Saturday, April 8, 2017

Time flew

Jeepers, time keeps getting away from me. Stuff just keeps happening so fast. Let's see, where were we? The Mille Crag Bend made a full recovery and headed on down the driveway toward her next adventure.


The Fretwater ChillyBin 276 achieved completion and is ready to go downriver with me in a little under two weeks. Yikes. It's almost summer.


My beloved dory Cataract came down from the loft after a winter of drying and got her bottom insults doctored.


And another experiment--sailboat flap-valve scuppers to help bail out the passenger footwells down to seat level. Stay tuned.


My orchid, after a dozen years without bloom, is in its third month of showing off this beautiful plume of flowers.


Outside the thousand bulbs we planted last fall are really starting to take off.


And our community project to build Dave Edwards a studio is nearly done. We are having a Boyo's Boxwarming party Saturday, April 15, to celebrate. Come on by!


But lest we get ahead of ourselves, we did launch into one more frenzied streak of productiveness. Nine new oars on order are now in production. Starting with big fat heavy ash planks.


After carefully sorting and testing our patterns, we actually found all nine oars hiding inside those planks. Each one got it's outer laminate milled out as well.


And glued on. I wish I had more clamps.


Then we cut them into a square version of their final shape.


And took the square to 8 sides, 16 sides, and more-or less 32. Rubbing charcoal on between planing sessions helps keep track of where you are.


God, I love running a shop that's full of genuine, hand made, organic, shade grown, free-range, gluten-free wood shavings.


Once the planing stops we work up a sweat with sandpaper.


Outdoors we went after the blades with a serious grinder, then an almost as serious sander. And at week's end we had a mess of pretty sweet oars.




And on go the Loehr Laser-tips.



And a quick seminar on how to open and close recalcitrant oarlocks. Cheater-bars to open.


And a hammer to close and re-shape. It's good to have a block inside the oarlock so the reshaping goes properly.


   And then a pause to reconnect with the river--the reason we do all this ridiculous boat stuff. I headed up to Marble Canyon to re-certify my Food Manager's card, do the annual AzRA guide pre-season orientation, and participate in the annual Guide Training Seminar. My talk was on Doris Rapid--more on that another time. One guest appearance was from Greg Adams, great-grandson of James White--the poor old prospector who was plucked off a log raft from the Colorado River at the foot of Grand Canyon 150 years ago and presumed by many, myself included, to be the first person to float through Grand Canyon. Greg built a painstaking replica of his great granddad's vessel for us to admire.


A close-up of the shirt.


I was headed for bed a little after midnight when the haircut crew got ahold of me.  How would a fella say no to that crowd?


And at noon the next day a bunch of us old wooden boat-heads headed up the river for a few days of frolicking.




Our first day of frolic ended up being under a tarp in the pouring rain, but that's why we brought the whiskey. Always be prepared.



But in the big picture it's still a desert.



Hmmm. Can't motor up that. Better turn around and row.


Mariposa lilies. It must be spring.


And Helleborine orchids. 


So very pretty. Even though they say we lost the best ninety percent of Glen Canyon, the wee bit we still have is pretty amazing.


You never know who you'll run into on the river. We camped next to a group that will likely be all the rage soon: Scary Larry and the Transylvanians. That was pretty interesting.

Then this happened.


Yikes. So it's back to the shop to tidy up a mess of loose ends. And head down the river.

8 comments:

  1. How did you attach the hardware on the cooler? I'm about to undertake a similar project in order to get a little experience with fiberglass before trying a full boat.
    Screws seem like they'd pull out and bolts seem like a good way to conduct heat in...
    Any advice would be most appreciated.
    Thanks!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Before you lay up the glass, drill in 1" holes where you will want handles, hinges, etc. Fill those with a thick paste of SLOW-KICKING epoxy and cotton flock. (Fast-kick will exotherm and melt the foam). For the handles I drilled clear through so the plugs bond to both inside and outside glass. Fastened the handle with stainless lag bolts that only go part way through. For the hinges I just went in about an inch, and used stainless steel screws.

      Delete
    2. Thanks Brad
      What are you using for the interior finish? Seems like the combination of cold and wet would put high demands on a paint or epoxy...not to mention the question of food safety.
      Thanks again!

      Delete
    3. Epoxy with white pigment.

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    4. Do you do a clear coat for UV protection over that? If so, why use pigment + clear rather than just paint?
      Sorry for so many questions and thanks again for the advice and all of the knowledge that I've gained from reading your posts.
      Cheers

      Delete
  2. Just resin--it will never peel. Cooler is buried in load, not exposed to UV.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Looking forward to the scupper report. Why not lower than seat level?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. They have to be above river level when you have a loaded boat. They are gravity operated.

      Delete

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