Once Songster was
in the water we had a few more jobs to do to get her ready for the season. The major jobs; replacing the VHF cable,
replacing a broken block and replacing some halyards, required Bob to go up the
main mast – 14 metres above the deck. Bob
donned the bosun chair and safety harnesses and I winched him up. All the jobs required Bob to go up the mast
five times over two or three days. I
developed quite the pectoral muscles with all the winching and Bob became less
and less happy hanging by lines 14 metres above a hard deck.
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It's a long way up - and down! |
While in Australia browsing through chandleries, Bob
happened upon a nifty product which will indicate if there is water in the
fuel. This product wasn’t on our list
but looked like a good thing to have. So
Bob tried it out on Songster’s fuel
tank. You paint a bit of solution on the
end of a dip stick and lower it to the bottom of the tank. If the solution turns red, there is water in
the tank. Well we got the red
colour. We borrowed a fuel pump to pump
out the water, which being heavier than diesel fuel, concentrates in the bottom
of the tank. Not only did water come out
but then a thick brown sludge came through.
This was not what should be in the tank!
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Sludge from the bottom of the fuel tank |
So back to our saviours, the Marvellous Marlin Men in
Red.
We had a nasty build up of algae
requiring the fuel tanks to be cleaned.
This is a massive all day five step process consisting of pumping out
the contaminated fuel through filters, washing the tanks several times with
various solutions, adding biocide to the filtered fuel then pumping it back into
the clean tank through more filters.
That
impulse buy of a water test kit was worth its weight in gold (even if it did
cost us several hundred euros to fix the problem).
A fuel filter clogged with algae cutting out
the engine in the middle of rough seas is not a prospect we would relish!
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The fuel pumping set up |
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Before cleaning |
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All clean |
Our final splurge was to spruce up below decks with some new
carpets.
The carpets that came with the
boat were getting very tatty.
Lantana,
who made us a cockpit enclosure last year, made us lovely new carpets.
Songster
was looking very smart and all ready to sail.
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New carpets |
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