This occurred as we were traveling from Funter Bay to Auke Bay (Juneau).
Monday, July 2, 2018
Friday, January 29, 2010
Seattle Boat Show
An encouragement that we used with Seahorse Marine, the folks who built Alpenglow, to get our boat finished expeditiously was our willingness to make it available for the Lake Union floating boat display portion of the Seattle Boat Show (January 29 to February 6). It also gave us a good deadline to get the boat cleaned up.
While at Seaview East Boatyard we pretty much reassembled the boat, repaired a few things that cropped since the boat left China, and cleaned up lots of dirt and grime (both inside and out).
The photo to the left shows how masts are typically stepped in the US. The mast is on a cart which can be wheeled close to the boat. A lifting harness is placed on the mast and a crane lifts it into position where a couple of guys guide it into position. Contrast this with how they did it when the boat was first assembled (stepping a mast at Seahorse).
We moved the boat over to the Lake Union venue on Wednesday, the 27th.
During the show it was part of the Capital City Yachts display. They are the broker for Seahorse boats and their sales representatives stayed on the boat while it was open for display.
We’d love to have many more sisterships cruising around as it creates a market for the inevitable time when we sell the boat.
Monday, January 4, 2010
Let’s not sink it just yet
When our boat was off loaded from the freighter on Sunday night, we had Lars Nilsson and Costica Gheorghiu from Marine-Tec help us. Lars is a licensed captain and Costica was a ship’s engineer on a commercial freighter. Our first journey was from Terminal 46 on the East Duwamish waterway over to Shilshole marina. That was plenty.
The next morning, with the help from our friends Dorothy & Dave Nagle, who own DavidEllis, hull #2 of the classic Seahorse Marine 462 Diesel Duck, and visiting “duckies” Jerie & John Milici who own Peking, hull #3 of 462 ducks, we took Alpenglow through the Ballard Locks. Our destination was Seaview East boatyard where we will begin reassembling the boat.
It was my (Kurt), first time driving the boat. It was pouring down rain and there was lots of water being spilled from the Lake Washington Ship canal giving a nice current to contend with.
With the help of lots of good fendering, major mishaps were avoided and the journey ended with the boat still afloat.
Sunday, January 3, 2010
Someday Your Ship Will Come In – Ours was January 3, 2010
We tracked the course of the Cosco Tianjin, the freighter carrying Alpenglow, on its route from Hong Kong, to Yokohama Japan, to Prince Rupert BC, to Vancouver BC and finally Seattle. It arrived on a cloudy Sunday afternoon and we eagerly went to Hamilton Viewpoint near our home to watch it enter Elliot Bay.
Our little boat had a good position on the ship. It was located forward of the bridge and engine exhaust and well protected by containers on either side. You can just see the fly bridge and bow poking out from its protecting containers.
Monday, December 14, 2009
Just “Ship It”
For another ten days after Kurt’s departure, Marcia stayed in China monitoring last minute fixes, and the preparation of Alpenglow for shipping. Since we were importing the vessel ourselves, we were going to have to know how to reassemble the boat after it arrived in Seattle.
When the boat is shipped, it will sit on top of shipping containers exposed to the full force of the North Pacific in winter. The mast and rigging had to come down. All of the electronics on the mast had to be secured or removed. All of the electronics on the fly bridge had to be removed.
Everything not bolted down inside the boat has to be secured.
After the boat is secured,
it is driven to a small port near the boat yard where it is put on a small (by shipping standards) vessel and taken to the main port where it is loaded on the large container ship that will take it to Seattle. The boat is securely lashed down to a cradle purpose built to hold our boat.
Thursday, December 3, 2009
Let’s Have a Party
Monday, November 30, 2009
The View from the Bridge
Our boat has a fly bridge (or flying bridge to some). It is located directly above the lower helm in the pilot house. On nice days it is a delightful place to pilot the boat or simply spend time.
For close quarter maneuvering, its view (especially forward) is outstanding.
The view to the rear is fine except for close-in objects. Having someone below telling you what might be lurking in your blind spot is handy.
The lower helm in the pilot house is more comfortable and has a larger set of controls.
It also is part of the normal living/social area of the boat not dependent on having good weather.
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Electrical Panel
We often joke about when you own a boat, you become a city manager on account of all of the systems on board necessary to support a style of living similar to that on shore. Old-timers will scoff at the complexity of a modern boat saying it is an invitation to disaster (or at least a smaller bank account). Nevertheless, that is the way new boats are built because boat buyers expect creature comforts comparable to their home.
To illustrate this, below are photos of our electrical panel.
Stepping a Mast – 8 November
First, I apologize for some of these out of sequence posts. On account of the inaccessibility of our blog site provider, blogger.com (one of the many subsidiaries of Google), I am catching up on posts while in Hong Kong. My first burst of posts were simply restating what I had sent out in e-mails to some people. Now that I’ve caught up with those, I am doing new posts and filling in the “blanks.”
The Seahorse (SHM) “duck” boats come with a large, for power boats, masts about 10 meters (33 feet). When they are mounted 10 feet above the waterline, as ours is, it makes for a very tall boat. The purpose of the mast is to support the steadying sails, which reduce the rolling of the boat to due to beam seas (see roll stabilization). In addition, the sails serve as “get home” propulsion should the main engine fail. True sailors dismiss the paltry pieces of canvas we call sails on our boat and say our sails provide more of a “get to a continent” feature as you can’t really sail upwind with them. Since we aren’t sailors, will take what we get and deal with their limitations at some future date.
Anyway, when the boat is launched there is no mast mounted on the boat. Two reasons are: 1) the mast gets in way in factory; and 2) wires for lights and electronics have to be stuffed into the mast which is easier when the mast is horizontal.
A few days after SD462-02 was launched its mast was “stepped” (i.e., mounted). In boat yards where fewer strong backs are available, cranes and winches are used. At SHM, lots of hands are used. It took no more than 15 minutes to take it down the dock and get it vertical and secured on the boat.
First Night Aboard – 15 November
We spent our first night aboard last night and survived!
We bought a comforter and other household needs (wastebaskets, dishwashing soap, etc.) yesterday afternoon in town. Later we attended a family event of the boatyard owners (a grand nephew's one-month birthday) at a restaurant in Zhuhai (about 30 miles from the boatyard). The food was excellent and everybody is very accommodating/understanding of my need to watch my sodium intake.
We got back to the yard about 9:30, made up our bed and were lights off about 10:30. This morning, not long after I went to the galley to heat water for drinks, I hear a plaintive meow. I looked around several times before seeing the senior boatyard cat outside asking to come in. "Slick" the cat inspects all of the boats so we had to let him in to check things out (actually, he's been on many times so maybe he was just checking to see if we were all right).
Later in the morning the new kitten at the yard came by to see how we were doing as well. As you can tell from the photo, Marcia is quite taken with him. You can also see the borrowed jacket Marcia is wearing. The temperature has dropped in recent days to overcast, windy and mid-50's.
Since it is Sunday, no workers on our boat today. We are running our generator and doing a load of wash in our washer/dryer combo. We are also running our AirCon units as heaters today to add load to the generator.
First Day of “Final” Suvey – 11 November
Tuesday was lots of work. Ray Wolfe, our surveyor, arrived at the yard early and we got to work quickly.
Yesterday, 11 November, was lots of plumbing and electrical checking. The two water tanks and three waste tanks were filled with water looking for leaks. All fixtures were checked for hot & cold water and leaks. The bilges in the five water tight compartments had water added to them and the electric bilge pumps and manual bilge pumps were checked. Lights, AC & DC outlets were tested.
About 100 gallons of fuel was loaded yesterday afternoon. We'll fire up the generator and test it for voltage and frequency stability, next.
I am not sure whether we'll have time today to do a sea trial on the river since the owner of SD462-02 (the boat launched last week) is making a one-day visit to the yard and there is lots of activity associated with that.
The sails have arrived but not yet been installed so perhaps a sea trial will be Thursday with sails up. Lots of testing left to do!
Night Launch of SD462-02 – 5 November
A sister ship to ours (SD462-02) was launched on the high tide which was about 9:30 PM. It was quite a sight, almost like a rocket launch with all of the lights and people climbing ladders into the capsule/boat.
In the attached night shots you'll see many round artifacts which I believe are the flash reflections from the dust floating in the air.
Once the boat was in position (a slow and careful process), fire crackers were set and the clutch on the cables holding the carriage supporting the boat were released. It slid backwards rapidly into the water at a speed faster than the boat will probably ever go under its own power.
The day shot shows the new boat (yellow mask) moored behind our boat (blue mask).
Progress continues on our boat and we hope to do the final inspection with our surveyor next week (9 November). With luck we will be able to move aboard after that for some "hands-on" experience of systems.
Cruising will have to wait until the boat makes it back home on a freighter.
State of Ship – 28 October
Below are some photos I took this morning before too many workers came on board.
First is the side profile. The bimini cover over the fly bridge is installed so that is why you see only the stainless steel tubing.
Next is the salon and “U” shaped galley. Instead of one large refrigerator, we have two stacked DC refrigerators each on a dedicated breaker so that we can only turn on one if that is all we need. We also have a freezer built in under the pilot house settee.
The master stateroom photo right clearly shows the installed mattress. The hatch enters the engine room and a hinged book case covers the hatch. A seat is under the porthole (no cushion yet) is at the right of the image.
The final photo is the forward stateroom. It has a smallish double bunk below and single bunk above on the starboard side. A very functional array of drawers, lockers and counter top are to the port side.
Great Firewall of China
File this under the "don't commit to something you can't control" department. A few weeks ago I sent out a message with our relocated blog site (http://mvalpenglow.blogspot.com). I had great intentions of posting regular updates to the blog site during our visit to China for the final inspection of our new boat. Well I didn't reckon with the "Great Firewall of China."
China has chosen to protect its citizens from some material on the Internet by filtering out "offensive" web sites. As it turns out, our blog site host, blogspot.com (a service of Google), is on that list. I can neither read nor post to our blog site. I tried one work around but that was blocked as well.
Rather than spend all my time trying to circumvent the Chinese governments efforts, I acceded to them and have not posted to my blog site while in China. Currently we are in Hong Kong to clear out our storage facility and have unfiltered Internet access. I will now try to catch up on things.
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
Progress being made
Marcia and I speak daily using Skype. It generally works well but the limiting factor is the connection speed at Marcia’s end. If she tries to do other things on her computer that use Internet bandwidth or if other people with whom the connection is shared use too much capacity the quality suffers. The delay is a bit like a phone call routed through a satellite and you have to be conscious of not “stepping on” the others comments.
Over the weekend (October 17-18), she was going through the boat with our surveyor, Ray Wolfe. He prepared a list of findings and the yard is now working through them. Marcia provides the necessary clarification/feedback to ensure that they are properly addressing the findings.
On Tuesday Marcia met with our project manager and the production staff and they worked out the following schedule:
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Thursday, October 1, 2009
Final Stretch
We are coming down to the final stretch on the new boat’s construction and the schedule is firming up. The airline tickets are purchased and visa’s in hand.
The plan is for Marcia to leave Wednesday, October 14. Kurt will follow the next week on Friday, October 23. Return dates are chosen but we recognize that they may change. They have us returning in early to mid December.
Once at the boat yard the goal is to accomplish the following:
- Conduct a “pre-final” inspection to identify any obvious problems or items not built per our requests;
- Conduct a final inspection with our marine surveyor, Ray Wolfe. The result will be a list of items needing correction;
- Work with the yard to complete the “punch list” created above;
- Live on the boat at the boat yard, learning the boat and identifying modest changes that we’d like the boat yard to make';
- Work with the boat yard to prepare the boat for shipment via a freighter.
We would like the boat to be put on a freighter in mid-December so that it can reach the Pacific Northwest by the first half of January. Possible shipping ports are Seattle, Tacoma or Vancouver. Our preference is Seattle but the cost of shipping will enter into our final decision.
Monday, September 28, 2009
Who is that Masked Trawler?
Bill Kimley, co-owner of Seahorse Marine, has been in the boat building industry for a long time and has developed a keen eye for what looks good on a boat.
On recent boats from the yard, he has been encouraging owners to consider adding a “mask” around the pilot house area. The mask uses either the hull color or a complementary color to visually lower the height of the boat and lengthen it. This is particularly valuable on boats like ours that have both a large superstructure and tall rigging.
Anyway, we looked at other SHM boats with masks and did a little playing on the computer with the photo editor to convince ourselves that it would look good to us. We did go the conservative route and stick with the hull color as opposed to something a little more eye catching like “fire-engine red.”
Below is a before and after view for comparison.
Friday, September 18, 2009
Boat Launched!
We received from Henry Zheng, our SHM project manager, the following e-mail this morning.
Hi Marcia and Kurt:
This morning, Alpenglow is successfully launched. We have the fireworks to celebrate this wonderful moment. Hope you and kurt were here, to share the happiness with our workers.
Have some picts for your information.
Best regards,
Henry
The pictures are below: