In December 2020 we had Micron CRC installed on a new to us sailboat at an Anacortes WA yard which they recommended. It was a singe coat as I recall, which seemed odd but they are the pros know this stuff (I guess). They did caution us that what works in their waters may not work in Central Puget Sound and this was good for 2 years.
I had the bottom cleaned in May 2022 and the diver indicated it seemed pretty good but there were some small barnacles starting which he dealt with. Now the boat is being day sailed regularly off my mooring where the boat rolls around a bit changes orientation to the beach with tide/wind, and there are lots of small barnacles on the rudder sides and within 1"-3" of the waterline. I am able to scrape these, but it's pretty obvious the CRC was a failure for 2-year life.
I found this post: Puget Sound Bottom Paint and will study it before the next painting session which seems like it needs to be in the Fall or maybe I can delay to Spring 2023 with some diver cleanup over the winter.
I'm assuming there is no magic solution to this issue other than my scraping until having the boat painted.
Regrading painting, has anyone ever intentionally used the tide and their beach to simply "lay the boat" over and paint where needed during the tide change? This would not be a long-term paint job, but might be a solution to my current issues? My beach is not ideal, meaning soft sand. It's more of the normal cobble so some padding (carpet ?) would be needed as the boat settles on its side.
overview of "work area".
Any thoughts on this would be welcome.
I had the bottom cleaned in May 2022 and the diver indicated it seemed pretty good but there were some small barnacles starting which he dealt with. Now the boat is being day sailed regularly off my mooring where the boat rolls around a bit changes orientation to the beach with tide/wind, and there are lots of small barnacles on the rudder sides and within 1"-3" of the waterline. I am able to scrape these, but it's pretty obvious the CRC was a failure for 2-year life.
I found this post: Puget Sound Bottom Paint and will study it before the next painting session which seems like it needs to be in the Fall or maybe I can delay to Spring 2023 with some diver cleanup over the winter.
I'm assuming there is no magic solution to this issue other than my scraping until having the boat painted.
Regrading painting, has anyone ever intentionally used the tide and their beach to simply "lay the boat" over and paint where needed during the tide change? This would not be a long-term paint job, but might be a solution to my current issues? My beach is not ideal, meaning soft sand. It's more of the normal cobble so some padding (carpet ?) would be needed as the boat settles on its side.
overview of "work area".
Any thoughts on this would be welcome.