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Boat Heaven - Boat Heaven

Boat Heaven - October 2006

safety requirements for your boat

October 30th 2006 18:06
Safety is a big issue on the water. Our boat looks fine, pristine in fact but is it safe? Many marine authorities list what is required to be carried to keep your boat in the minimum of safety operations. This will vary if your boating in in enclosed waters or offshore and to a degree how far offshore. If you race your boat the authority that you race under will have a minimum standard for safety. Here are a few things you can look at your self.

Water tight integrity: Do the hull, cabin top, decks and doors hold out the ocean and in many cases the rain. Too much water in your boat will of course sink you but even a little can effect the stability due to the free surface effect at sea.


Crew safety: How do you keep the crew on board? Lifelines mainly so check they are secure, no damaged wire and check the ends, often tied with string or cord that may be quite old and frayed by now. Remind your crew to keep three points of contact while moving about the boat at all times.

Fire: On a boat this is the scariest thing. Naturally you will have updated fire extinguishers on board but on a fibreglass boat for instance, once the fire has a hold you are in a life saving mode not a fire fighting mode. Thick black noxious fumes that can prevent you from getting your carefuly stored lifejackets. You have sometimes only a matter of one or two minutes before you must abandon ship. Progressivly, timber, steel and ferro boats are more likely to be saved depending on where the fire starts.

Running aground
: This should not happen but it does even to the best skipper. The first instinct is to get off the mud bank, reef or whatever you have run on to. If you know it was a soft object like mud or sand you can probably re float yourself and no damage done. If however you are on rocks or a coral reef, your boat may have sustained a hole damage and as you pry your self free you could then sink. Check this out as quickly as you can, before the tide and waves make up your mind for you.


Being run over or run into by another vessel: We will assume that you will never run into someone else. The main reason someone would run into you is that they have not seen you. then perhaps they had a fault in their steering or just did not know the rules of the road. Both parties are equaly at fault. Both skippers should have kept a good look out and avoided collision. It is the rule! If you are steering away from someone to avoid them, make a big move to port or starboard. Something like 40 degrees or more. then the other skipper can see you are aware of them. Stop or slow down if you have to but don't accelerate to go in front, even if you are the stand on vessel.
Remember that vessels generaly pass port to port so to avoid someone you almost allways steer to starboard. The vessel on your port should be giving way to you IF HE SEES YOU.
More saftey later



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A matter of safety

October 29th 2006 18:46
I have just read on another site I attend, about one of our members fishing on lake Macquarie this last weekend. He was chasing a particular kind of fish and as he tried one spot then another and again another, he gradualy moved further and further away from the boat ramp and the safety it offered.
Hardly a challenge to an experienced fisherman and boater who has a a good reliable engine and a strong hull.

Well the fishing Gods were not smiling on him though he did land a couple of great fish. Not the ones he was hunting but then that doesn't go to plan all the time. He had a good feed of fish.

Suddenly it was time to go home and he was almost ten nautical miles from his departure point. He had plenty of fuel but the wind had picked up It was blowing around forty knots which is almost eighty kilometres an hour. The wind itself was not a problem but it is the wind that causes waves.

As the wind blows across the water, the friction causes the water to move and in no time there are wind ripples. The further the wind blows across the water (called wind fetch) the higher the waves start to rise. The further the waves have to run (called wave fetch) the more chance they have to develop in size. The stronger the wind the more chance of high waves.

Wave speed is equivalent to wind speed but for some reason, (lucky for us) the speed of the waves is limited to twenty knots. The lake is about fourteen nautical miles long at its longest measurable point. That allows for a lot of fetch.

Our intrepid fisho has now a long hard slog to get home. A 4.5 metre boat without cover and the waves having the tops blown off them. White water everywhere and waves at about a metre in height. Life jacket on! Stow everything loose in the boat so it is stable. Adjust the speed of the boat to the safety factor required. try not to soil yourself. At this point he is soaked to the skin, not a drop of rain just spray from the waves. The waves are close together, not far apart as is the case out at sea. Close, hard, tall chop. He hides behind an island briefly but he is cold and wet through so elects to motor on.

No catastrophy, no disaster as he got home to be able to write his fishing report and show some photos of his catch. But he was one scared little puppy for a brief time. What saved him was experience, seamanship and the knowledge that his boat was tough, his engine well serviced and motoring at a speed relative to the safety of the boat. Wearing his life jacket or PFD would also have given him some small measure of comfort.

To look at the lake as I do now from my window, it is a millpond. Smooth as glass. It does not take long to change all that and a small distraction like catching few fish to disturb your thoughts enough that you miss the signs of a weather change.
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One wok cooking aboard

October 27th 2006 19:45
Lots of recipes are written for one pot cooking, a lazy way to cook for yourself and friends. Living on board has prompted me to find a quick practical way to cook for myself. hence one wok cooking.

The wok as many people know is an asian tool and where it's actual development occured does not bother me greatly. What I do know is that it requires less fuel, less time, less energy to cook a statisying meal. And it is not restricted to Asian meals.

I have a small 8" wok on board and apart from my billy it is the only cooking utensil I use. Easy to wash as nothing seems to stick to the surface, easy to store, just hangs on a hook and easy to use.

Breakfast: Bacon and eggs simplicity itself. Porrige, quick and easy.French toast, yummy and quick.
Fresh fish fillets dusted in flour, fried with butter, mmmm

Lunch: 2 minute noodle soups with a handfull of leaf vegetables,
onion, fresh chill and maybe some pork, squid or beef strips.
Steak sandwiches
Hamburgers all too easy.

Dinner: I do a lot of quick stews such as chopped vegetables in
a paprika sauce and chicken strips.
Shredded cabbage, onion carrot and pork with mustard
1 tin hot chill beef, 1 tin tiny potatos
All the stir fries you could imagine!
With a lid ( I confess I use a small bamboo steamer on
board as well and this has a good lid) I can do a pot roast
cook my own silverside, do a damper and even scones.

Best of all, these meals can be all eaten straight from the wok! a saving of washing up time which means I can hurry back to reading my book, re bait my fishing line, settle down in a favourite chair or take my snooze earlier.

One wok cookery it has my vote.
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What do you eat on board?

October 26th 2006 20:35
Gourmet dining
Not everyone is into gourmet dining

What do you like to eat when you go out in your boat. Are you a gourmet diner or do you prefer simple food for simple sailors?

[ Click here to read more ]
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Steam Navigation

October 25th 2006 18:09
How is your navigation? What navigation gear do you carry on board? Are you capable of guestimating your way across the bay, along the coast or across a sea without a GPS and chart plotter? If you have a radar can you plot the speed, course of other vessels with it?

Very early navigators of course had little in the way of navigation instruments at all. A piece of home spun string, tied to a rock to give depth, (still works today), a look at the sun for time, one finger span for three degrees and one hand span for fifteen degrees or one hour. Direction of the wind, tide and current in relation to the known land mass. That is about as simple as it can get.

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What is your dream destination

October 24th 2006 20:47
the navigator
Deciding, where to next?

What is your dream destination? You have your boat, it is all kitted out and ready to go. Your crew, if you need one is keen and well trained. You have all the time and inclination to go where you want.

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Confessions of a sailing instructor # 3

October 24th 2006 06:38
wet conditions
A particularly windy (50 knot) day during a delivery

I have been lucky enough to be able to convert my old yacht into a sail-training vessel and by running my own school through the week at Lake Macquarie, I can still pick up enough work on weekends to be almost comfortable. Being able to teach Competent Crew and Inshore Skipper on the lake was not quite enough so now I am also taking small groups to the Baltic to sail and also to the Barrier Reef to race in the Hamilton Island series.

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Confessions of a sailing instructor # 2

October 22nd 2006 19:22
competent crew
A competent crew

Now what were we talking about, oh yeh, girls!
More and more girls are learning to sail as they are very good at it. Also they are realising that is where the boys are. Rather than have to share pies and a sausage sizzle at the footy or cricket on a saturday avro they are flocking to sailing. They don't want to look like rank amateurs so they do the right thing and take lessons.

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Confessions of a sailing instructor

October 21st 2006 20:01
the Gerringong gang
These guys never looked back after their course

Confessions of a sailing instructor.
Probably ever since ‘The Banjo” penned and published Clancy Of The Overflow, people have wondered who really has the best job. Banjo Paterson feared that Clancy would never swap places with him, never leave the Cooper or trade the “sunlit plains extended” for “the dark and dingy office”. As one toils at their chosen grind it is easy to slip off into a fit of fancy and ponder what might be. Well for my money, being a sailing instructor is what it is all about. My office does not have “grimy windows”, nor do I hear “the gutter children sniping”. My office changes from day to day from a J 24 to a Benneteau 41

[ Click here to read more ]
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Review of Simpson 36 catamaran

October 20th 2006 18:59
Woman Woman is a Simpson 36 catamaran. Purchased in Brisbane she was due to come down to Lake Macquarie. Who got the job? You guessed it lucky Tom Nelson. I flew up and met the owners at Southport. They had managed to bring her down through the swamps from Brisbane on their own. Luckily the owner and his family and crew are not entire novices. They had some cat experience but mostly Hobbies and had just sold the most hotly contested sale of a 24’ yacht that I have ever known An aquaintence bought it and swears he will never sell, (a Triton 24 in very good condition)

We introduced ourselves settled all the gear, re-fuelled and without further ado headed for the Gold Coast Seaway. We were greeted by a twenty to twenty five knot nor-easter blowing onto a southern swell. Choppy and white capped this was my first serious delivery of a cat. She didn’t heal, tip, tilt or lean but boy did she buck. I have read about how cats are supposed to be stable at sea. And yes stability is a lot different from comfortable. As a master I have studied ships stability and it is nothing whatsoever to do with comfort, other than knowing you are on a stable or unstable ship! But I am not knocking here just making a statement.

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your favourite boat

October 20th 2006 02:18
Your favourite boat: Just what is your favourite boat. Mine is a timber ketch I saw some years ago on a marina at Port Stephens. I know absolutely nothing about her. No name no pack drill. She was really nicely rigged with nicely raked masts and could have been a Hereshoff design but I don’t think any one who owns a Hereshoff would dare let their boat get to look so neglected.

From bowsprit to stern she was around 38’ and I guess around 9 and a half wide. There was hardly a scrap of paint left on the whole boat. She looked like a sun-bleached log cabin you see occasionally out bush. But her lines and the dreams she has invoked in me. Not a day goes by that I don’t have a little daydream about her.

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A wild and woolly race

October 18th 2006 20:50
STV Lucinda
a wild and woolly race

A wild and woolly race day out on the lake.
I had my first opportunity to race my yacht in what seemed like ages yesterday.

[ Click here to read more ]
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Predeparture check list for boats

October 17th 2006 19:48
My predeparture check list is pretty well ensconsed in my brain by now. I only run down it mentaly but you may want to write yours down so you don't forget any of the steps.
1) Keys for the marina and dinghy shed
2) Fuel for the dinghy and the yacht

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Boating in the fun park

October 16th 2006 19:44
Well now it is time to look at how we can enjoy ourselves on the water without having to take our toys home with us. To digress slightly, some trailer boats are huge and do get taken home. I consider any boat on a double axle trailer or more to be huge. I honestly don't know how people can trail them but they do and often. Yachts, cruisers and house boats. I take my hat off to them.

The idea of leaving your boat in the water is to have less drama involved when it is time to go sailing or cruising. Just row or motor out to your boat or if you are lucky or can afford it, step aboard at the marina. Hoist the sails or turn the key and you are off. No putting up masts, dropping boats off trailers and looking for extra long parking spots for car and trailer.

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Be it ever so humble or ever so grand, your boat is your ticket to the fun park. And what a great fun park we have with over 70% of the earth covered with water, mostly available for our use. Does your boat fit in anyof the categories below or is it in a unique category?

The little sit on plastic paddle board just one step or two up from a surfboard is gaining in popularity. It is wide bottomed and even a giant like me can get on board with out it tilting over and dropping me in the water. I have paddled these things for miles in all kinds of (enclosed) waters and they handle the conditions well. Great for taking up a quiet little creek to do a bit of bass fishing as well.

[ Click here to read more ]
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Be it ever so humble or ever so grand, your boat is your ticket to the fun park. And what a great fun park we have with over 70% of the earth covered with water, mostly available for our use. Does your boat fit in any of the categories below or is it in a unique category?

The little sit on plastic paddle board just one step or two up from a surfboard is gaining in popularity. It is wide bottomed and even a giant like me can get on board with out it tilting over and dropping me in the water. I have paddled these things for miles in all kinds of (enclosed) waters and they handle the conditions well. Great for taking up a quiet little creek to do a bit of bass fishing as well.

[ Click here to read more ]
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Mariner 3400 delivery #2

October 14th 2006 20:30
Your text goes hereYour text goes here The entry to Yamba, which we did at night, was a bit tough. To our way of thinking the first port hand marker on the break wall was a bit hard to find with our approach. It did not seem to be bright enough yet we could clearly see the starboard light. To the confusion of entering the harbour we had road traffic headlights and tail- lights. Then just on eleven hundred hours the first of the new years eve fireworks went off. It was a nerve-wracking entry but without any swell at the bar. We got a great welcome from the marina and the fuel berth owner who had decided as he was waiting for us anyhow, he would have an impromtu party at his office.

We left right on midnight at not much more than idling speed as we were cooking our dinner of frozen pies in the microwave. We had cleared the entrance and were heading north when suddenly some big waves loomed up in the moonlight and they were breaking across the top! We angled straight into them and the first one lifted us high and slammed the boat down shaking everything on evry thing and every one board and tilting the microwave so our pies stopped cooking. The next three or four we took a bit slower and managed to clear the breaking bar. In just the couple of hours we had been inside the port the bar conditipns had changed so much


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Mariner 3400 delivery #2

October 14th 2006 20:30
To date: We have been delivvering a Mariner 34 from Broken Bay to the Gold Coast. (see previous blog)
The entry to Yamba, which we did at night, was a bit tough. To our way of thinking the first port hand marker on the break wall was a bit hard to find with our approach. It did not seem to be bright enough yet we could clearly see the starboard light. To the confusion of entering the harbour we had road traffic headlights and tail- lights. Then just on eleven hundred hours the first of the new years eve fireworks went off. It was a nerve-wracking entry but without any swell at the bar. We got a great welcome from the marina and the fuel berth owner who had decided as he was waiting for us anyhow, he would have an impromtu party at his office.

[ Click here to read more ]
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Mariner 34 test drive #1

October 13th 2006 20:01
Mariner 3400 test drive. Sydney to Gold Coast.


[ Click here to read more ]
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Another day in paradise

October 13th 2006 08:13
Can I tell you that the religious fanatics don't have a Christmas hold on paradise. I was just there, (again) and wow was it good
Paradise for me is on Lake Macquarie with a cloudless blue sky
a fifiteen to twenty knot breeze and half a kilo of prawns in the cooler, (next to the beer.)

[ Click here to read more ]
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Fishers or Hunters?

October 12th 2006 18:31
There are commercial fishers and recreational fishers, there are commercial hunters and hunters. We don't hear about recreational hunters and they don't seem to get bagged like the recreational fisher does.

I think we are in fact hunters and as such we hunt food for ourselves, families extended family and friends just like it was done before Adam was a boy. If a shy sheep were walking along the road on our way to our favourite fishing ground some of us might run it over with the 4 x 4 and claim it as road kill (another good hunting tactic)

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fishing not working

October 11th 2006 06:33
Another day out fishing and not working.

Tom 8 fish nill. Thats the kind of score I like when I go fishing.

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A doting dad part 2

October 10th 2006 20:11
Close competition
Close competion

I was no longer a young man when I was pitted against my son in the swimming pool. He had a swimmers body after all the training he had been doing. I on the other hand was drinking beer and wine but still training reasonably hard to play grade water polo.

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Doting dad's memoires

October 9th 2006 21:44
29er
Doting Dad

It is a great feeling to be a doting dad. I was lucky with my son who came late into my life. (Adopted from Korea). While I can't claim his direct genes I can hold myself up responsible for a good part of his development toward adulthood.

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GPS Navigation

October 8th 2006 20:18
Navigation Clas
Learning Coastal Navigation


Recently I had the opportunity to help out some people who were a bit confused about GPS (Global Positioning System) accuracy.

[ Click here to read more ]
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Another great day on the water

October 7th 2006 23:27
]I had an interesting day yesterday and it was all to do with boating as usual. I had to make my way to Palm Beach from Lake Macquarie for a meeting and looked at alternatives to driving all that way which would take around 2.5 hrs. A train to Central then bus would be around 3 hours. What I did was drive to Ettalong on the Central Coast then caught the ferry to Palmy. Wow what a great day and what a great way to be on the water.

The day was sunny with a balmy temperature. Absolutely ideal for boating. I drove to Ettalong and as I was early for my ferry stopped at the new services club for lunch. Amazing new style of club with a huge resort facility attached. Listened to jazz on the deck as I ate lunch. I wandered down to the public wharf to wait for the ferry. Dozens of kids were taking advantage of the warm weather and diving off the wharf to show off and keep cool.

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An inland water system please

October 6th 2006 18:19
Can we have an inland waterway transport system?

Without “stirring the possum” too much I would like to get people’s ideas on a viable inland waterway for NSW. I know there have been some discussed and proposed in the past and for differing reasons they have been shelved.
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Compulsory wearing of life jackets

October 5th 2006 22:02
PFDs yes or no
Have your say on compulsory wearing
Comulsory wearing of life jackets in NSW ... have your say

Permanent change to life jacket laws in New South Wales? The NSW govt is looking to change the laws pertaining to wearing of life jackets or personal flotation devices. Currently all vessels must carry jackets to suit the number of people on board and all people on board must wear a jacket when crossing a bar. To change the law to read “wear a jacket at all times the vessel is under way” is a little ludicrous in my view. Most devices are not designed to be worn at all times on the boat. They are too cumbersome and impossible to wear while doing many things that need to be done on board. Those devices that are easy to wear and do not become tiresome, caught up in the rigging etc. are not passed by Australian standards. A catch 22 developing here I believe.
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pets afloat

October 5th 2006 06:32
Some pets love to be afloat!
How about yours or do you know pets that are afloat?


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roberts 55 test sail

October 3rd 2006 21:28
roberts 55' ketch pic
Luann in Moloolaba

21 YEARS ON A TEST SAIL OF A ROBERTS 55’ KETCH.
In Australia

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My boat a Vandestadt black soo

October 2nd 2006 04:47
Lucinda my black soo
MY BOAT

Not every one it seems owns the boat of their dreams. I read with some envy, of the people who have a boat just the right length made of naturally formed warm glowing timbers or exotic composite materials. Their dream boat tracks like a train and flies like an albatross effortlessly eating up sea miles to locations that many of us will only visit in our dreams. The sun always shines and the wind blows in the right direction and storms disappear over the horizon as they sit comfortably sipping cocoa in a watertight cabin as their dream sits out the "rough stuff" laying ahull like a perfectly well behaved Labrador. I can afford to be a bit cheeky and show my jealousy to a small degree, as I am sure that my boat and I, will never really, truly go to sea. Oh we will do the odd little coastal cruise, sticking our nose out of the harbour on a fine day when there is a gentle breeze blowing over a millpond, directly toward our overnight destination. And I don't mind occasionally reefing right down and putting up the "stormy" and racing about the harbour when all sane men and women prefer to prop up the bar and shout each other rums. It's just that my boat could never be called pretty, seaworthy, watertight or anything even vaguely great.
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Lake Macquarie is still one of the best cruising grounds around for all types of vessels.
The current work on dredging the entry channel from the sea and straightening the dog leg at Pelican


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