This was our 2013 Jayco Flight Swift 198 RD

THIS WAS OUR 2013 JAYCO FLIGHT SWIFT 198RD, PARKED AT THE TOMBSTONE TERRITORIES RV PARK IN ARIZONA



Tuesday, 24 September 2024

Things of interest and boat interior progress

 Today it’s raining and quite wet outside. We haven’t had any rain for over a month, I think, so it’s welcome.  It inspires me to sit down and tell you about the last 10 days since my last blog post.


I promised more photos of the ongoing refit of our pocket trawler “Albatross” and I will post some at the end of this post. There is steady progress, but between kick-off time of epoxy, drying time of varnish, paint or the cutting of wood, completed sections ready for showing seem to take a while. So not to tire you out with that exclusively here are some photos I took of other subjects.


Photo taken with my iPone

Every so often on a Sunday morning in the summer there is a powered parachute flying above the shores of Lake Erie. It must be the same woman who has been doing it for years! The last time this happened I got my camera out and captured the approaching pilot. I had to be quick though, it was coming up rather quickly and disappeared just as fast. What a fun experience this must be to look below and view everything like through a bird’s eye.


Here she comes


And before you know it, she is gone


Goodbye


On the same day I spotted 8 hawks cruising together overhead, this one came close


Capturing objects of interest I just happen to come across is not always easy for me. Usually I have two leashes in my hands with two doggies pulling me along or I’m driving and can’t stop. However, I can entertain you with the cormorants having a morning meeting on a log that I photographed while driving over a bridge across from the Wheatley harbour. I thought they looked funny and since there was no traffic I stopped briefly and took a photo with my phone through the window of my truck. 


That is the best I could do with my iPhone through the truck window


Don’t you think that his mushroom growing out of a tree branch, I noticed while walking my dogs, is pretty to look at? And for more cuteness, this little bird kept watching me from the bird house above while I was picking cherry tomatoes below in my garden. I thought nesting time was over but it seems the birds like to hang out in them all the time.





Finally, what you all have been waiting for, more boat project photos.



Benno is cutting the moldings to assemble the door frames. 



The doors are drying. Three sides of the frame were epoxied together and laid out to dry overnight. Two equal insert panels were glued together with spray adhesive. After drying the three fame pieces the double insert got slid in and the top frame piece is then epoxied on to the frame to make it a complete door.







Oops, for lack of space on the workbench, Benno placed the insert panels on the shrub outside the garage and then sprayed 3M Super 77 Spray Adhesive onto the back of the panels, it looks like the frosting on a cake or snow, I was a little ticked off. 



Once you sprayed the glue and attached the panels, do not try to rearrange or take them off, this glue sticks like sh.t!!



After installation of the trim, the screws are hidden with plugs. Those plugs are epoxied into the holes and when dry are cut off flush with his Dremel Oscillating tool where the space allowed him to, otherwise by hand with a Japanese Pull Saw. Benno then sanded the trim smooth and it got revarnished by me and rubbed down with oil and steel wool.



Here I am laying beads of caulking along the frame of the counter. Hard on my hands as it does not flow easily, but I am not a sissy!



Benno is inserting the solid surface counter top onto the just caulked frame to glue the top into place. It is also held on two sides by trim.



Counter top is in and the new lamp is installed. On the left is the new 120 volt breaker panel with AC Volt and Ampere Meter. Our 12 volt panel is up in the wheelhouse.



Frames for the doors are done and holes are plugged.



Trim is finished and the upper two doors are fitted including door knobs.



Close up of finished upper part of the cabinet.



You can see the doors are hinged and are magnet-spring closed/opened on the upper and lower frame.

The other doors for the lower part of the cabinet are in various stages of drying time and will be installed in the next couple of days.


Thanks everyone for dropping in and taking an interest in the progress of redoing the interior of Albatross.


Saturday, 14 September 2024

Mid September happenings

After two days of fall like weather temperatures, summer has returned to our area here in southern Ontario. That gave us a chance to enjoy a few more evenings on the deck without wearing jackets and for the most part it was bug free.


While I was hunting for some interesting photo opportunities in my garden to post in my blog, I came upon this creature and I don’t know what it is, but hope it will transform itself into something more handsome than its present state. There are also an abundance of grasshoppers around eating holes into the leaves of my plants, but it’s useless trying to shoo them off.




And then I came upon this photo on the Internet which made me chuckle and so I thought I better change the subject of garden creatures and such and talk about other things going on around here.




We had more visitors! Last winter we dropped in to see Barb and Chuck in Tucson, Arizona. They are cruising friends from our time with “Diesel Duck”. You can read about that post here.  Barb sent me a message that she would be helping her girlfriend Jeri to drive her camper van from Maine to Missoula, Montana. They would be driving through Ontario with a stopover to see friends in Napanee (close to the northern part of Lake  Ontario) and then head towards the US border in Windsor. So of course we offered them to come for a visit and spend the night here before continuing their journey. 


Barb


Barb and Jeri


Jeri’s husband fitted out this RAM 2500 ProMaster van into a comfortable camper van that Jeri and Barb were happy to stay in. We wish them a continuous safe trip.


Jeri's Camper Van


At the boat refit progress, I’m holding off with photos of the forward cabin until the dresser/cabinet is close to finish. Last week we purchased a piece of solid surface, cut and polished made for us by "Designer Countertops" here in Leamington that is the top part of the cabinet and now Benno is working on the trim around it. For the trim we needed more wood that we got from "The Wood Mill" in Windsor and that they milled down for us. It is 2 boards of excellent 98x10x2” quality “Sapele” wood. Part of the wood Benno cut and routered into long edge moldings which I then varnished. The rest of it will be used to build cabinet door frames etc.


Two large pieces of Sapele wood





While we were in Windsor I went to the Fabricland store and bought material that I intent to use to cover the V-berth mattresses with. There are two sections to the mattress. A while back Benno made an insert for the top of the V-berth so it closes the gap between the two mattresses but it needed a cushion. There was a seat in the forward cabin that we eliminated by building this dresser/cabinet. I used the rectangular seat cushion to cut the foam with a bread knife into a trapetze size form to fit the insert and plan on making new covers with the new material I bought. That will be a big project to come for me.


The wood inseert


Seat cushion


I cut the 5inch foam with a bread knife


Foam cut to size and the Dacron glued back on for tight fit


About 11 meters of new material


So we keep being busy doing things for the hobby boat and around the house and property. 


Thanks for dropping in again