Your life, your boat
In Latitude 38 several months ago there was an article about a couple who lost their new boat (thankfully not their lives) off Mexico. They hired a local to change the oil in their engine. The local put too much oil in (probably filled it to overflowing). When the couple worked the motor in a gale trying to keep off a lee shore (after ripping their sails and tangling their furling lines in the wind) the engine overpressured the oil compartment, blew gaskets, and failed. The boat drifted to the rocks, the couple escaped barely with their lives but the new 40-ish foot boat was lost.Are you kidding me? A couple loses several hundred thousand dollars of hard assets, lots of dreams, and almost their lives because they didn't want to (or couldn't) change their own oil? Who do you trust with your life, money and dreams?Some jobs are best left to boatyards who have the right tools and setup to efficiently do the work. But I know everything they are doing, double check their work, and let them know my standards.For most things, if you want it done right, you have to do it yourself. And boaters should know how to do it themselves-- when it all hits the fan, the owner's manual or the insurance policy or the 1-800 factory number aren't going to save you.Chris......................