T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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626.1 | I'll second that!! | CASAD1::THOMAS | | Thu Aug 20 1987 14:18 | 17 |
| I'll second all of Alan's comments. In our case, the costs are less
because we're only moving about 10 miles or so. Our boat is also
smaller (23' x 7') but I'm not sure how that figures into the costs.
If you've any inclination to work on the boat then I would recommend
storing it at home!
By all means, check your zoning. You might also check with your
neighbors to see if any of them have any problems with your storing the
boat at home.
I use Marine Transport in Norwell, 617-878-2207. They provide the
stands.
Ed
|
626.2 | KEEP IT IN THE BOATYARD | MILVAX::HO | | Thu Aug 20 1987 15:00 | 14 |
| I tried it once using the same rationale. Now I keep it in a boat
yard. It was going to be more economical and productive at home
but in reality it got so lonely that I kept putting off a lot of
things that I intended to get done. BS'ing about boats is as much
fun as sailing and this is much more readily done in a boatyard.
Also, when you need some extra bodies to shlep a mast around, it's
usually easy to get volunteers. When I get sick of the sanding
dust, I can wander down to the water's edge and see how nice it
will be a few weeks. If I get sick of boat work at home, I look
at my neglected house and yard and see only more work. There is
also the side benefit of gratuitous advice some of which occasionally
turns out to be useful. Anyway, I subscribe to the theory that the
less I move a boat, the less likely I am to injure it or myself.
|
626.3 | no place like home? | NRADM3::MITCHELL | | Fri Aug 21 1987 12:36 | 44 |
|
RE:.0
You must be Psychic! I had been contemplating writing just
such a note. I recently ran into a DEC person on the dock
at MYC. he has a 32' Islander in beautiful condition..10yrs
old..He trucks it home every winter and it shows.
I am giving the same consideration to my plight (the title
of my not was going to be "boatyard or backyard") I'm still
in a quandary. I guess my final decision will be based on
a combination of 2 factors - cost vs convenience. When I
purchased the boat this year it included a cradle. The bill
was part of the paperwork I inherited when I bought it..$550.
Do they haul with the cradle or not? What would you estimate
a haul of 50 miles for a 27' x 9' to cost. The reason I'm
trying to find out is that Parkers Boatyard where the boat
was stored last year, is in the process of being sold to
Marblehead Trading Co. I haven't inquired into their plans
for last years customers...besides the cradle resides there.
.....I have to agree with :.2 that a lot of fun is missed
by not being where the action is. BUT tools and power and
convenience are more important than BSing when it comes to
getting the boat ready for the water in the spring. I'm
gonna opt for the Backyard at this writing...whats gonna happen
when I start going for that 50'Island Packet?...move to Quincy?
...To those Boatyard folks: How many trips do you make to
the boatyard in the winter to make sure everything's allright?
Looks like that could be a pain..especially if theres severe
storms and lots of snow n' stuff.
The more I think about it, the more I lean to home.
Thanks alan for the topic...just what we needed
Whats your Boats Name? - Sacre Bleu?
___GM___(PAGURUS ~ 200yds off Parkers
Yard - Dk Green Sloop)
|
626.4 | vote for hauling | MTBLUE::BELTON_TRAVI | Travis Belton | Fri Aug 21 1987 16:24 | 17 |
| I have a Cape Dory 22 that I have trucked home for the past four
years. The local hauler I use charges $80.00 each way; this includes
him helping me step and unstep the mast. It is about a 25 mile
trip from the marina to my house.
His rig allows you to use your cradle if you want. He chains the
cradle to his trailer, backs it down into the water, you drive your
boat into the cradle, and he uses hydraulics to lift the cradle up to
support the boat, and then pulls you out. Pretty quick and easy.
Since I added a garage onto my house this summer, I lost my parking
spot for the boat and will have to go to boatyard storage. Not
only will it be twice as much money, but I don't look forward to
the inconvenience. I somehow consume vast quantities of water in
the Spring getting ready.
Travis
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626.5 | Contact info please. | NRADM3::MITCHELL | | Mon Aug 24 1987 17:32 | 7 |
|
RE:.4
Travis - Whats the name of your Hauler? Does he want some
Business...I may want to talk to him.
George
|
626.6 | | BAXTA::BELTON_TRAVI | Travis Belton | Tue Aug 25 1987 08:59 | 7 |
| re: .5 His name is Bob Mansfield and he lives in Bath, Maine.
Telephone 207-443-6326. Havn't spoken to him since the Spring,
so I don't know his workload, but he always seems busy. I have
always had good dealings with him.
Travis
|
626.7 | A DOUBLE EDGED SWORD!!! | CSSE::GARDINER | | Tue Aug 25 1987 13:41 | 19 |
| I have had my boat at home every winter for the last 7 years. When
I bought the boat it came with a tandem axle trailer, which makes
it easier and cheaper than a hydraulic trailer. I need to hire
a trucker to haul the boat and trailer home due to the wieght (Boat
and trailer weigh 5.5 tons), but even then the cost is about 50%
of winter storage at my Yacht Club (@8.50/ft).
The only problem I find with this arrangement is that I plan projects
that are beyond the time available. This year I didn't launch because
the Spring was so lousy I couldn't finish the projects I had started
in the Fall.
I you are not handy and just want it home to reduce travel, then
perhaps its a benefit. If your planning major work, keep it at
the yard. It will keep the scale of the project to a reasonable
size.
|
626.8 | yes, but .... | PULSAR::BERENS | Alan Berens | Tue Aug 25 1987 14:10 | 19 |
| re .7:
>>> If you're planning major work, keep it at the yard. It will keep
the scale of the project to a reasonable size.
Ah, but there are projects that one would either like to do or must do
that are too time consuming or difficult to do at a boatyard but can be
done quite easily at home. An example is our chain locker. I must have
climbed into the boat a hundred times during design and building to make
sure the locker would fit. (It is bolted into the boat to allow removal
of the water tanks. It is also a major part of the framework holding the
water tanks firmly in place. This would not have been a feasible project
if the boat had been in a remote boatyard.)
Each year I plan one or two major projects that I really want to
complete and several smaller ones that I won't be terribly disappointed
if I don't complete. I have always gotten the major project(s) done but
never all the smaller ones.
|
626.9 | Tips for preparing for the long ride home.... | MCS873::KALINOWSKI | | Mon Sep 18 1995 14:40 | 60 |
| Getting ready to have my boat hauled home yet again, I thought I'd add
a couple words of wisdom from what I have learned in the past year.
1. Schedule early. I had to go with my 2nd date instead of my first
date because I waited too long. Also look at when they will be
bringing your boat home. Figure an hour to pull it and set it on a
trailer. Then figure where they are leaving from and where they are
going. I saw some poor bastard's monohull going up Rt128 at rush
hour last week. It was at the end of a 6 mile backup because of an
accident. At $40 an hour, that can get expensive. Also try and get
a morning slot if you have a long haul. That way it is still light
out and the rigger can work more quickly in setting the stands.
2. Buy half a dozen 2-3 foot long heavy duty bungie cords. they make
wrapping all the stays a piece of cake, and no sticky crap left on
the wires. More likely you will check the rigging during the winter
knowing you can wrap them right back up.
3. After they take your windvane off, secure it in your car. Mine was
perfect till the ride home pulverized it on a shelf. Ifn fact pull
everything you can out of the boat. Nothing is going to piss you off
more than raising the mainsail next season to see a big green stain
where the head deoderant spill onto it on the ride home and dried.
4. If you have an outboard, pull it. At 55mph, those bumps in the road
can really jolt the boat. I saw my boat pop the outboard into the
up position and then cause all kinds of stresses on the transom
gelcoat with each successive bounce because of the leverage.
5. Pull the gas tanks. I had one tip over and slowly drip out the
scupper onto my windshield. It also removed some bottom paint.
6. Get most the crude off your bottom before you have it hauled. You
are paying by the hour for this, so keep it short. You esspecailly
should pay attention to just in front and just behind a fin keel,
as this is where the slings are going to be, so the presure washer
is not going to get in there very well. You may also wish to carry
some old heavy cardboard to wedge between the slings and your hull
in the summertime in case the boat before you had wet paint. And
wash the topsides the day before. Why wash all that salt onto your
grass that is only now starting to see a bit of attention from you
;>) .
7. At home, make sure you have cut 1x1' plywood platforms for each
stand leg out of 3/4" or thicker plywood. You don't want that puppy
moving. Also, you should put half a sheet of 3/4" plywood under
the timbers holding up your keel. And don't forget to check the
stands after a couple days to see if any have gotten loose.
8. Tie your halyards off to the mast ahead of time, and cut the rigging
tape off the turnbuckles. Time is money . You may want to note where
the threads are for each to make putting it all together again that
much easier.
9. Get yourself 2-3 sawhorses to put the mast on. That way it is at
ground level where you can work on it at home, yet not lying in the
snow.
10. keep a notebook of things you find as you strip the boat. That will
make the winter projects a snap (well not counting paying for it all).
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