Ok so I decided to go to Luna early this morning. I got a couple donuts and a soda and enjoyed them while lounged out in the cockpit. The morning was beautiful. I replaced one of my traveler lines with a longer rope so now they are both 43’ long. The 25‘ line I had on one side was long enough to do the job, but I only had like 2’ left at the cockpit. Now I have plenty of rope to the helm. The 25’ section replaced the rope from the traveler car to the boom and now that’s all sorts of pretty. I met a couple of my neighbors as well today, and one couple didn’t even realize Luna was the same boat, they thought it was a new boat. Another neighbor 2 boats down just bought his boat to from a guy I met last week while cleaning Luna. He has never owned a sailboat before and bought an Ericsson 32 for less than I paid for Luna. It’s in good condition and ready to sail even! So I helped teach him how to hook up his Genoa and showed him where the lines go. Good day… well while I was at the boat anyway.
I found a length of rope that was spliced to a piece of wire rope in the boat a few weeks ago… today when I was trying to locate all my different rigging and see where it all goes, I found the same setup going into my mast, and coming out the masthead, and it was tied off with a shackle on a safety line. So I’m guessing this is for the spinnaker… any thoughts on that. My gib halyard and main halyard have been found at this point, and they both exit the mast at about 5’ from the deck and stay at the mast, this rope goes all the way back to the cockpit.
And for some bad news too … my oven is toast… it maybe used to make toast, but now it’s not. There was some surface rust near the bottom of the door, so I decided I was going to remove the door, and clean up the rust, and paint it with some high temp paint. Well once I got it apart I found signs of water having set inside for a long time and was right up to the window. Also the lower 2” of the inside piece of the door was missing, and most of the inside of the door was just rust holding the shape the metal used to be in before turning into powder when I took the stainless cover off the door.
So yea, I need a new oven. Maybe just a new door, but that’s not all I found wrong. I got a new propane hose made, and decided to see how well my system works, and burn off some the propane in the rusty tank. The regulator is good, the solenoid is good and the stovetop part of the oven is good. Unfortunately the oven side of the burner didn’t work properly. I got the pilot light lit, but when I would turn the valve to a temp the pilot light wouldn’t get bigger so the valve could activate unless I manipulated the dial a bit, then it only lit for a few seconds before burning out (after I let go of the knob). The burner when it did light had a nice even flame all the way across. So not all is lost with the oven. I will try to see if there is a good replacement in the boat graveyard up north or just swallow the bullet and go for new.