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Introducing Ariel #187 "Eight Bells"
Hello!
Having lurked for about 4 months I've finally gone out and taken some pictures and am now ready to introduce my "new" boat, hull #187 "Eight Bells".
She was donated in 2003 to the Hurricane Island Outward Bound School for use as a staff boat. I began instructing there in 2005 and she was the first "modern" boat I'd ever sailed on. Interesting enough I was the last person to sail her during the summer of 2007 before she was hauled out. Since then she's been sitting on the hard.
This past summer, due to budget cuts, the school was forced to put her up for sale and began a staff-only auction. In the meantime I'd gotten a "grown-up job" at a non-profit and was living about five miles away from the Outward Bound base. In August I ran into the OB boathouse manager who, having not received any bids, encouraged me to make him an offer. After sending in an embarrassingly low number I found myself the owner!
So, I now unexpectedly own a boat and, having looked over the posts here, have the feeling that I have no idea what I've gotten myself into. I can promise you though that I'm very excited and have a great deal of sentimental attachment to her, so I'm going to try my best to do her justice.
There are a few things that I know were not working properly when I last sailed her:
1) Roller furling was twisting the jib halyard and cutting through it. I guess that means I need to figure out how to fix the roller furling and then run a new halyard.
2) Port side winch doesn't work under a load although it sounds normal when you rotate it without.
3) The outboard, a 2000 Honda 4-stroke, doesn't seem to get enough air when it's running in it's well. When you open the cover it runs just fine but the cover gets in the way but I'm not sure this is an issue worth fixing.
Some other projects I think I need/want to take on before putting her in the water this spring:
1) Bottom paint
2) Bright work
3) Painting the v-berth
4) New cushion covers (I think mine are still the originals... gross!)
I've been searching through posts on all of these subjects and want to thank all of you already for the wealth of knowledge on this website. Any additional advice as I go through the process will be greatly appreciated. My first question is, do you think this is a reasonable amount of work for someone with no experience to tackle by themselves in their first spring of boat-ownership? I tried to choose things that seemed necessary but do-able but the list seems to have gotten very long especially since my bill of sale requires that I get her in the water by the end of April.
I've included some pictures below. The first is of me the last time I was on her in 2007. The others are from this past fall after I bought her. Interior photos will have to come later.
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Spring update - we are sailing!
An update on Eight Bells' progress - but first, let me introduce myself. I am Gillian's Dad. I retired last fall, and when Gillian asked me if I would be interested in her buying a boat she knew about, it sounded like a good idea, so I signed on as Junior Partner (First Mate??). Apart from a little inland water sailing many decades ago, and a few days out on a borrowed runabout, this whole experience is all new to me.
Back to Eight Bells - she came through the winter snug and dry once we replaced the tarp after a Nor'easter. We scraped the flaking areas of the bottom, put on a new coat of bottom paint, got the rigging back together, and put her in the water. That was back in April, as we had to vacate the hard standing, but the wind was too strong that day for us to take her out on our first sail. With other things going on, that didn't happen until last weekend, when Gill, her sister and I finally got her going.
Our first discovery was that the halyard wrap problem with the jib was not cured, but one of Gillian's friends pointed out to us that we had the jib hoisted on the spinnaker halyard. Re-rigging it on the correct halyard, and making some other minor adjustments to the jib rigging, seems now to have solved the problem, and we had a good sail, beginning to experience how the wind blows around the islands and hills of mid-coast Maine, as well as its variability!
Eight Bells is on a borrowed mooring several miles away at the moment. We have a mooring almost within sight of the house, but it has been unused for many years, and we are not trusting it until we can get it checked out by a diver. Once it is, the boat will spend the summer there, where will be able to reach it easily to continue the needed work, of which there is lots. We haven't got the winches changed yet, and although the motor started up and ran fine and the lights work, there is no electric power to any of the electronics, so we have some sort of wiring issue. Restoring of the woodwork has got no further than buying a can of varnish and some sandpaper, and we haven't even thought about the cabin!
However, she sails, which is the main thing!
Tony
PO mods = Previous Owner modifications
I was noticing the instrument mounting, especially the compass, the vents, the raised lazerette lid, the foresail furling system. All nicely done.
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Our first summer with Eight Bells
Thank you for the birthday wishes!!!
Eight Bells finally came out of the water for the winter last Wednesday. All sorts of things have changed for us since we bought her (Gill bought a house, and also became an aunt for the first time, as well as having to attend to that old problem - work!), and we find that the number of times that good weather coincides with our free days here in Maine is limited, so we didn't take Eight Bells out as far or as often as we had expected.
But boy, did we enjoy the times we did have her out. She sails beautifully. We still have a lot of learning to do - I don't think the mainsail is setting quite right, we have to figure that out. We found and fixed a few loose and corroded connections in the electronics, and they all now work properly.
I'm sorry we didn't get the interior pictures - the boat was on a mooring all summer so we only visited when we were going sailing, and we never remembered to take the interior photos! Although she is ashore now, she isn't yet covered over, and we'll try to remember the camera when we go to work on her!
Here is a photo of her on the mooring on a beautiful fall evening, after her last trip before coming out of the water. We are looking forward to next year!
Tony