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JennyMorgan

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Posts posted by JennyMorgan

  1. 36 minutes ago, BrundallNavy said:

    I take mine out of the water every year and try and do one big job as well as the smaller one to keep on top of things.  Last years winter budget was around £2500 plus under cover storage.

    you don’t need to have the boat out every year and lots of small jobs can be done in the water, every two to three years should be ok as long as the boat is sound the problems come when you leave it for many years without maintenance. 
     

    I would budget around £2 to £3k every couple of years for major hull work.

    Based on twelve years of ownership of a wooden sailing cruiser I'd up that to  3 to 5 grand and I did the annual decorating. 

    • Thanks 1
  2. 4 hours ago, MauriceMynah said:

    Am I a hoarder? Well I was but not now.

    If I can't eat it, can't drink it and don't need it for a job, I don't buy it. 

    You and I! Wise words too.

    I have a near neighbour who has had his fascia boards replaced, blow me, he kept the old, largely rotten ones! Presumably there might be some sound stuff that might come in handy one day, he's over seventy now so he'd better get a move on!

  3. I admit it, I have to work hard at not being an excessive hoarder!

    It all came home to me when I cleared my mum-in-laws house after she died. Oh dear, nine builder's skips of absolute rubbish. Perhaps not an obsessive hoarder but I could see me heading that way, just in boat projects and bits, fishing tackle and a vintage bottle collection. Time to stop.

    My NHS daughter surprised me when she told me just how many beds were blocked in the hospital where she works by patients who's homes are too untidy for them to convalesce in or for carers to safely work in. Apparently hoarding is becoming something of an epidemic and costing the NHS dearly. 

    Just watched Extreme Hoarders on TV, worrying stuff, perhaps I'll re-start on the garage tomorrow. 

    It must be wonderful to be organised!

     

    • Like 1
  4. 53 minutes ago, floydraser said:

    Peter, did you ever see this old Suffolk boy apply cooking oil or did he just tell you that's what he did?

    I did and have done so myself on several occasions since, not least as JA's better half does. Not because we ran out of 'the proper stuff' but because that was what the instructions on the product said. I haven't tried it on wood that is subject to weathering though.

    As the saying goes, suck it and see.

    • Thanks 1
  5. 28 minutes ago, webntweb said:

    Perfick - except for the pub being closed of course.

    Just have to keep a bottle of Woods Rum or Morgan's Spiced onboard, plus a bottle of best Prosecco in case Grace pops up! 

    • Like 3
  6. Just a thought, one old Suffolk boy I worked with, as good a boat builder as any, finished his interior woodwork off with cooking oil! Can't remember if he fried an egg in it first but his work always looked good.

    I have several bits of once fashionable Danish teak work from the 1970s and the instructions that came with them was to occasionally wipe with cooking oil so it's not just a far fetched suggestion.

    • Thanks 1
  7. Being undersides, e.g. underside of decks, furniture etc, I was always taught to leave it untreated so the wood could breath. The decks on my daugter's RCC are over a hundred years old now and are as naked as the day they were laid. I have furniture at home that is even older, likewise untreated where it is not normally visible.

    • Thanks 1
  8. Probably not for those who seek civilization! 

    Nowhere to plug in, probability of cow pats, no shops, stunning dawn chorus, lots of birds, stacks of dykes, plenty of mud, long walks, huge skies, no street lighting, few if any chavs, no street noise, no pavements, often the only company is your own, ghastly, primitive place! Can't think why any one would want to moor there. Heavens, might bump into some hippy locals!

    • Like 1
  9. 1 hour ago, Gracie said:

    I loved the sound of the meadow ladies too, just added to the feeling of being in the middle of nowhere x

    :default_xmas6:

    Probably as near to nowhere as you can possibly get on the Broads! Love it.

    • Love 1
  10. 7 minutes ago, grendel said:

    MM i take it you mean new facts revealed rather than guesses or suppositions?

    There have been a news report, namely that victim was found dead on his boat, that he hadn't drowned and that the cause of death has not yet been established and there is no sign of foul play. 

  11. 1 hour ago, Bytheriver said:

    I watched the original Broadland District Council Licencing Committee Meeting. The licence is for one of the outbuildings not the Pub itself 

    I have a sneaking suspicion that a certain Mr H is linked to a possible re-opening. It would certainly add to the confusion if he is. Perhaps confusion is the name of the game!

    • Like 1
  12. Perhaps asking those nice engineers at Richardsons would be a plan, after all they do know the boat. I would also re-read and take onboard the very wise words of Vaughan: 

    14 hours ago, Vaughan said:

    To MM I would say - why not try it out for a couple of years until you haul her out again, and see what you think?  The boat has been going around on hire quite happily with the present one, plus you are now going to take the speed limiting off the engine, which will also make a difference.

     

  13. One of my locals has published its 'substantial meals' menu designed to pull in the boozers. I can think of at least two OAPs who will certainly be turning out, just for the meals. Indeed I suspect that it will be more than just the two of us. I have 'messaged'  the menu onto several local OAP friends. Mind you, SWMBO might be tempted to have a pink gin. Almost as cheap as cooking at home plus there's a sea-view & no washing up, bonus!

    • Like 2
  14. 19 hours ago, MauriceMynah said:

    Gracious me, I think you might be right. Thank you for reminding me of it's name, all I could think of was "farting hole".

    Well, I was close! 

    It all depends on whether you are coming instead going, or going instead of coming.

  15. 3 hours ago, TheQ said:

    but you'd have to acheive lift off at 4mph..

    Lift off when a ranger is within 1/4 mile thus no need for a license. Once off the water you'd be outside the BA jurisdiction. 

    Ranger ahead warnings could be issued on CB & VHF. Now, that is a thought . . . . . . . . shades of Smokey & the Bandit, Norfolk Broads style!!

    • Like 1
    • Love 1
  16. 6 hours ago, Vaughan said:

    Perhaps if Mr Colman had decided to cart away even more of the Yare valley for gravel extraction, it could have been done at Whitlingham.

    I think it safe to suggest that very many people thought that being a sports/spectator venue was one of the justifications for Whitlingham. Dragon Boats raced there for a while but for whatever reasons they eventually returned to Oulton Broad. 

  17. 40 minutes ago, MauriceMynah said:

    What about the "Trinity broads" ?

    Strange that you ask that! Whilst on the Nav Com I asked that very question. 

    Seems that the Trinity Broads are owned by a water company and they supply drinking water to Gt Yarmouth. The good folk of Yarmouth understandably don't appreciate water tasting of processed Adnams or Red-X impregnated exhaust residue.

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