Sunday, January 23, 2011

Southside Marina

I was planning to start this post with a neat photo La Gringa took of the recent full moon. You know ... instead of starting like I usually do, with yet another sunrise photo. I was trying for something different. Or at least thinking that way. But then I kept thinking , which is usually a mistake. Since she took the moon photo just before dawn, the sun was rising,as the moon was setting (we get up REAL early) so was it technically a 'sunrise' photo? Or would it be more accurate to call it a 'moonset' photo? Well, I'm sure you can appreciate the quandary. I got confused.  Some say this is normal, for me.

I solved it by deciding to just start with a real sunrise photo. Again.



And now that this is all sorted out, here's the photo I was talking about. Providenciales just before dawn:



I sometimes think that someone unfamiliar with the Turks and Caicos might come across all the sunny photos on this blog and think that it never rains here. Well it doesn't rain all that much here compared to some places. And the rainfall varies from one side of the country to the other. And the rainfall varies from both sides of the country to the middle of the country. And the rainfall here on Providenciales varies from one end of the island to the other, and from the north side to the south.

I just read a description of the climate here on the Ocean Vibes web site, and they say that "Providenciales, Middle Caicos and North Caicos average less than 50 inches of rainfall annually, while Grand Turk and South Caicos average only 22 inches of rainfall annually. Salt Cay has even less because at the beginning of the Salt Trade, the Salt Rakers cut down all of the trees on the island in an effort to reduce rainfall. "

We get 100% of our water from rain, so we are not too upset if we get a bit from time to time. La Gringa caught a picture of the edge of a squall this week, literally:



I hope you can see that rain in the photo. When it decides to rain here, sometimes it REALLY rains. We get warm air that has come four thousand miles across open ocean, and that has picked up every little molecule of water it can carry. Then it bumps into these islands and has to go up over them. All that stacked up air full of water cools off with the altitude increase. Everybody pretty much knows that the further you get from the earth the colder it gets. That's why mountain tops have snow on them when no place else does. Well, the wet air gets cooled, and suddenly it can't carry all that water any more, and guess what. We get a real frog strangler.
We were laughing at one of the local newspapers a couple years ago. It rained so hard here that the windscreen wipers on the vehicles were totally useless. All of the low spots on the Leeward Highway were flooded, some of them to a couple feet deep. The next newspaper edition had a photo of a car sitting in a lake of water up over the wheels, with the headline that said something like "Hundreds of Gallons of Water Fall on Provo". Hundreds, mind you. Yeah, no kidding.

The Ocean Vibes fact sheet also points out that "Ambergris Cay which is South of South Caicos has a weather pattern of its own due to the majority of its ridges running North to South, versus East to West like most of the Islands, this actually affects the cooling and condensation process and results in quite a bit of rainfall ". This little country has an amazing amount of weather variation for a place only 90 miles across. I guess the main climate factoid to remember about the Turks and Caicos is that it averages 350 sunny days a year.

And on many of these sunny days we like to get out on the ocean. This week was no exception. We've got this new Hobie toy to play with and have really been enjoying it. Weekend before last we decided to sail it offshore a bit. Just to see what it was like out in the ocean. Away from the beach. It was sort of an experimental trip, or shakedown cruise. We wanted to see how well we did navigating our way out to various shoals and reefs we've targeted on our navigation and GPS charts. We've got these great hopes for using this little boat to explore and fish. I have always been a little nervous about pushing the inflatable too hard. It never let us down, but I always wondered how I could handle it if one of the chambers deflated, and we still had miles to go to get home. The idea of trying to sail, pedal, paddle, or swim and tow a limp inflatable for a few miles in the open ocean just somehow never appealed to me all that much.

We launched at our usual spot near the Southside Marina. One of our 'trampoline' straps got unhooked in the process. La Gringa found out first hand how well the amas (outriggers) do to stabilize the boat when she 'scootched' out to fix it. According to Hobie's specs: each ama will float 220 lbs. I don't remember if they mentioned whether that was in fresh water or the ocean.



We kayak the canal for a while, and then right before we make our turn toward open water we see the Southside Marina:



I know I have mentioned Southside several times in the blog, but I never really talk about the marina itself much. We have become good friends with the owner of the marina, Bob Pratt. He lives in that house behind the crane. You can see the foundation of the little restaurant he is in the process of building. And we talk with his manager, Simon, on the radio every morning. Well to be accurate, La Gringa talks to Simon every morning. I just listen, for the most part. And provide technical consultations from time to time. Until someone tells me to shut up.

Southside is very much a 'cruisers' marina in that they cater to boaters passing through on their way north or south. This time of year they are very busy, as people headed down to the Caribbean are stopping for fuel, provisions and to just get off the boats and stretch their legs. To look around Providenciales.

Every morning at 07:30 Southside broadcasts a situation, weather and tides update on marine VHF radio. This daily broadcast is called the "Cruisers' Net". La Gringa is involved and sometimes relays messages from the marina to boats trying to find their way in. We've also assisted with people in trouble and can relay messages between boats that are too far apart to hear each other.

Last year I installed a marine VHF at the house and we have been getting very good range with it due to our height above the ocean. We have talked to boats that were about 60 miles away and have heard USCG helicopters talking to boats from over 100 miles away. We heard the Coast Guard talking to Ray the Pirate on Treasure Seeker when he was aground up in the Plana Cays. That is 105 miles from here. So we have a real good ear on all the local boating traffic talk. Probably the best on the island. And since we live in the neighborhood, we have gotten to know the people at Southside.

This is the view looking back at Southside Marina from the far side of it:



It's not a big marina as these things go but it's very popular with a lot of the sailors who pass through the islands. We get to see and meet full time boaters from all over the world here. We see a lot of different boats, as readers of this blog will already know. And we like boats. We see smaller, single-handed monohulls:



And we see a lot of mid-size multihulls. These are usually catamarans with the odd trimaran thrown in from time to time. We were impressed by the particularly well equipped recent visitor Kari Bela. You can see her from the side behind the Stardust above and here is a view from the stern:



That is a well thought out sailboat. Three headsails, heavy duty standing rigging (that's the mast and cables that brace and hold it to the boat) radar, satellite communications, solar and wind power, an escape hatch in the bottom..... that's the kind of boat to take a family around the world. For the kind of people who might dream about things like that. As we are. And as you might be, if you like this blog.
That's not automatically a given,by the way. We know lots of people who love living on small islands who don't get into boats much at all.

We noticed that the hulls on the Kari Bela are somewhat unusual. Most of these modern cruising catamarans have steps leading down to the water at the aft end of the hulls. A lot of people call these "sugar scoops" because of their appearance. You can see them on the Lady Moona in this photo. It's the boat on the other side of Kari Bella:



Now if you look back at the Kari Bela, you can see that the hull design has been modified. They are extended out about a meter from what they would be if they were the standard 'sugar scoop' design. Each one has a very nice, solid, professionally-designed boarding ladder on it. If I had to guess... I'd say these people are divers. I'd almost bet that there's a compressor to fill SCUBA tanks somewhere on that boat.

That extended hull length at the waterline will change some other things about the boat, too. Increased buoyancy and bridgedeck clearance (see how high it's floating?) and probably a slight increase in maximum hull speed.

Southside doesn't just handle 'ragboats' (also known as 'blowboats'). They get their fair share of 'stinkpots', too. And I mean some nice ones. The larger boats tend to go to Turtle Cove marina on the other side of the island. The maximum draft that can get into Southside is about six feet, six inches and that is only at high tide.

This is the M/Y Jade, stopping in for fuel and a break from the sea. They left the next day for the Dominican Republic.



If you look just behind Jade and on the other side of that palm tree, you can barely see the top of a small gazebo type structure. Those lumps are gas grills and chairs. Every Thursday evening the Southside Marina crew organize a potluck barbecue here. People from various boats in the area come, along with some locals. The plan is for cruisers to bring one dish to share with everyone, and something to throw on the grill for themselves. It's been rumored that some participants bring rum. This rumor is hereby confirmed. I am married to one of those participants.

This is the Lily May. She is the live aboard home for Simon and Charlyn, who are the managers and hosts at the marina. They spend their summers on a barge in France, and their winters here at Southside. When they returned from France in December they found out that they had an issue with someone who was living on their boat, Lily May. It was on the way to getting ugly when we got involved. I am not going to say anything more in print because the police arrived and there are legal charges filed and we may be called as witnesses. If that tells you anything.

Sunny days, clear water, pristine reefs, perfect beaches,shipwrecks, vhf radios, sailboats, pirates..... I tell you we got it all, right here in the beautiful Turks and Caicos Islands!!



These power boats round out the current stable at the Southside Marina. I think there are enough stories coming through there for someone to write a book about the place from a crossroads witness perspective.



We've already told you about the Star of the Sea and now hinted at a story about the Lily May. We were at the Southside Cruiser's barbecue (and extended happy hour) two Thursdays back and met Ron and Karyn of the M/Y Equinox. They had been staying in the marina for a couple of months but were now out at anchor when we were taking these photos. "Tied in the marina" = $$. Anchored a mile away, "on the hook", is free. And the Equinox is getting ready to take off on a circumnavigation of the world starting in October. I'll post a little more about these guys in a few minutes.

I wanted to continue the narration of our little sail out of the marina by mentioning Stanley or "Burly" as he is more commonly known. He is a local fisherman from North Caicos who lives here on his boat near the marina. Technically, I guess he is tied up in the canal, and not the marina. This is his home and livelihood, the F/V Five Cays:



We've gotten to know Stanley over the past couple of years, talk to him on the radio, wave to him on the street and sometimes pick him up hitchhiking to or from town. He doesn't have a car here. He does have a sloop tied up in a slip further up the canal he tries to sell us from time to time.



This is just a photo of someones hand woven fish trap. People tie them to stakes or bushes along the banks and leave them baited on the bottom of the canal:



Once we clear the tricky little entrance to the marina we put the sail up and relax. And the first thing we see is a yellow trimaran anchored just outside the entrance:



Our intended route of travel had been to sail from the canal to a patch reef out on the Caicos Bank. So far, we had gotten distracted by making a tour of the marina to take those photos. And now we see not only an intriguing trimaran to look at but also the Equinox that I told you about earlier. So we decided to sail over and look at these boats before getting back to our original agenda. Typical. This kind of spur of the moment planning is how we ended up stranded on the mud flats.

We sailed by the Equinox. We had met them at the barbecue and had heard them on the radio the previous day hoping to leave for Puerto Rico but having alternator problems. We had found we had some acquaintances in common, as Ron and Karyn had gotten involved with our friends at Sip Sip restaurant on Harbour Island in the Bahamas.



Even waiting on the hook is not that bad here. The Equinox dinghy is easily capable of taking them to shore quickly if needed. Their plan, as of last week, is to be going through the Panama Canal sometimes around October. That would let them spend next hurricane season down where it's safe, and have an easy run to Panama in the autumn. That would be one plan, anyhow. These things tend to change, in our experience.

"Life is what happens to you while you're busy making other plans." (John Lennon)



Wouldn't you just love to take a few years and explore the world in a home you can move across entire oceans? Waking up to a constantly changing view through your parlor windows. Sleeping in your own familiar bed every night instead of some bizarre hotel room. Hot showers. Your own kitchen. Everything you need. Hopping off the back of the boat with a spear in hand, or trolling a few lures behind you in the moonlight... yeah, we could get into that. I think if I ever moved onto a boat like that I would have a very difficult time leaving it to move back ashore.

The Equinox is a 58 ft. Hady-Krogen, if you would like to Google that for a fantasy boat. And if you'd like to follow Ron and Karyn on their adventure, just click this to visit their blog about Equinox. That link should take you to one of their posts about the Thursday night cookouts at Southside Marina, by the way.

Now this boat really got our attention. What are the chances of there being two yellow trimarans out here on this particular day? Well, I generously call our little kayak a trimaran. It'll have to suffice, for now. And this, well this is a real one:



And I know you can't read it in this blurry photo, but if you were to ask us to tell you the name of this boat, we'd have to say "We Don't Know". Out of New Iberia, Louisiana.



After satisfying some of our curiousity about the trimaran we got back on track to see how we could do navigating our way around by sail a little further up the coast.

It's nice to be able to scoot over rocky bottom like this without cringing and waiting to see if something makes an unexpected noise.



We navigated by the small group of little islets called "Five Little Cays". This is the view between a couple of them:



And this is the place I am going to bring people if I ever get into an argument about who has the toughest feet. "Climb this. Okay, now stand on the top. Uh.. okay now jump up and down. All right. You win." Cause I ain't getting out of the boat here unless it's to go swimming.



We then did something new for us. We turned and headed directly offshore out to a little patch of reef marked on the GPS:



What's new for us is that the place we wanted to investigate is about three miles from land. The only other time we've taken a kayak out that far here was when we went from Osprey Rock to West Caicos and back. And then we were only three miles from land for a few minutes, right exactly in the middle. This time, it was a destination. We wanted to see what kind of dive platform the Hobie will make.

And a destination was was an excuse to go sailing. Although I have no idea why we would need an excuse. Sailing these waters in a small boat on a sunny day is one of the pure joys of life as we see it. We wish everybody could experience this. We smile a lot on this boat.

This is what it looks like from the surface over a bit of 'patchy reef' three miles out.



We discovered that rolling the trampolines up makes it a lot easier to get in and out of the boat. It also improved visibility into the water from La Gringa's position in the front seat.

My camera housing had fogged lens issues during the underwater shots I took after this, and they came out so bad I decided not to even try to post them here. They did not do this water justice. I deleted them.

I was checking our little folding anchor while La Gringa was rinsing her face plate out:



This is normally where the trampolines are stretched, and where Dooley the Delinquent snoozes. Or huddles in terror, as the case may warrant. You can see how it opens things up with the boat.



You can also probably see that my lens was beginning to fog up.

We snorkeled around for a while. It helped us to 'ground truth' in person what we had seen on a GPS chart, and on Google Earth. Now when we see similar things on a satellite image, we will have a real good idea what's under water there. In this case, we plan to come back with fishing lines and see if we can catch some of the mutton snapper we spotted.

Eventually we had to start back, knowing we had at least an hour's sail to get to the marina. You remember, just a couple paragraphs ago I explained that we rolled up the trampolines where Dooley the Drowsy usually snoozes? Well. With them rolled up he had to sleep somewhere else. And that was the spot directly behind me, between me and the rudder. Out of sight, out of mind, until we heard this noise that sounded amazingly like about seventeen pounds of Dooley the Detached falling overboard. And it was.

La Gringa turned the boat around while I grabbed a camera, but of course the lens was wet. I did manage to get this photo of the fuzzy faced little trouble maker doing his best impromptu impersonation of Johnny Weismuller outrunning a crocodile.



If you ever want to see how incredibly fast a dog can wake up from a dead sleep, try letting him fall overboard from a boat he thinks is going to leave him behind. It's a good thing dogs don't tend to take hysterical laughter personally.

There's an actual wake behind him:



(and Todd, thanks again for bringing the life vest down! You can see why the little stinker needs one.)

The rest of that trip was relatively uneventual. We now see that we should be able to use this boat for conch diving and fishing trips. This is very good news for us. I need to come up with some way to keep messy conch and dead fish out of the boat, and we can refine our anchor handling a bit. But it's looking good. The Hobie TI has rod holders molded into the back, right behind the rear seat. But after this 'dry run' out to a fishing spot and back we are thinking that a hand line might make more sense for what we want to do. Have you ever heard of a "Cuban YoYo"? I'll try to get that into the next post.

Back to the rest of our life, we continue to muddle through the typical day-to-day stuff involved in living here. We do take a lot of photos that never make it to this blog. This is a familiar scene to us and yet the first time I have taken a photo of the Defender 90 outside the new Fed Ex location in town.



Come to think of it, the two Land Rovers are a big part of why we spend so much time at FedEx that they are on a first name basis with La Gringa. Keeping these trucks running continues to be one of my main DIY drains here. I refer to it as a 'drain' because working on rusty motor vehicles is only fun for me if I do it every now and then. These things tend to jump up and break suddenly, and take over an immediate priority. We depend on them for a lot. That's why we have two with identical drivetrains. I know I can always keep at least one of them running.

Last week, I was returning from the yearly vehicle inspection/registration (!) when the brake pedal went all the way to the floor. Yep, no brakes. Does that happen to you often? Well, this is the third time it has happened to us here. First the Ford Expedition, then the Defender 90 and now the other Land Rover. What happens is that the hydraulic brake lines on the rear axle get splashed a lot. They are made of steel and the water here is made of nitric and hydrochloric and surphuric acids and bubbling sodium hydroxide and.... and....

No, it's not. That's from a nightmare of mine. The water is just salty and it eats steel just as surely as Dooley devours Doritos, only slower. So it eats holes in the brake lines. And we get to practice driving without brakes. It's not that bad with a standard transmission.

At the top of this photo you can see the rear brake lines from a 2005 model Land Rover. Only five years old. I notice I don't even have all the pieces:



The straight tubing at the bottom and the funny looking tool, are what I am going to use to bend myself a new set of brakelines. Are we having fun, yet?

And it never ends. The OEM taillight bracket rotted and fell off and went away. I looked into ordering one from England (don't get me started..) and decided to just take this opportunity to concentrate on form following function. I put this plastic, sealed one on in place of the original:



If and when it breaks, I can get another one for $20 locally. Or I might decide to fork over the equivalent of a few weeks income for one that says Land Rover on it.

You might also notice that stainless steel bolts are beginning to find their way into my repairs.

Not all of my DIY stuff is dirty greasy salty, yet. Sometimes I actually get to be creative and experiment with something totally new. I do a lot of this when we can't find what we need locally. Which is a lot of the time. In this case, the new trailer for the kayak did not have a good way to support and secure the front of the boat on this bumpy road. I am somewhat limited in available aluminum hardware stock, but simple strips and angles are available. So I am experimenting with trying to find something simple that works here:



I already know I should have extended the two angle pieces another foot or so to give me something to snug the bow up to. Oh well. That's why it's a prototype. But did you ever notice how often temporary fixes evolve into long term solutions?

Okay that's going to be it for this post. We have some more boating trips planned (of course!) and we are going to try diving for conch and fishing from it. And the Middle Caicos model sloop regatta, the Valentines Day extravaganza on Bambarra, is coming up and this year Preacher is serious about it.

We haven't managed to snag any great sunsets this week. Oh, there have been a few, but not when we were standing still with a camera. So in the meantime, I will offer another sunrise instead.

Here's looking forward to a bright new day:

16 comments:

RumShopRyan said...

Great story about the marina guys. I'm going to start following the Equinox blog and their journey around the world. I too started laughing when I say the pup swimming hard and fast in the water. Gotta love those dogs.

Cheers!

jeeperman said...

Another fantastic post!
The Mrs. and I are your latest fans. We am in the process of reading every one of your blog posts. Sad to say, it appears we missed out on your epic thread over on that fishing/boating forum.
The moving and building one that got removed. I am DoubleO7 over there. Did you ever do a whole house emergency generator install or is that still in limbo?
Adios

Ashworth said...

Here I sit with the snow piling up while you guys cruise around the island having too much fun. We are expecting around 10" of snow today. Can't wait for the spring and to get the boat back in the water. Love the blog and keep it up.
Jim
NJ

jeeperman said...

P.S.
They make stainless steel brakelines.

Anonymous said...

Hi y'all. I was wondering if anyone was still reading this thing! Thanks for writing. Feedback is good.

I know about the stainless brake lines. BUT, they don't stock them here. To ship Fed Ex, would cost about $ 100 plus 40% import duty. Cheaper to buy the ones NAPA stocks and replace them every three years.

Last time I was in the US I tried to buy the correct, DIN/Bubble flaring tool from a Sears store in Colorado. Got in an argument with a guy who quite frankly doesn't know what he is talking about when it comes to various types of flaring tools. He couldn't understand why I didn't want the SAE/Double flaring tool....

But they didn't have the right flaring tool, which is something else I would need.

Living here, ya gotta be patient, flexible, and have a sense of humor. Or you'll go nuts.

Anonymous said...

Hey Gringo, I have been reading this blog since the beginning, really since you started it on Hull Truth, I think it was. It is one of the first web sites I check every morning, and it makes my day (week really) when I see a new post. Keep up the good work.

Just curious. Did you ever get the Contender back up and running? Maybe I missed it in one of your posts but the last I remember you were having engine issues. Haven't seen anything about that boat in awhile.

Tim

Anonymous said...

Hi Tim.
We haven't written anything including the Contender lately because we haven't been using it. It seems every time I get it all working right, something else breaks. We continue to have big problems with the fuel here. I put a filter in line that gets everything down to something like 5 microns, but then the filter clogs up because surprise, there is LOTS of stuff in the fuel here bigger than 5 microns.
Last time I tried to start the motor, the battery was totally dead. I bought a new battery, and as soon as I hook it up, it drains it. Something, somewhere is shorted, and I have not been able to find it quickly. I tried all the usual stuff. I am going to have to go through everything, item by item, on the boat with a meter, and find the short. So far, I know it's none of the pumps. Or the lights. I checked those first. I am a bit nervous because there are some indications it might be in the starting circuit. Maybe, if I am lucky, it will turn out to be in the ignition switch or something relatively simple.

Meanwhile, other priorties keep taking me away from troubleshooting the Contender yet again. But we miss the capabilities it has. Big time.

Emily said...

Another great blog post - love your entries, sense of humor, and gorgeous photos. Love anything concerning Dooley the Dog. The sequence of him swimming back to the boat made me laugh out loud. Too funny and cute!

BTW, is it legal to use a VHF on land there? At least here in the US, I could have sworn they were legal for on-water use only. Seems like I read some dire warning to that effect in the manual when we purchased a handheld when we were boat owners. Just curious.

Anonymous said...

Yep, no problem using a VHF wherever you want. In fact, until cell phones came out VHF was the main way of communicating all over the islands. "Land lines" were not that plentiful. When we moved here in 2005, the taxicabs all had VHF radios, in fact. Their 'handle' and the channel they monitored were on the magnetic sign on the side of the cab.
The FCC ( in the USA) has absolutely no authority here whatsoever.

jeeperman said...

LOL,
Yea I forgot you have those oddball LR's and the funky bubble ended brake lines. By USA automotive standards, etc. I suppose one aspect of island living is to have what everyone else has in the hopes that they and parts for them will be cheaper and more readily available. And not just automotive stuff.
Have you ever tried hosing down the underside metal parts on your LR's with used motor oil or Corrosion-X, etc. ?

Anonymous said...

I did ask our friend Brenton, who runs the Benjamin Moore paint store here, to import me six cans of Corrosion X. It's all gone now. I did spray it inside the chassis on both vehicles. But I like the idea of spraying used motor oil. I'll pick up a cheap pump-up sprayer and give it a try. Couldn't hurt!

Most people here trade cars about every two to three years.

jeeperman said...

I found a garden sprayer could not spray the used oil as it was too thick. I ended up getting a 3M Rocker Schutz gun. You need an air compressor but per your blog you have one of those.
You could probly cobble up an experimental one using some other sort of siphon feed delivery gun with your compressor.
Just Google "motor oil ndercoating".
And you will see loads of varients.

Bill said...

Another good one Gringos!

I had just been looking through an old issue of 'Yachting' magazine and noticed the ad for the Kadey-Krogen's and jokingly asked my wife if she thought we should get one. Real nice boats, definitely a world cruiser there.

Also, is 'Lily May' a Marine Trader 46? I just saw one up close here in Key Largo, lots of space, not my cup of tea though.

Anyway, keep having fun on the TI, I've enjoyed seeing all those photos. I hope the camera works for you next time you go snorkeling, it's been too long since we've had some good underwater photos! :)

Joy said...

Interesting post; a good mix of photos and subjects. Do you know what kind of boat the Kari Bella is? You said it's the kind that would be good for a family sailing around the world... yet the hulls look so narrow. Is there berthing and a galley, etc. down there? So surprising that there would be room for it.
I would love to sail around (at least the Caribbean and Atlantic coast) with my husband and kids someday. I have no experience with sailing yet. My husband is a vet of Navy submarines, with the head knowledge of sailing (that everyone in the Navy gets), but I'm sure he could pick up on everything quickly. Not sure how much it would take for me to be useful, but we'd figure it out!
We are celebrating our tenth anniversary next month, and considered a sailing trip through the BVIs to celebrate, but are instead going the easy, cushy route of staying at Caneel Bay on St. John. Looking forward to it, though!
Oh, but I had a question. I know that you guys took a sailing course (I think BVIs?), and I was wondering if that was your first sailing experience, how easy was it for you to pick it up, etc.? Curious how much schoolin' we'd need before we felt comfortable enough to do a bareback charter.
Anyway... enough questions for now! Reading this was especially enjoyable after coming in from shoveling snow. : )

Anonymous said...

Great post as usual. Poor little Dooley! Was he sleeping so soundly that he just rolled off the boat? Hadda laugh out loud whilst reading that bit! Lovely moonshot!!! Keep up the good work you guys. Regards from the sweaty and hot Newman in Western Australia.
Cheers from Jan O

MrPat said...

Great post guys. I love the marina tour.

Mutton snapper...yum, go get em.

Re the gas issues, you might want to buy one of those West Marine gas filters. http://www.westmarine.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/Product_11151_10001_99869_-1?cid=chanintel_google&ci_src=14110944&ci_sku=99869