Muisbosskerm |
Its so difficult to stay positive when frustration
levels build, let down after let down by contractors drive us batty.
Sundowners Muisbosskerm |
With yet another weekend looming and no sign
of the stainless Kevin treated us to dinner at Muisbosskerm, an amazing
restaurant on the West Coast, basic to say the least.
Muisbos Walls |
Muisbos (a local bush) forms the walls, latte
for a roof, wooden benches and tables in the sand and big fires in the middle
to cook the most delicious seafood dishes, ranging from fresh fish, to mussles,
bokkoms (dried fish – not pretty)
"Kitchen" at Muisbosskerm |
rollmops (pickled herrings) to crayfish
tails, a once in a lifetime experience that I have been looking forward to for
ever.
Challenging cooking |
Sundowners @ Kookfontein |
It was pretty far so we stayed over night at
Kookfontein, a wine estate in Lamberts Bay, magnificent, a single cultivar
vineyard only producing Sauvignon Blanc wine, and it was delicious.
Lamberts Bay |
Gannet & Seal Colony |
On our arrival at Lamberts Bay we stopped at the
Cape Gannet Colony and Isabellas restaurant for oysters and wine, yummy.
Wit Mossel Pot in Elands Bay |
Surrounded by Dream Catchers |
Lunch (as instructed by the owner of
Kookfontein Estate) on the return trip was at the Wit Mossel Pot in Elands Bay,
Mussels |
Soverby Lapa |
delicious fresh mussels in a real hippie, beach bum joint. Then drinks at Soverby Lapa Beach Restaurant
before the last stretch home.
The Coctail Boat |
The Opening Season sail arrived and still MaXScene
was not seaworthy, there were various pertinent parts of stainless steel
missing. We were fortunate to be able to
join the festivities on Sundowner Rose and what festivities!
Noodle knots |
In formation to salute the Commodore |
The theme for this year’s event was “The Art
of Sailing” which brought out the finer side of Capetonians, sails were
painted, an artist and his easel were precariously balanced on the front of a
monohull and one boat inventively used pool noodles as knots to decorate their
boat. Sundowner Rose was “The Cocktail Boat”,
Chrissy and Alan printed and laminated the recipes for 4 cocktails – Pimms #2,
Sundowner Rose White Lady (my personal favourite),
Face painted |
Bloody Mary and Strawberry
Daiquiri, laid out all the ingredients and, with snacks supplied by Gerry and
Judy, the party was in full swing. We
might not have been the most decorated boat but we sure had the most
spirit(s).
After a tour through the V&A with champagne it
was back to the club for the party, something RCYC does with enthusiasm. Castle Lite draft and wraps, live band, face
painting by make-up artists - absolutely amazing art done in seconds and a
caricaturist. Hangovers aplenty the next
day, of course.
Chilly day for racing |
Wrek at the back of Robben Island |
Seals at the start |
this time on Sungazer, great experience
as Sungazer is the same
Island Spirit Catamaran as ours only a little lighter
and she goes like the wind.
We
joined Sundowner Rose to watch the start of the race and most importantly the
display by the Silver Falcons and wow were they good.
This is the time of year to meet many different
people in the sailing world. Yachts sail
in from all over, mainly from the Indian Ocean – Madagascar, Mauritius,
Seychelles, etc and stop in Cape Town, usually after some exploring at other
marinas down the coast, before heading for either the Caribbean or the
Mediteranean. New friends were Bertie
and Theresa Chapman, they sailed their Island Spirit 401, Entheos, across to
the Caribbean in 2014. They have finally
reached St Thomas where they plan to do charter work, using their own yacht,
for a couple of seasons. They safely stashed
their yacht in a “hurricane hole” and flew back to South Africa for a month to
attend their daughters wedding and were staying on Eco Promise. What a lovely couple and we were privileged
enough to be guinea pigs for the recipes
Chocolate Mousse |
Meringues |
Theresa is planning to serve to
clients and boy was the food amazing, Frangelico chocolate mousse and meringues
with berries and ice cream being the most favorite. We tried the “house cocktail” they have
invented and were treated to “pain killers” which they learned to make from the
“Soggy Dollar Bar”, containing coconut cream, orange and pineapple juice and
rum, delicious, moorish and the jury is out on whether it is a pain killer or
causer.
@ Woodcutters Arms |
Bertie raved about pork belly that the used to eat
at Woodcutters Arms during their 2 year stay in Houtbay before they left South
Africa. Convinced, we all headed out one
Sunday to explore the Houtbay Marina and Club followed by lunch. Unfortunately by the time we were putting our
order in the roast lunch and the pork belly was sold out, seems to be popular dishes. Sadly we picked other items from the menu,
but, we never give up so the next Sunday we did a re-run only this time they
were ready for us and roast beef and Yorkshire pudding and pork belly’s were
devoured, worth the return trip.
Jessica alive again |
Short abridged group on Jessica |
We noticed a beautiful Steam Train engine and
carriages parked on the railway tracks outside RCYC, googled the logo and lo
and behold Ceres Railway Company own 3 heritage engines, one of which, Jessica,
is used for trips to and from Ceres with lunch at the Ceres Golf Club, sounded
like an amazing day out so we booked, then mentioned it to a couple of people
and so the word spread, next thing we were a group of 18, ready for some
serious fun.
Fireman or as we called him, arsonist |
The decor was amazing |
Heat in the heart |
Then disaster struck,
midnight on the Friday before departure messages were received bearing sad news
that Jessica had blown one of her boiler elements and due to the fire hazard en
route (been a very dry winter once again) they were not able to fire up the
coal burner so sadly the trip was cancelled.
Lunch @ Waverly Hills |
by the
next weekend and although a much smaller group, we went and had fun.
The lunch venue changed to an Organic Wine
Farm just outside Ceres, Waverly Hills, the venue and food were impressive but
it seems you might need to develop a taste for organic wine.
Nope, not gonna fit under here |
Kids just loved the Steam Train |
The countryside we travelled through was
truly amazing, vineyards all covered in new green leaves, olive trees, fruit
trees, endless corn fields, beautiful mountains, rundown remnants of guard
houses on the side of rivers – momentos of a bygone era and everyone loves the
steam train, especially kids, so many smiles and waves from by standers.
The stainless steel guys came to the boat with
their equipment to cut the mounts off the back frame and re-weld and polish
them on site so that they would be correct.
A slight of hand saw 2kg of stainless welding rods disappear into the
depths of the ocean causing a temporary halt in work while Kevin raced around
trying to find more!!
The back frame was
now ready for permanent fixture and Graeme and his dad arrived for a week to
help do just that (well one did hard labor the other supervised). It took some tricky work to get plates in to
mount the frame onto but now that it is mounted in place it looks
brilliant.
We fetched the cross bars and
installed those too, much head scratching for this simple (no such thing in
boating) job as the holes drilled by the manufacturers were at the wrong angle
Michelle (who came down for the weekend) and I left Graeme and Kevin to this
and headed for the Market at Groote Post wine estate with Chrissy, much less
frustrating drinking wine.
We were woken to the dulcet cock-a-doodle do of a
Rooster one morning, now bearing in mind we are in a yacht club, nestled in a
very large commercial harbor and that the only bird life we see is gulls, this
was most noteworthy. Eventually we
realised that the sounds were emanating from the back of a newly arrived
Brazilian catamaran directly opposite us in “Cat Corner”. Urban legend has it that they are a group of
sailors attempting to be purely “Green” and self sufficient. Kevin and Graeme paid a bit of interest and
were less than impressed at the manner in which the chickens were kept on the
back of the catamaran and a lot of questions were being asked about the
legalities of bringing livestock, most especially chickens, into South
Africa. The final straw might have been
when the owner of Madimoo, direct neighbor to this floating farm, had a severe
sense of humor failure as he is trying to sell his boat and being moored next
to a floating farmyard is not a very good selling point, the next morning the
Cat and its chickens had quite literally flown the coop.
A quiet farewell dinner at Wang Tai for Bertie and
Teresa, as their time in South Africa was up, ended in a joyous send off at
Panama Jacks for Oyster shots and more Oyster shots, then whiskey and
Oysters. A brilliant evening of raucous
laughter and fun, good luck guys, we can’t wait to catch up with you at the
Soggy Dollar Bar…..
begins Wednesday
night racing once again. We have been
fortunate to be able to take part on Sungazer.
Des is a well experienced, calm skipper from whom we are learning much. Some racing situations really get close but
he and crew and boat take it in their stride. The first night we started in blistering 28 –
32 knots of wind, speeding around the course to finish a respectable 3rd
place.
In true Cape Town weather extremes there was not
even enough wind to get from the first marker to the second in the 2nd
and 3rd races
and the last two races have been cancelled due to
incredibly high winds of 45 – 55 knots in the harbor, the same winds that have
been making it bitterly uncomfortable to sleep and even live onboard as the
boats bounce and jerk around and the wind howls through the rigging
continuously, a constant buzzing in your head!
On exiting the harbor for race 3 we passed a ship
that had been on fire since the morning, apparently there was polystyrene on
board which is difficult to put out, it eventually took 3 days to extinguish,
the tugs looked really impressive with their plumes of water putting out the
blaze.
Cape Town once again had a
very dry winter and the dams are in distress.
We are under Level 3 water restrictions meaning no hosepipes may be used
and being in this dirty harbor that is not a pleasant situation. Craig of Eco Promise has developed what seems
to be a winning solution - Waterless Boat Cleaner. We put it to the test and have been impressed
with the results, very little water needed and it contains a wax which leaves a
shiny finish on the gel coat that also repels a certain amount of this black
dust. Kevin also polished the windows
with the polisher/buffer, something he has been wanting to try since it was
recommended to him in Richards Bay and the difference is striking. Our windows are back to almost normal again,
we can see clearly now the film is gone...
Leaking here |
First fix of leak and offending hatch |
Then, in a heart sinking
moment, I opened the lid of the front port cabin storage where we had just
installed the new hatch and fixed the leak to find everything stewing away in
about 2 inches of fresh (yup, I tasted it) water. We eventually ascertained that the new hatch,
although pressure rated to 4m, is not holding pressure and leaks as soon as the
tank is full. Add to this another leak
pushing up from the side of the tank and we were stunned. Reseated and even replaced the lid of the new
hatch, no joy, so decision made to remove and replace with clear Perspex. Alfred duly got stuck in, filled the
offending hole at the top of the tank and re-fibreglassed but unfortunately
this also proved to be a failure.
Wet wood showing bigger problem NO fibreglass on inside wall |
Tank cut open and fibreglassed again |
Eventually we discovered, to our horror, that the back wall of the water
tank is nothing more than a coat of paint over ply wood, so, back to grinding
we went.
Alfred covered in plumes of dust AGAIN |
Finishing off lid before reinstalling |
Cut the lid off the tank AGAIN, in went Alfred with all his tools and out came huge plumes of fiberglass dust. Eventually he has ground the whole tank back and fibreglassed the whole thing, he now says its guaranteed not to leak again.
Lid on ready for testing |
Now to paint, seal and test
–
some days we don’t know whether to cry or just drink.
We installed 2 new mounts
for the tender motors on either side of the new stainless frame, they fit
perfectly.
Kevin also finally installed
two of his blue lights, makes such an effective difference to the boat, creates
real ambiance, now to decide where to mount the other two.
We had a flying visit from
our friend Janet, she popped down to take a look at two new Lagoon Yachts that
have just arrived in South Africa on their way to Seychelles and Mauritius, seeing
its always fun to view other yachts and get ideas Chrissy, Alan and us were
only too happy to go take a look too and in true style the day was finished off
with sushi and a sundowner trip with champagne in the VIP carriage of the
V&A Wheel.
Should hold the Tender Boat... |
Our pushpits are finally
back and installed and all our stainless is finally together again, now begins
the next round of frustrations – manufacturing the roof. On the bright side - we can sail again….