We're now Pagans!


Erbas has now been sold and we've moved onwards and upwards to a Westerly 33 ketch we've renamed "Pagan"

Come and visit our new blog at svpagan.blogspot.co.uk

Thursday 10 December 2015

Hectic isn't the word!

Down to the boat last Friday, followed by a major clear out of all the kit that doesn't need to be aboard over the winter and then some

Then some because, of course, we don't expect to be using Erbas again other than as a floating cottage for a few more weeks

With boxes and bags loaded into the car, we headed down to Burnham for a very pleasant evening aboard the good ship Laurin

Curry, beer, music and scotch did flow and after staying over a very welcome breakfast set us up for the journey home

Wednesday morning saw us back on the road at the ungodly hour of two am after Jane got an early finish

We slept most of the morning and then set about Erbas with the pressure washer and hoover as appropriate! A couple of hours graft in the sunshine had her looking her best again

Then this morning I set about diagnosing the tiller pilot fault. As I half expected it turned out to be a bad connection on the back of the deck socket...



With that fixed the good tiller pilot worked perfectly so I had a look at the old dodgy one. I'd wondered if the original problem had been damp, to which (ridiculously) tiller pilots are notoriously prone, and it seems that may have been the case as it now seems to be working OK.

I wouldn't trust my life to it but as a back up to the known good one it's a bonus.

All was about ready for a visit from a potential buyer for Erbas who duly arrived for a tour of the boat and a chat. Chickens are not being counted yet but fingers crossed!

Meanwhile Carol has been busy fixing things on "Safe Return" which is good! We'd have popped round for a visit but we've both got colds which are probably best kept to ourselves

It's back home again in the morning for another round of solicitor nagging as we've had a call from the agents and our buyers are getting understandably impatient. So are we!

Saturday 5 December 2015

The Great Escape - the saga continues

It's all a bit frustrating at the moment really. We're champing at the bit to get on with things but solicitors and banks seem incapable of moving along quickly

To recap, we're now simply waiting for the last piece of paperwork on the purchase of the house in Kettering and then we can exchange contracts and agree completion dates on both properties.

I'm going to be pushing all parties hard on that next week, I want the earliest possible completion date set in concrete by next Friday.

The lift out and survey on the new boat is booked for the second weekend in January. Unless the keels fall off or something equally dramatic I don't expect to learn anything that will put us off or affect the deal. (In fact, as there's a survey less than 10 years old available, we could have avoided the expense of having a survey done now. However, we'd then have needed a survey all the sooner and given that we're blowing our entire budget on the purchase it's probably wise to get the boat checked over and make certain there are no hidden nasty surprises)

We're now in the middle of two trips down to Erbas in less than a week! We've come down this weekend to have a major clear out of all our personal gear, which really needs to come off over the winter anyway, and to move as much of the boat kit as possible that won't be sold with Erbas into the Boson 's Store

It's a properly windy day today and we had a bit of a disturbed night last night. Not so much the wind, that really doesn't bother us much, but neither of us slept that well.

We'll crack on in a while, it shouldn't take long to do what needs doing, and then it's back home in the morning.

We'll be back down on Wednesday to spruce up Erbas to look her best as a chap is coming to look at her on Thursday. It would be very useful indeed if we could sell Erbas at around the same time as buying Pagan, or even sooner, thus avoiding owning two boats which can get very costly!

On with the kettle I think and then it's time for some action!

Friday 20 November 2015

Some further thoughts on Bigger Boat

Nearly all respondents have been various shades of green with envy but one or two have been politely negative about our decision to buy a Westerly Vulcan and I can understand that

So I thought I'd expand on yesterdays post with some of the logic and reasoning behind the decision

Firstly let's deal with the aesthetics. She is without doubt a bit of a Marmite boat looks wise. You know, you either like it or loathe it! With the best will in the world the Vulcan could never be described as a pretty boat, I have to confess but then we'll be on the inside looking out :)

In fact, I had been expecting to be put off by the looks when we went to look at her and I found that I rather like her style. She's chunky, purposeful and honest and the colour scheme has been carefully chosen to ease her lines and avoid her looking like a total brick. A bit of a brick, maybe but not a total brick!

Looks are however only superficial. They are also a matter of opinion.

The other negative comment that has been raised is the potential sailing performance. And here I think it is a matter of expectations. If you buy seven and a half tons of floating brick with shallow bilge keels and a rig that is modest by performance boat standards and then expect her to slice up to windward like a racing yacht you are most definitely going to be disappointed.

However, our sailing involves and will always involve relatively short hops from port or anchorage to port or anchorage with the absolute bare minimum of passage making. And when we set out on extended cruising as we plan to do as soon as we've spent all the money we need to spend on the things we need to spend it on, we'll have the luxury of not having to sail to a timetable.

So what if she sails to windward like a, well yes OK, brick? If the wind is blowing the wrong way we either go the other way, don't go at all or we bite the bullet and fire up the iron topsail. The plain truth of the matter is that in five years of bashing around the East Coast with trips as far afield as Norfolk, Chichester and Belgium, I can count the number of times we've spent more than an hour or two beating to windward on the fingers of one hand. It's fun for a while but after a while you start to think "I can spend the next six hours doing this or I can hit the starter and be there in three" and it's on with the engine again.

My only absolute requirement is that a boat be weatherly enough to claw her way off a lee shore in the event of engine failure. I'm satisfied the Vulcan will do that, if we can make her do better (and we do seem, somehow, to be able to get bilge keelers to go although I really don't know what it is we do right!) that will be a happy bonus.

The chunky, to some indeed ugly, looks and the unspectacular sailing performance are the price we are paying for a simply vast amount of space and comfort. As I said yesterday, she really is a tardis boat. Her relatively short length for the amount of accommodation will keep visitor mooring fees down (it's not relevant to our mud berth as we pay a 15m minimum charge so we can have a 4.5m dinghy on there as well if we like ... and that may one day happen as I quite fancy something to mess about in)

And the accommodation is simply awesome. And there's the rub you see

When you get right down to it, we'll be spending maybe forty or fifty days at sea at the most in any given year (except the Round Britain year when it will rise to around 120) which means we'll be spending well over three hundred days on board in our home berth, in a visitor berth or at anchor.

So in return for Marmite looks and staid sailing, we're getting a fabulously comfortable saloon, a really decent galley and three separate sleeping cabins (although I have designs on the aft cabin which may be converted into a workshop albeit with the ability to convert it back again quickly when we're going to sea or need the guest accommodation).

You might ask why we need those cabins when there's only two of us but we've got family and friends we like to have around and especially moving away from the Midlands it will be great to have the room for guests without compromising our living space.

And storage? Jeez, our biggest problem is likely to be losing stuff and never ever finding it again! There are even lockers in lockers! I may need storage ashore for the business before long but I think we can safely see that we will not need to store anything ashore for ourselves. In fact, the problem is likely to be ensuring that we don't revert to our bad habits of keeping stuff we don't really need.

Every choice of boat is a compromise. I would have dearly loved to buy an old gaffer, it has been my dream for as long as I can remember to one day own a classic gaff rigged pilot cutter or something of that ilk. But the reality is that within our budget, even stretched to within an inch of its life as it is now being, we were simply not going to get an adequate level of comfort and accommodation to make living aboard the year round a viable option (I know others manage quite happily sometimes in extraordinarily small boats but it wouldn't work for us).

On this decision I firmly put the heart in its box and made a strictly head choice. The Vulcan not only hits all the essential nails on the head, it bangs them firmly into the woodwork and clenches them over on the other side for good measure!

Thursday 19 November 2015

We've found Bigger Boat!

And paid a deposit on her so unless something goes wrong it's a done deal :)

And here she is ...


Say hello to "Safe Return", although she won't be keeping the name (for reasons that will become clear shortly). She's a 1980 Westerly Vulcan 34 Deck Saloon yacht, technically a motor sailer but with a respectable if unspectacular sail area to displacement ratio (comparable to Erbas and better than several other boats we've been considering) a decent if steady sailing yacht none the less

She's currently the Estuary Sailing school yacht and therefore MCA coded for 6 people up to sixty miles offshore. As such she is, of course, in tip top condition inside and out. She's been re-engined, the sails are in good condition and all the essentials are in good order.

The technical stuff ...

She's 34' long, 11'9" beam and displaces a tads over 7 tonnes. She's the twin keel version with a draught of 4'3" which is well within the constraints of our mud berth. She carries around 700 square feet of sail (depending on the exact cut of the genoa) and she comes with a cruising chute and a spinnaker, the latter having a snuffer.

On deck, she's got lovely wide side decks, all the deck hatches have been renewed recently and there's a powered anchor windlass although the Bruce anchor may get replaced in due course (mind you, I've been threatening to replace the Bruce on Erbas since we bought her and it hasn't happened yet. However, we'll be doing a lot more anchoring in future so better ground tackle is definitely on the shopping list).

There's also an emergency forestay even though th storm jib hanks on to the baby stay - not that we'll ever use the storm jib - and the main has three reefs in it just like Erbas

The lines aren't led aft to the cockpit from the mast which we'll see how we get on with. There are pros and cons but if we find the current setup works for us we won't be changing it for the sake of it.

The cockpit is not huge. It is as big as it needs to be though. And of course she's a deck saloon so the cockpit is less critical as a social space.

There is a simply vast cave locker under the starboard cockpit seat which you can climb into and stand up in! I'm not so sure about the added wooden storage box at the stern which looks a little odd. If it stays I think it might get a coat of white paint as it looks a bit out of place

The stern gantry carries two solar panels and a Rutlad 913 wind generator. Unfortunately, at some point in her life, the davits that used to extend off the gantry have been cut off. So dinghy davits are another item on our shopping list.

And she doesn't come with a cockpit tent which we'd like to have especially for the liveaboard side of things.
That may have to wait awhile for budgetary reasons

The only other "issue" is that the instrumentation is somewhat dated and basic and there's very little info available at the main helm. As a sailing school boat that would not, of course, matter but for our needs I'd like to have the plotter, instruments and ideally the radar (on a combined display with the plotter) at the sailing helm. However, the budget probably won't stretch to all new instrumentation in the short term so we may simply do a bit of re-arranging of the location of the existing serviceable equipment

So that's the outside. She's chunky rather than pretty, steady rather than exciting and capable, even versatile, too. She may not win races around the cans but she'll sail around Britain, at a respectable pace and go virtually anywhere. She'll handle any amount of rough weather and look after her crew. Just the ticket.

So now for down below...

We seriously considered calling her "Tardis". The amount of accommodation and stowage is astonishing for a 34' boat. She feels more like something well over fourty feet down below. Here's the plan ...

Starting aft and working towards the bow ...

Stepping down from the saloon on the port side aft and through a door by the chart table is the aft single cabin ...


The headroom is a little limited it's true but it's a really nice private space for one at the opposite end of the boat from the rest of the accomodation.

In common with the rest of the boat, there's not only a berth and a small seat, there's acres of stowage and storage too


 Emerging from the aft cabin, in the well by the door, is the chart table

The original swing seat, more of a perch really, is long gone and we'll need to contrive a seating arrangement if this space is to be used as more than just an occasional chart table at sea. I'd like to make it an office space too and I have a notion of how to arrange a fold up seat but that's a "future project"

 The smaller of the two chart plotters on board is here and may well migrate to one of the helm positions as I use the laptop for my passage planning and only need a plotter under way.

From the nav table we step up into the saloon, or step down into the saloon from the cockpit of course ...


The saloon is fabulous. Spacious, light and airy without feeling like you're in a goldfish bowl (something we've previously noted with dislike in other deck saloon yachts)

And as the eagle eyed will have noticed already, there's an inside helm position for those horrible days when you have to make progress but really wish you didn't. No more hours of misery getting cold and wet at the helm for us!

The starboard settee extends back under the side deck and can be made up as a big double bed. There's another huge storage space below it, more storage below the sole aft and forward and yet more capacious locker space under the port berth. And shelves above too!

Stepping down from the saloon and turning to port brings us to the galley ...

An almost brand new gas cooker, twin sinks, plenty of worktop space and once again unbelievable stowage. The original under counter cool box is still in situ in the far corner but it's currently redundant as there is an Isotherm fridge at the aft end of the galley in a cubby hole under the saloon sole

The original cool box might be suitable to be repurposed as a small freezer but that's another item for the long term to don't list!

Turning to starboard is the second guest cabin ...

Entering the cabin there's a small seat, a hanging locker forwards, cupboards and shelves above and a narrow double berth extending aft under the inside helm and forward end of the saloon ..



 A couple would have to be of modest girth and very much in love :) but it's usable and or a single guest it's superb.

There is, of course, yet more stowage under the bed

On the port side forward of the galley is the heads ...

A good old basic hand pumped and ultra-reliable Lavac toilet, sink, shower and once again storage to die for!

Hot running water is, by the way, provided by a 35l calorifier in the cavernous locker below the aft end of the saloon.

There is a holding tank although it's currently being used as a fresh water toilet flush tank. It can easily be changed back and I reckon we can probably squeeze a flush water tank in somewhere!!!

And finally we come to the v-berth...

It's a decent sized berth with the usual infill, a hanging locker to starboard and, you won't be surprised to learn, loads of storage both visible and invisible.

This will be our master cabin, it's more spacious than the v-berth on Erbas and we're more than happy with that space so this will be luxury

We may convert the upper set of shelves into lockers at some point but it's the to don't list again!

Mechanically, the engine is under the centre section of the saloon sole ...

It's a 55hp Yanmar installed new in 2008 with about 1400 hours on it. The engine is so clean you could eat your dinner off it!

Carole, the sailing school proprietor and owner, reckons she'll use around 2.2l an hour at 5 and a half knots which is around double our current consumption albeit with an extra knot of speed.

That said, I've found that if we wind Erbas up to over 5 knots rather than 4.5, the consumption rises from around 1.2l an hour to nearer 2l an hour

There's quite an inventory of kit to come with her - another inflatable dinghy, a Mariner 2.5hp outboard and the 8 man liferaft is going to be swapped for the 4 man raft that's on the boat Estuary Sailing are buying to replace "Safe Return" as an 8 man is too large for our needs (not only too heavy but also quite dangerous with only a couple of people in it. There's a spinnaker with a snuffer, a cruising chute, spare main and genoa and so on.

So there she is, our new home

We're not talking about what we're paying for her! More than we can afford but we've decided to stretch the budget as she's so ideally suited to our future plans. And to sweeten the deal Carole has offered to throw in a couple of days own boat tuition and showing us where everything is when we take her over

On that front, we've shaken hands, paid a deposit and agreed the deal but we won't be taking ownership until around February or perhaps early March as we've got to complete on the house move and Carole needs to complete the purchase of the replacement yacht for the sailing school.

We've got a shopping list of improvements and modifications we'd like to make when we can afford it (if ever!) but none of it is vital.

Oh and the name ... we've offered to relinquish the name "Safe Return" as the sailing school website is www.safereturnsailing.co.uk and the name doesn't do anything much for us anyway. As to what she will be called in our ownership, that's a secret for now. You'll have to wait and see

Tuesday 3 November 2015

The Fog on the Crouch ...

... unlike The Fog on the Tyne does not make for a good song lyric. It doesn't make for much of a trip on the river either which we'll come to shortly

I picked Jane up from the Big Shed at Six, typically of course she had to work an hours overtime when we wanted to get away sharpish (it always seems to happen). It was an easy drive down in the quite traffic of an early Saturday morning and we were soon aboard.

Jane went straight to bed whilst I idled about doing odds and sods, drank coffee and then late morning set about getting the boat ready to leave our berth.

Much to my annoyance, the tiller pilot was deader than a very dead thing. Whether the unit itself is u/s (and it's the replacement for the original that came with the boat which failed) or whether we've a power supply problem I had no time to ascertain - there does seem to be a problem with a power feed somewhere as we've suddenly started getting some intermittent odd problems around the instruments, engine controls and nav gear. It's going to be a case of physician heal thyself next week!

I could live without it for this trip as we were only heading an hour and a half downriver anyway.

As soon as we had water for the cooling inlet, I sparked up the engine to start charging the batteries (you'll recall that the battery charger ceased and desisted last week - I want to have a proper look at it before we splash out the money on a new one so we're reliant on the engine alternator to charge the batteries at the moment).

Then at just about the time I expected we were able to reverse out of the berth which had to be done smartly to avoid being swept into the pontoon or the barge next to our berth since the tide was still flooding quite hard.

It was a pleasant autumnal day but what little breeze there was was from the East so there was no point in even pretending to sail. I cracked on downriver with 2,400 RPM on the engine which gave us about 4 knots over the ground against the tide. I hadn't bothered fitting the log impeller for such a short trip on the river but we must have been making somewhat over 5 knots so my efforts with the pressure washer seem to have paid off

Jane arose as we approached The Cliffs and brewed up a welcome cup of coffee - I was gasping having forgotten to make one in the rush to leave when the tide was right and without a tiller pilot it was more faff than it was worth to make one myself

Into Burnham and the berth we'd arranged by phone earlier and then on with the TV widget to watch the rugby world cup final. I just missed the kickoff but the action had only just got under way. The widget worked well even in the confines of the Yacht Harbour and I thoroughly enjoyed the game.

Then it was time to get ready and walk down to the Royal Corinthian Yacht Club for the East Coast Forum Laying Down Supper.

A fantastic evening with wonderful people and then afters aboard their boat with Jim and Lynn made for a very late night. Well, more like the early hours of the morning to be honest!

Sunday dawned but I didn't see it! By the time we felt inclined to be up and doing it was very foggy indeed. The forecast wasn't looking good for the next 24 hours either. The best time to go seemed to be an hour or two earlier than we'd have left it otherwise but we went for it in loose company with Pleinair

Radio comms came in handy with us calling other boats out to each other and by keeping close to the Northern (starboard) bank we nearly avoided the downstream traffic who were all (with one exception) doing the right thing and keeping over to their starboard on the Southern side of the river

The exception was a rowing boat that emerged out of the murk almost dead ahead and then cut across our stern to go closer to the Northern bank which perhaps wasn't the brightest of things to do. No harm done though.

We arrived back at Fambridge with enough water to get onto our berth, just, but a good knot and a half of flood still running. I could see any attempt at a clever down tide maneouver going very wrong so we popped alongside the river pontoon for an hour or so to wait for slack water

Whilst waiting, we embarked on a quick shopping trip arriving back just in time to wave Tony and Shelagh off home. Then we settled down for the evening. Home cooked sausage casserole, a wee drop of rum and the first episode of series one of Game of Thrones entertained us until bedtime

We were not early to rise on Monday morning but it didn't matter. We sorted things out in a leisurely fashion and hit the road for home around lunchtime. The journey back was without incident or undue delay too for once but I'll be glad when the hike to and fro is an occasional excercise and not something I'm doing twice a week or more - I'm back down to the boat on Wednesday for around a week in work mode!

All in all, a pleasant weekend which would only be improved by not having to travel. Can't wait!

PS. For some reason I didn't get around to taking a single photo. So there aren't any!

Monday 26 October 2015

A few days of fiddling

I'd got a couple of free days on board with the aim of dealing with the essential maintenance tasks ahead of the winter

The first job was a minor rearrangement of the plumbing system to give us the facility of flushing the heads with fresh water. The smaller aft water tank has been dedicated to this purpose and will also deliver a temporary cooling water feed to the engine. This enables the engine to be run on the mud berth and the fresh water flush avoids picking up the silty water that tends to make a mess of the loo even when the tide is in and it can be used. We still can't use the loo when the tide is out though

The major task was the annual / 250 hour engine service. The oil and filter change went without a hitch and then I pulled the heat exchanger tube stack to examine it.

As I half expected it was more than a little choked up with crud and even some weed that had escaped the clutches of the water filter

Off I popped to the DIY store to pick up five litres of brick cleaner acid, a sovereign remedy for cleaning tube stacks and into the rubber bucket went the stack and half the acid.

Much bubbling ensued for the next hour or two with an occasional stirring of the pot to keep things going. The received wisdom is to leave it to soak overnight but it wasn't necessary as the stack came up good as new after less than three hours

With the now pristine tube stack reinstalled and the alternator belt re-tensioned, the job was done and it remained only to test run the engine utilising the fresh water feed to the seawater system for cooling

The engine ran perfectly once I got it started however the engine start battery is clearly on its last legs as I had to cross-link the domestics in to fire up the engine.

Happily there were no leaks and everything was just as it should be.

Unhappily, the Sterling battery charger took umbrage at the batteries being cross-linked as I'd stupidly forgotten to turn it off before starting the engine. Even so, it shouldn't have gone phut but it did.

So that means a new battery charger and a new engine battery. Expenses we could do without as matters are moving on apace and we now expect to be looking for a new home for Erbas within a matter of months.

Hey ho!

Sunday 18 October 2015

The Great Escape - we have a landing

And a hall, stairs, bathroom, all the usual features of a house!

Yes, we've found the house that will be Carls' new home and our temporary staging post on our way to living on board.


It's a good old fashioned Victorian terrace in a quiet side street just five minutes walk from Kettering town centre. The layout is basically typical "two up, two down" with a kitchen extension to the rear but unusually the extension is two storey with the bathroom above the kitchen and a single story utility room beyond the bathroom complete with downstairs loo (most properties of this type have a downstairs bathroom beyond the single storey kitchen extension)

There's a small garden to the rear with an outbuilding and a side alley shared with the next door neighbour.

The alley is a major plus point as it avoids having to drag wheelie bins through the house

The outbuilding is interesting and gives a clue to the history of the street. It's one of a back to back range of outbuildings that extend the whole length of the street and the parallel street beyond

Internally, it has a small storage area beyond the door where I suspect there may have originally been the toilet (or "ootside netty" as we'd have called it back home in Sunderland) which may not have been served by mains sewerage. The rest of the building is very well constructed in brick and there is even a small fireplace in the back left corner, now blocked up. The biggest clue is the large window which floods the room with light

Put that into the context of Kettering being second only to Northampton in the Victorian shoe trade and it's very likely that the houses were built for shoe trade outworkers

(The "lawn" will have to go though!)

Internally, the house is in good decorative order (although the decor wouldn't, to be honest, be what we or Carl would choose but redecorating can be left until time, money and inclination are available). It isn't large, the house we looked at earlier in the week was bigger inside but it's big enough

There's no off road parking but that would have been too much to hope for. The on street parking is residents permit only though which is a plus as it means the street isn't used by people working in the town centre trying to escape paying for all day parking.

We elected to offer the asking price given the way properties are selling like hot cakes. This house had only been listed the previous afternoon and whilst we'd got in first on it there were several viewings booked to follow us. Carl has the mortgage arranged all bar the final paperwork, I'll instruct the solicitors by email today and get the paperwork to them tomorrow and if all goes well I see no reason we can't have everything done and dusted before Christmas (and I'll be kicking the solicitors up the bottom on a regular basis to make sure the process moves along swiftly!

The time rapidly approaches when we can start the search for Bigger Boat in earnest :)

Wednesday 14 October 2015

The Great Escape - we have lift off

Assuming all goes well, step one has been achieved and then some!

The motivation to get some real progress on sorting the house out came from a phone call from the agents who sold our dear departed neighbours house. Weeks after the sale had gone through, they were still receiving calls about it and they had a queue of people wanting to buy a similar property

We had had them value our place as it stood and the answer came back at a level that was unsurprising but somewhat less than we really needed to achieve. Given what next door had sold for, and the level of interest, the agents were now suggesting we could almost certainly reach the minimum we needed to move forward

So last Wednesday, with the house tidier than it has ever been in the seventeen years we've lived here, round came the photographer and the measurer to get the info to create a nice sales brochure. They didn't mess about, by mid-morning the next day I had a draught copy in my in-box and after a couple of tweaks to the wording by mid-afternoon the house was on the market.

And that's when it went mad. Berserk even. We had two viewings on Friday afternoon and I'm pretty certain the first couple would have put in an offer in due course. Then Saturday afternoon just got silly! We, literally, had people queuing in the street to view the place.

The first couple to view were clearly in love with the place. They hadn't gone away whilst the second lot were viewing and then they collared the agent conducting the viewings and tabled a genuine offer of £5k over the asking price to secure the place.

Having talked to them extensively myself and having a clear picture of their circumstances and what they wanted, we had no hesitation in accepting the offer on the spot and taking the house off the market without further ado. The remaining viewings were cancelled and that was that

(They have sorted out their solicitors already and want to complete asap so they are not messing about!)

So that brings us to phase 2 of the cunning plan - buying a flat. Or not

Because it has become increasingly clear that a flat is not actually that good an option. There are two reasons - flat prices in the Kettering area have shot up way faster than house prices (reflecting a national trend apparently) to the point where there's not a huge gap between the asking price of a two bed flat and that of a two bed terraced house. In fact, some flatts we might have been interested in are actually dearer than some houses we might fancy!

The second reason is something we had no previous experience of. Ground rent and service charges. It turns out that on average in this area these add up to upwards of £80 a month and often more than £100 a month. When you add that monthly outlay onto the cost of the mortgage on, say, a £90k flat you have an outgoing that would comfortabke fund the mortgage on a £100k plus terraced house

So we've adapted to suit and the search is now on for a two bed terraced house within walking distance of Kettering town centre.

And yesterday we found one. A rather nice one. In fact, it's an absolute cracker. Vacant possession, right location (near enough) and in absolutely apple pie order having been recently redecorated and fitted with a new kitchen

The fly in the ointment is that it's £10k over budget!

The selling agent and the mortgage advisor are looking at ways and means to do a deal on it so it's not a complete non-starter but frankly I don't think it's going to come off so the search goes on

Monday 28 September 2015

The Great Escape - the story so far

This will be the first of an ongoing series of posts which, whilst not directly concerned with Erbas herself, record for posterity our efforts to break free from the rat race and make a bid for freedom upon the high seas. Oh, OK! Maybe not the high seas 'cos we're wimps! We'll settle for spending our summers pottering around the coast of the UK and Northern Europe

Inevitably, I'll be repeating myself in places catching up to where we're at now so if you have been keeping up at the back, my apologies!

To summarise, the cunning plan is..

Step 1. Sell the house
Step 2. Buy a flat up in the Kettering area with our eldest son
Step 3. Buy a larger yacht more suitable for long term live-aboard use
Step 4. Refit the new yacht as necessary
Step 5. Make sure our finances are in order and then ...
Step 6. Jane "retires" from full time work

(The flat will give us a base near where we currently live in an area where temporary work is plentiful in case we need to top up the financial coffers. It also gives us a base near to family and friends, somewhere to retreat to in the depths of winter or if the boat needs major work, the long term security of having somewhere ashore to live if something goes amiss and, crucially, a legal residential address)

When steps 1 and 2 have been achieved, we'll be mortgage free and we'll have a modest sum of money to spend on a new bigger boat. Hopefully we'll have a budget of between £30k and £40k to buy and refit a suitable vessel so we're going to be talking something older. Probably a 1980s Westerly or Moody but we're keeping a very open mind on that

So that catches up on and consolidates stuff I've previously posted but what progress have we made?

I have to admit that it's getting off to a slow start! The house and garden are a complete mess and it is a frankly daunting task to sort out which I've been struggling to find any motivation or enthusiasm for.

It's also proving tricky to try and co-ordinate my time and workload trying to develop my marine electrical engineering business with the demands of taking Jane and Carl to work and actually getting to see something of each other, we are leaking cash at a gradual but mildly (at this stage) worrying rate and what little has been done around the house has not yet achieved a great deal!

Ready and waiting ...
We have, though, had the leaky roof repaired and the plasterer is booked to come and deal with the resulting damaged ceilings. And last Friday a skip landed on the drive as we start the key process of getting rid of all the accumulated junk that is everywhere.

There's the remains of all the stuff we no longer need from the festival days, loads of worthless boat junk, old electrics and electronics, dead tools, surplus materials and general crap because we hardly ever throw anything out!

Well we're making a start now! Not only is all this "stuff" in the way of  putting the house to rights, we can't take most of it with us. So it's time to be utterly ruthless and ditch anything that is not of immediate use and/or which we won't be able to take with us to the flat or on board Bigger Boat.

There's some stuff that is worth passing on or flogging off but I'm not planning on wasting too much time worrying about that. If it's going to waste any time at all, in the skip it goes.

So far, I've cleared various cupboard around the house, the big under stairs cupboard and made a start on the loft. Carl and I are about to tackle some of the heavier stuff that's up in the loft in a few minutes




Friday 25 September 2015

Tides, keels and mud berths - the mathematics of mud


As we think ahead to Bigger Boat, one critical issue is draught - the depth of the keel below the waterline - and when, or indeed if, we'll be able to get in and out of our drying mud berth (which we're very happy with and would be loathe to give up)

So I sat down earlier and plugged the daytime high tides for 2016 into a spreadsheet and then used conditional formatting to highlight the tides which would give us access to the berth with our current 3' draught, with a draught of around 4'6 and again with a draught of 5'6 (which I reckon is the maximum we can realistically entertain)

This is based on our experience to date where we've found that we need a tide of 4.3m or better to comfortably get in and out of the berth with Erbas although we did scrape in last time with just 4.2m albeit leaving a groove in the mud with the starboard keel!

Here is the resulting table ...





2016
January
February
March
April
May
June
Fri 0117:134.6 Mon 0117:554.3 Tue 0117:084.4 Fri 0118:254.2 Sun 0106:344.5 Wed 0108:474.8
Sat 0218:004.4
Tue 0206:184.3
Wed 0217:584.2
Sat 0207:024.2
Mon 0208:014.5
Thu 0209:585.0
Sun 0318:554.3
Wed 0307:274.1
Thu 0306:254.2
Sun 0308:404.4
Tue 0309:214.8
Fri 0311:005.3
Mon 0407:214.3
Thu 0408:474.2
Fri 0407:524.1
Mon 0409:574.7
Wed 0410:275.1
Sat 0411:555.4
Tue 0508:294.3
Fri 0510:004.4
Sat 0509:214.3
Tue 0510:585.1
Thu 0511:245.4
Sun 0512:485.5
Wed 0609:364.4
Sat 0611:004.7
Sun 0610:314.7
Wed 0611:515.4
Fri 0612:165.5
Mon 0613:355.6
Thu 0710:364.7
Sun 0711:525.0
Mon 0711:285.0
Thu 0712:405.6
Sat 0713:065.7
Tue 0714:085.5
Fri 0811:284.9
Mon 0812:405.3
Tue 0812:185.3
Fri 0813:285.7
Sun 0813:505.7
Wed 0815:015.4
Sat 0912:155.1
Tue 0913:265.5
Wed 0913:065.6
Sat 0914:085.7
Mon 0914:335.6
Thu 0915:425.3
Sun 1013:005.3
Wed 1014:065.7
Thu 1013:485.7
Sun 1014:505.6
Tue 1015:155.4
Fri 1016:255.0
Mon 1113:415.5
Thu 1114:475.7
Fri 1114:295.7
Mon 1115:335.4
Wed 1115:595.2
Sat 1117:114.8
Tue 1214:205.6
Fri 1215:285.6
Sat 1215:105.6
Tue 1216:165.1
Thu 1216:464.9
Sun 1218:004.6
Wed 1315:005.5
Sat 1316:095.3
Sun 1315:525.4
Wed 1317:044.8
Fri 1317:384.6
Mon 1306:354.5
Thu 1415:425.4
Sun 1416:545.1
Mon 1416:355.1
Thu 1418:014.5
Sat 1406:104.6
Tue 1407:384.4
Fri 1516:245.3
Mon 1517:444.8
Tue 1517:244.8
Fri 1506:364.6
Sun 1507:194.5
Wed 1508:464.5
Sat 1617:125.0
Tue 1606:044.9
Wed 1618:234.4
Sat 1608:004.5
Mon 1608:364.5
Thu 1609:494.6
Sun 1718:064.8
Wed 1707:174.6
Thu 1706:564.5
Sun 1709:224.6
Tue 1709:454.6
Fri 1710:444.7
Mon 1806:264.9
Thu 1808:494.5
Fri 1808:304.5
Mon 1810:284.8
Wed 1810:394.8
Sat 1811:304.9
Tue 1907:434.7
Fri 1910:094.7
Sat 1909:524.6
Tue 1911:184.9
Thu 1911:244.9
Sun 1912:125.0
Wed 2009:074.7
Sat 2011:144.9
Sun 2010:584.9
Wed 2012:005.0
Fri 2012:045.0
Mon 2012:525.1
Thu 2110:204.9
Sun 2112:065.1
Mon 2111:475.0
Thu 2112:365.1
Sat 2112:405.1
Tue 2113:305.2
Fri 2211:225.1
Mon 2212:505.2
Tue 2212:295.1
Fri 2213:105.1
Sun 2213:165.2
Wed 2214:065.3
Sat 2312:165.2
Tue 2313:275.2
Wed 2313:055.1
Sat 2313:405.2
Mon 2313:475.2
Thu 2314:415.3
Sun 2413:035.3
Wed 2413:595.2
Thu 2413:365.2
Sun 2414:085.2
Tue 2414:205.2
Fri 2415:185.2
Mon 2513:415.4
Thu 2514:305.2
Fri 2514:065.2
Mon 2514:385.1
Wed 2514:525.1
Sat 2515:555.1
Tue 2614:185.3
Fri 2615:015.1
Sat 2614:345.1
Tue 2615:085.0
Thu 2615:275.0
Sun 2616:375.0
Wed 2714:535.2
Sat 2715:295.0
Sun 2715:025.0
Wed 2715:414.9
Fri 2716:054.9
Mon 2717:245.0
Thu 2815:275.1
Sun 2815:584.8
Mon 2815:304.9
Thu 2816:174.7
Sat 2816:494.8
Tue 2818:194.9
Fri 2915:594.9
Mon 2916:304.6
Tue 2916:014.8
Fri 2917:024.5
Sun 2917:414.7
Wed 2906:594.8
Sat 3016:334.7




Wed 3016:374.6
Sat 3017:594.4
Mon 3006:144.7
Thu 3008:174.8
Sun 3117:104.5




Thu 3117:234.4




Tue 3107:294.7


























July
August
September
October
November
December
Fri 0109:334.9
Mon 0111:325.1
Thu 0112:545.4
Sat 0113:065.4
Tue 0113:385.4
Thu 0113:475.3
Sat 0210:425.1
Tue 0212:245.3
Fri 0213:315.5
Sun 0213:365.5
Wed 0214:085.4
Fri 0214:195.3
Sun 0311:405.2
Wed 0313:125.4
Sat 0314:035.5
Mon 0314:055.5
Thu 0314:385.3
Sat 0314:515.2
Mon 0412:355.4
Thu 0413:505.5
Sun 0414:345.5
Tue 0414:345.4
Fri 0415:095.1
Sun 0415:265.1
Tue 0513:235.5
Fri 0514:265.5
Mon 0515:035.4
Wed 0515:035.3
Sat 0515:425.0
Mon 0516:045.0
Wed 0614:055.5
Sat 0615:015.5
Tue 0615:335.2
Thu 0615:335.1
Sun 0616:194.8
Tue 0616:484.9
Thu 0714:455.5
Sun 0715:335.3
Wed 0716:045.0
Fri 0716:054.9
Mon 0717:044.7
Wed 0717:404.8
Fri 0815:245.4
Mon 0816:065.2
Thu 0816:374.8
Sat 0816:424.7
Tue 0818:034.5
Thu 0818:434.7
Sat 0916:025.2
Tue 0916:415.0
Fri 0917:184.5
Sun 0917:294.4
Wed 0906:344.4
Fri 0907:144.6
Sun 1016:405.0
Wed 1017:204.7
Sat 1018:134.3
Mon 1018:364.3
Thu 1007:594.5
Sat 1008:334.8
Mon 1117:214.8
Thu 1118:094.5
Sun 1106:504.2
Tue 1107:214.2
Fri 1109:164.8
Sun 1109:465.0
Tue 1218:084.6
Fri 1206:434.3
Mon 1208:174.2
Wed 1208:494.4
Sat 1210:205.1
Mon 1210:495.3
Wed 1306:404.4
Sat 1307:534.2
Tue 1309:364.5
Thu 1310:004.8
Sun 1311:165.5
Tue 1311:465.6
Thu 1407:424.3
Sun 1409:074.4
Wed 1410:414.8
Fri 1410:575.1
Mon 1412:075.7
Wed 1412:385.8
Fri 1508:494.4
Mon 1510:184.6
Thu 1511:335.1
Sat 1511:485.5
Tue 1512:575.9
Thu 1513:285.9
Sat 1609:574.5
Tue 1611:154.9
Fri 1612:205.4
Sun 1612:365.7
Wed 1613:426.0
Fri 1614:125.9
Sun 1710:544.8
Wed 1712:045.1
Sat 1713:065.7
Mon 1713:225.9
Thu 1714:266.0
Sat 1714:575.7
Mon 1811:455.0
Thu 1812:495.4
Sun 1813:455.8
Tue 1814:026.0
Fri 1815:105.8
Sun 1815:425.5
Tue 1912:305.1
Fri 1913:315.6
Mon 1914:245.9
Wed 1914:436.0
Sat 1915:555.5
Mon 1916:285.2
Wed 2013:135.3
Sat 2014:095.7
Tue 2015:035.9
Thu 2015:265.8
Sun 2016:475.1
Tue 2017:184.9
Thu 2113:515.0
Sun 2114:485.7
Wed 2115:435.7
Fri 2116:105.5
Mon 2117:454.8
Wed 2118:114.6
Fri 2214:285.5
Mon 2215:255.7
Thu 2216:265.5
Sat 2217:025.1
Tue 2218:514.7
Thu 2206:314.5
Sat 2315:055.5
Tue 2316:045.6
Fri 2317:165.1
Sun 2318:074.8
Wed 2307:234.5
Fri 2307:384.4
Sun 2415:435.4
Wed 2416:465.4
Sat 2418:234.8
Mon 2419:274.7
Thu 2408:404.5
Sat 2408:494.4
Mon 2516:225.3
Thu 2517:345.1
Sun 2519:504.7
Tue 2508:074.5
Fri 2509:464.7
Sun 2509:534.5
Tue 2617:055.2
Fri 2618:374.9
Mon 2608:394.5
Wed 2609:264.7
Sat 2610:394.9
Mon 2610:464.7
Wed 2717:565.1
Sat 2707:284.5
Tue 2709:584.8
Thu 2710:284.9
Sun 2711:245.0
Tue 2711:324.9
Thu 2806:354.8
Sun 2808:594.6
Wed 2810:595.0
Fri 2811:175.1
Mon 2812:035.1
Wed 2812:145.0
Fri 2907:504.7
Mon 2910:184.8
Thu 2911:485.2
Sat 2911:595.2
Tue 2912:395.2
Thu 2912:545.1
Sat 3009:144.7
Tue 3011:195.1
Fri 3012:305.3
Sun 3012:355.3
Wed 3013:155.3
Fri 3013:305.2
Sun 3110:294.9
Wed 3112:105.3




Mon 3113:085.4




Sat 3114:055.3























Highlighting bands are at 3'0", 4'6" and 5'6" draught and err on the side of caution











The lightest blue is the 3' band and as you can see Erbas, or a boat with similar draught, is rarely neaped (unable to get in or out of the berth). Some months we wouldn't be neaped at all and at worse it's only for two or three days a month

Move up to around 4'6", the medium blue band, and we inevitably get neaped a lot more often. Twice a month and for periods of up to a week in fact. That's tolerable as we are rarely if ever inclined to go out for a sail on a whim. If we know we want to go out or come back during the period that we'd be neaped we can move off the berth onto the river pontoon or a spare mooring or do the same in reverse coming back

At 5'6" the scenario gets somewhat worse. It knocks a day off either side of on week where we can access the berth but it's the other window of access during the lower of the two tide cycles each month that really takes a hammering. There are times in the spring especially when we would be unable to get on or off for ten or eleven days at a time and then we'd only have a narrow window of opportunity

And this of course presupposes that the tides weren't suppressed by high atmospheric pressure etc. It is not unknown for the tides to be considerably lower than predicted

It could be managed but it isn't ideal so we really need to consider the draught of Bigger Boat closely and anything over 4'6" has to be so perfect in every other respect as to outweigh the drawbacks of being neaped for nearly a fortnight at a time (or worse)