GL: Mud Berth Storage.
jonathan olenick
jdolenickmd at yahoo.com
Fri Oct 31 01:44:40 EDT 2008
________________________________
From: jonathan olenick
<jdolenickmd at yahoo.com>
To: fred at tug44.org
Cc: great loop list
<great-loop at lists.samurai.com>
Sent: Thursday, October 30, 2008 10:29:45 PM
Subject: Re: GL: Mud Berth Storage.
You might want to place a few railroad
ties just in from the turn of the
bildge to make sure that she doesn-t tip,
and dig out around the rudder and
screw, Make a high pitched roof tent to keep
the weight of snow and ice off to
keep her from getting too top heavy. Place
ample heat rods throughout.
Perhapse upright rr ties as a carreening wall on
the dock side, and as
stabalizers on the water side. Check with American tug
as to their thoughts.
Certainly your (our) hull configuration is the best for
what your
propose. Good luck, Jon on Valentine
p.s. you mich speak to people
who have experience using tidal grids common in Puget Sound.
________________________________
From: fred <fred at tug44.org>
To:
great-loop at lists.samurai.com
Sent: Thursday,
October 30, 2008 7:01:44 PM
Subject: GL: Mud Berth Storage.
Winter is almost
here, up in the frozen north
(Champlain Canal), and the canal
will be closed
in 2 weeks. I had arranged
for winter storage at a nearby
marina but that is
turning into a comedy of
errors. First we planned to put
it into a nice
storage shed, then discovered
there's not enough air draft to
get under some
power lines. Now, they're
telling me their horseshoe trailer
might not lift
the boat high enough to
clear the keel on my trawler.
Right
now I'm running
out of options and must
do something very very soon, before
the canal closes
and I get stuck right
here.
I have been thinking of
letting the boat sit in
the mud right at my
dock. The canal will be drained,
leaving a nice mud flat
... just soft mud
and no rocks. The boat could simply
sink her keel into the
mud, and rest
there until spring when the canal is
re-filled and the boat
refloated. This
has the advantage of being free, plus
it will be right in
front of my house.
I know there are a lot of boats
sitting in very shallow
slips, which drain at
low tide, leaving the boats in
the mud and those boats
all seem to be fine.
Has anyone ever heard of a
fiberglass trawler be beached
in the mud for the
winter? Does it make any
sense at all? Or is the idea
completely crazy?
Comments appreciated....
Fred
Tug 44
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