After 10 months of working almost non stop on "Fever Dream", she's finally in the water.
Over all went well getting her off the trailer and motoring to the slip, raising the mast, etc.
I was amazed all the "little" things I still HAD to do to get her ready, (not being able to step the mast and install the running rigging, figuring out how it all goes together at home on the trailer cuz of the ccoolldd and rain).
I get her (and mine) first BRAND NEW, never used, crips, white, sails up, all set, the sheets attached, man it looks good! Best looking boat at the marina!!!
A few pics to mark this historic moment and let's go!
The moment of truth has arrived, we cease outta the slip and head for open water on our "maiden voyage".
Of course as soon as we cleared the docks, poof! Someone somewhere turn off the wind machine and the lake turned to glass! (maybe it's my hat?? The same damn thing kept happening to me last year??)
I tooled @ for a hour, doing this, trying that, waiting for some type, any type of breeze to wake up the tell tales, but sadly no.
With a heavy heart and a desert dry mouth I resigned to the fact that my virign voyage in her is a "motor sail" trip, head back in.
"Which one is my slip? They all look the @&!^@%#$!! same from out here! I THINK it's this one"!
I went to drop the jib in open water, pretty good, a little stiff (the sail) but she layed on the foredeck without looking like the dogs breakfast.
I go to flake the main, that's when the the sheet hit the fan........................
It's so stiff it's like trying to fold cardboard! There is NO way I'm gonna get this to lay on this boom in any kind of neat order!! I'd have a better chance of flaking 3/4" plywood!!
I had to motor in with the sail all over the cockpit, raise it again and 45 minutes later and quite a few curses, I got a sloppy flaking job and the cover on.
When I took the ASA 101 class last spring, the sail was older and more flexible, we were able to flake it over the boom with no hassle, nice, neat.
This is the 3rd time I've ever flaked a sail, (trailer sailor last year with a 16'. Drop the sail, fold it up in the parking lot and away I go, none of this B.S.).
It takes like 5 minutes to set the sail from the bag,(provided I get it folded nice back into the bag), prehaps I should just store it down below when I'm done?
What am I doing wrong?
What the secert to flaking a new sail when it's stiff and "un rulely"?
Joe
Just when you think you got it made, reality surfaces and bites you in the aft!
Over all went well getting her off the trailer and motoring to the slip, raising the mast, etc.
I was amazed all the "little" things I still HAD to do to get her ready, (not being able to step the mast and install the running rigging, figuring out how it all goes together at home on the trailer cuz of the ccoolldd and rain).
I get her (and mine) first BRAND NEW, never used, crips, white, sails up, all set, the sheets attached, man it looks good! Best looking boat at the marina!!!
A few pics to mark this historic moment and let's go!
The moment of truth has arrived, we cease outta the slip and head for open water on our "maiden voyage".
Of course as soon as we cleared the docks, poof! Someone somewhere turn off the wind machine and the lake turned to glass! (maybe it's my hat?? The same damn thing kept happening to me last year??)
I tooled @ for a hour, doing this, trying that, waiting for some type, any type of breeze to wake up the tell tales, but sadly no.
With a heavy heart and a desert dry mouth I resigned to the fact that my virign voyage in her is a "motor sail" trip, head back in.
"Which one is my slip? They all look the @&!^@%#$!! same from out here! I THINK it's this one"!
I went to drop the jib in open water, pretty good, a little stiff (the sail) but she layed on the foredeck without looking like the dogs breakfast.
I go to flake the main, that's when the the sheet hit the fan........................
It's so stiff it's like trying to fold cardboard! There is NO way I'm gonna get this to lay on this boom in any kind of neat order!! I'd have a better chance of flaking 3/4" plywood!!
I had to motor in with the sail all over the cockpit, raise it again and 45 minutes later and quite a few curses, I got a sloppy flaking job and the cover on.
When I took the ASA 101 class last spring, the sail was older and more flexible, we were able to flake it over the boom with no hassle, nice, neat.
This is the 3rd time I've ever flaked a sail, (trailer sailor last year with a 16'. Drop the sail, fold it up in the parking lot and away I go, none of this B.S.).
It takes like 5 minutes to set the sail from the bag,(provided I get it folded nice back into the bag), prehaps I should just store it down below when I'm done?
What am I doing wrong?
What the secert to flaking a new sail when it's stiff and "un rulely"?
Joe
Just when you think you got it made, reality surfaces and bites you in the aft!