding hole, then a nice picnic featturing a carribbean chicken thingy concocted by Jacob and then back to base.  Lovely. And after all his efforts Jacob didn't even get in the photo because he was the one who took it.  Lol.


The good thing was that the visiting crew did all the steering and locking so I had a very easy day.

However I have not been entirely idle since my last post. For one thing I tackled the somewhat yucky job of clearing out the lockers on the back deck that has got full of old oily and painty rags and tins of paint long past their use by date. Of course I also discovered a couple of long lost tools, so it was worth it.

Work on the roof paintwork continues in little bits and pieces. The whole handrail section on the starboard side is now stripped and painted with fertan as are the flaky bits in the paint on that side of the roof. Next, a coat of Hammerite rust beater primer/undercoat. Exciting.

The plan is to create a finished strip of good sound paint about 8 inches wide down the side of the roof , which was the area of most damage. Then bit by bit to spot fix and repaint the rest of the roof in manageable sections. Then I have a cunning plan for the handrails. I'm going to replace the old wood with new sapele and I've found a supplier who can supply just the right dimesions and profile. I think the new rails will cost about £300 including paint etc. Thanks to watching  clever people on YouTube, I've found some special self tapping screws for fixing wood to metal. I'm picking them up tomorrow to do a test on a bit of the old handrail.  And today I bought myself an impact screwdriver to shift the firmly stuck screws holding cleats to the old handrail and to my delight it worked just like it was supposed to, so that's another problem sorted. All in all I'm feeling a lot more positive than I did a month ago when it all seemsd a horrible and difficult job.

That will still leave plenty to do of course, we still need to repaint the dark grey panels on the starboard side of the cabin and the light grey borders on both sides.  Then the front and back decks need a good seeing to. Oh and the cratch too. I'm getting some new quadrant beading the the window trim tomorrow. Much easier to replace that rather than refurbing the old beading.

I reckon we should have it all finished by 2030. What do you think?



Friday, April 18, 2025

What I've been up to.

 It seems a few people were wondering what I've been up to between my two last post which were in January and then mid April. Well here's a quick photographic tour of some of the highlights. I don't normally do posts when we're not at the boat, but there are some boats shown below so you can't complain.

January

A visit to Portsmouth to drop off a guitar of mine to be refurbed by a specialist.  Having time to spare we went on to the D Day museum to look at the amazing D Day tapestry which stretches almost round the whole building. Well worth a visit.


and of course we had to get on a boat so here is Kath on the bridge of a landing craft


There's always something to see down by the harbour. Here's the Isle of Wight Ferry pulling in to it's berth. I hope the skipper is paying attention, there ain't much room for manoeuvre.


and February is the month when we get excited to see the first spring flowers in the churchyard behind our house

 
Who wouldn't want a back garden like this?


Then in March I drove all the way up to Blackburn for the funeral of an old friend Gordon and on the way back dropped in to see our grandson Jacob in West Didsbury, Manchester, so we went out to dinner at a lovely Persian restaurant called Pomegranate.  Who needs a photo of Jacob when you can feast your eyes on this instead?



 Our garden at home was waking up by March and ship's cat Gertie was exploring in the hellebores.  This is about as tidy as our garden gets.

Still in March we spent a weekend in Cambridge with our son Peter and once again a food photo shows the highlight. Turkish breakfast at our favourite Cafe Camtown hidden away on a back street well away from the city centre.


and so to April when we went (sort of) to the theatre to see Steve Coogan in Dr Strangelove - a belter.  When I say 'sort of' because we actually watched the National Theatre production from our local cinema.  It's a great way to see the theatre without the bother and expense of going to London and they do make you feel like you are there (and you get close ups)


The man took ages to fix my guitar (he did a great job though) and it was only last week that we went back to Portsmouth to pick it up, so we treated ourselves to lunch at our favourite pub in Old Portsmouth, first visited when I was a student there way back in the 1960s. It's a gem.  Here's Kath on the patio.




It's not every day you eat lunch whilst looking at an aircraft carrier. Here's a better view of it from our table inside the pub.



So you see I've been having quite a nice time in between doctors appointments, Covid jabs and clearing up the garden.  And now here we are back on Herbie.  The plan had been to go home today to see Jacob who is visiting his mum, our daughter Claire, then they had the bright idea to come up to us here on Sunday, so we're staying on and I can do a bit more on Herbie's roof. 


Like all these jobs it gets worse before it gets better, but I now feel I have the right tools for the job and bit by bit, we'll get there.

Meanwhile Gertie has overcome her fear of her new surroundings and is beginning to go off exploring for long periods. She comes back when she's hungry.


 More soon.








Wednesday, April 16, 2025

Eating the elephant

 A request has flooded in from our old pal Rainman asking me to do a blog post. I've almost forgotten how to do it, it's been so long.

Well we are back on Herbie at last, although not out cruising yet. After the long wet winter, floods and mud, I thought I'd better sort the garden out before boating, then we had a number of medical appointments etc etc.  Anywhere we're here now for a few days and of course the weather has got worse. It's really windy today.

Herbie has over wintered very well internally. We left a couple of cheap moisture trap thingies inside and the interior was dry as a bone.

Ship's cat Gertie has been refamiliarising herself with the boat and our corner of the marina.  Fun seeing her see a swan for the first time - a mixture of fascination and terror.

There's lots and lots to do on Herbies paintwork and you have to take the first bite of the elephant somewhere, so I've made a small start on the handrail.  You may recall I pulled of the old wooden handrail top last autumn.  Here's a pic to show how the wood sits on the metal.



of course in due respect to sods law many of the old retaining screws chose to break off rather than unscrew, leaving little studs or nibs or whatever you call 'em. I didn't count them but one every foot or so

so I decided to hand file them off before attacking the surface with a scratchy thing on the angle grinder. Here's before filing and after



Aquavista's Ts&Cs say that you're not supposed to use noisy dusty power tools at your berth, but the lady next door says that people do and no one has complained so the angle grinder is the next job.

It'll never come really smooth and flat with all that pitting, so then it'll be a choice if using a filler and painting over to finish, or just painting then putting new wood back on top.  The wood is a bit of a pain because although it looks and feels nice it seems to need repainting much more often than the metal. We'll see.

Then the whole roof needs rust spotting and repainting, which I've done a couple of times before, one section at a time. I think next time I'll use a harder surface paint than the raddle I used before.

So it feels like we're back on track a bit.  We have to go home on Friday but we'll be back soon.


Some time later.

I had an experimental go with a scratchy pad thingy on the angle grinder (never really used one before) and it looks like its easy to get rid of rust and flaky paint with it. I was back to bare metal in seconds.  Gertie didn't like it though.  Next job is to try an experimental go at putting filler in a sort section of the handrail to see how smooth I can get it. One step at a time. Rome wasn't built in a day (but probably quicker than HS2 ).