Jim Walsh wrote:I like Steve’s advice and option “D”. Sea room is your best friend.....in my opinion.
Concur. I’m leaning heavily on option D right now. Will see what the next couple days brings.
I decided yesterday morning, as much as I wanted to go, to abort the plan to sail up to Waterlemon Cay in St John National Park. It’s Memorial Day weekend. I reasoned there was a high probability I could get up there and all the moorings in Waterlemon would be taken. There is no anchoring permitted in the park.
Three days ago I weighed anchor and moved over to pick up a free mooring. Very nice moorings...all recently installed. But I dove it anyway and checked it carefully. A big charter cat anchored right next to me in the general area I had been anchored. Hard to resist as there is a great sand bottom there.
That night the wind went very light. I awoke at 0330. Some 6th sense I think—we’ve all experienced it. I went up on deck. The big cat was three feet away! I quickly got my air horn and boat pole and spot light. But within a minute we had drifted another 15’ apart. So, I stayed up till 0530 watching when the wind began to fill and the boats realigned themselves. That morning another mooring opened up and I moved over to it. I’m less likely to get crowded here since there is seagrasss around the mooring and anchoring is not permitted in the grass.
This morning I was having coffee and lounging in the cockpit chatting on the phone with Gayle. I could see the rain coming. I signed off and sure enough it was a gullywasher. I loosened up the cool-a-roo mesh panels and slacked the 5x5 sunbrella sun awning so it would sag in the middle. I caught some water by pulling the edge of the tarp down and letting the water run into a bucket. But I needed a better system. So, I slacked one side of the tarp a bit more than the other and tied off a funnel under the low spot then tied the line to a PVC pipe and placed it through the bucket handles. It worked very well. Water was pouring into the bucket at a rapid rate. In a short time I had topped off the water tanks, filled the solar shower, and filled two five gallon collapsible jugs. Probably 30-35 gallons. Of course, since my rain collection “system” is just cobbled together I lost as least as much as I caught.
There is plenty of room for improving our rain collection system. I have sketched out a few ideas as I have thought over the last few years about the best way to capture pure clean rainwater. Sure, adding an integrated udder, either canvas or a through hull to which a hose can be attached would help a great deal but there are some other mods I can also make to really capture a lot of water quickly and efficiently. But, further improvements will have to wait till I return home. In the meantime “General Jack Ripper” would be pleased with our success capturing rain water and protecting our “precious bodily fluids.”
PS. There is apparently some discussion in the blogosphere that sunbrella is not a good choice for rain water collection as the chemical treatment used to make it water resistant can contaminate the water. If true, I will have to find a more suitable material. I don’t think a dedicated rain-collection tarp is the solution as if it’s not already up when it starts raining it’s unlikely I would go to the trouble to dig it out and set it up. Often the showers are so brief you only have time for the first minute of rain to wash the tarp off then collect what you can before the rain stops.
If you’re interested in how the celestial is coming along click here to read about the latest star shots.
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