No Bad Days - Kyle

San Diego

October 15, 2010

 

After I wrote here about Jim visiting last month, I had a flood of friends offering to come keep me company here on the boat. I guess I sounded lonely! First was Diana, then Cindy came, and now my dear friend Chriss from SLC has just stopped by. Next week my son Porter and his wife Erin are coming, and the week after that, Phillipe Shiela and Anya, who are all on a big California road trip, are stopping by, and then not long after that my daughter Kenzie and her husband Julio are coming. I love the company, it is wonderful, and not just a little bit crazy! giddy up

So Chriss is here now and she wanted to go see San Diego. My friend Harrison is still down there with his new boat and asked us if we would come down and sail with him as he gets acquainted with it, so it worked out well. We drove down there the other day and spent the whole day sailing out on San Diego Bay. WOW what a beautiful and interesting place to sail. We had good steady moderate winds and the water was calm as it is such a protected bay. We sailed out of his marina on Coronado Island (Which I think is really a peninsula, not an island, but maybe the chamber of commerce thought calling it an island sounded better to attract tourists…) and out under the Coronado bridge, soaring many hundreds of feet over our mast. No worries about hitting it!. (I noticed as I drove over it the other day that along the edge there are signs posted up there offering suicide prevention help and a toll free number to call if you find yourself standing up there thinking to end it all with a step off! I imagine if you were going up there to jump you may well have your phone with you. Even though it would get ruined in the water, you would hate to miss that last-minute call saying you won the lottery, she forgives you for being an idiot and loves you after all , and your dog came back…)

 

San Diego harbor is a huge natural harbor and is the home of a massive US navy fleet. We sailed past 4 huge aircraft carriers, destroyers, big grey ships of every kind. They towered hundreds of feet over us and were over 1000 feet long. (My friend Robert back in SLC said he would never get on a boat that wasn’t at least 500 feet long and grey. Now I know what he means! These things look like they could handle just about anything) We sailed past the big gleaming white hospital ship Mercy, which my friend Sheila has spent many months over the years working as a volunteer nurse providing medical care for people all over the world. I think she just got back from working on the Mercy for 6 weeks in Thailand and the south pacific. We also sailed past the San Diego city water front which I must admit is quiet pretty. The city skyline juts up right along the edge of the water and the buildings were very interesting shapes and colors. I bet it would look really cool at night.

We sailed past a yacht, Red Sky, at anchor there that has been anchored next to me for several days up in Dana. I never met them, but I bet they are getting ready to head on down to Mexico. Tis the season to be heading south. Someday I plan to do the same.

The next 2 days we played tourist, spending all one day on the ship Midway museum. We were given free tickets and thought “what the hey, we were not too interested but we’ll run on and take a quick look.” Ended up we spent 5 hours there and could have spent more! It was fascinating! The Midway is an aircraft carrier and was launched just as World War 2 was ending. It served in Korea, Vietnam and the first Iraq war, and was recently decommissioned and turned into this museum. This ship was home to 4500 sailors at a time, launching airplanes off the deck and the processes for keeping all that going were amazing. We had these little headphone devices that we listened to as we walked all over and up and down and around the ship and listened to the stories of the people who were on the ship all those years. The ship had huge fuel oil boilers that created steam that ran all the systems like the turbines for the propellers to drive the ship, the electrical generators, the plane launch catapults, and even the cooking was done by steam. And of course there was plenty of hot water for showers! We were told that the new nuclear ships run exactly the same way except the steam is now created by the nuclear device instead of a giant oil burner. All steam driven. I guess not much changes after all eh?

After the Midway we caught the TRAX up to Old Town, a re-creation of the original site of San Diego, with old Spanish style adobe haciendas. The high light of the place was the mariachi band that played us a really cool mariachi style medley of Pink’s Brick in the Wall and Santana’s Oyo Como Va and Black Magic Woman. WOW I was blown away by how cool it sounded in that style!

The next day we toured Balboa Park which is a huge city park built for a exposition in 1913 to celebrate the Panama canal. The park is big, many square miles, and along with many miles of hiking trails is home to the San Diego zoo, as well as a collection buildings for museums, galleries, botanical gardens, and concert halls. We explored the Museum of Man and the natural history museum. Both were pretty cool. The Museum of man was mostly for fossils and the development of early man, very interesting, and a mummy exhibit. I was intrigued by a sign stating that the exhibit did not contain any mummies from North American burial sites (As if only those were of any special significance deserving special respect. Hmmmm. Pretty arrogant of us. No wonder much of the rest of the world hates us!

The natural history museum was cool. It was not just a lot of dead animal in glass cases like some NH museums. This one had several exhibits about habitat including water and how critical the shortage is and how it all plays together for nature and humans to survive and thrive togehter, especially here in the desert. We saw a movie about life in the coral reefs down off the Baja coast, which was very interesting because that is where I am headed eventually!. There were many displays of fossils of ancient marine critters like the monosaur which is like a huge shark. There was a display of gemstones. I was not too gaga about all the sparkly stuff, but was fascinated by a picture of deep in a cave in Mexico where these guys in orange jumpsuits were crawling around on giant quartz crystals dozens of feet long, all tilted and leaning at odd angles and gleaming sparkling white. It almost looked fake it was so bizarre. And did you know that they have not discovered any element out in space that is not found here on earth? For some reason I thought that is an interesting factoid.

I came back to the boat for some R&R, Chriss is still touring San Diego and will catch the train up here later. We plan to go sailing again if conditions permit. I must admit it is nice to just hang out here quietly alone for a bit!

 

Good bread - Cindy’s visit, and memories of Sandy Lazarus

October 11, 2010

 

After Diana left from her visit here, another friend from Salt Lake, Cindy, popped in for a short visit. She had asked me what she could bring and I mentioned how hard it seems to be to find good bread here and bless her heart she showed up with 2 loaves of Great Harvest sunflower wheat, my all time favorite! (I bet the TSA inspectors at the airport puzzled over that one. Almost as much as back when I would travel with a dozen power bagels in my luggage!) We spent a day fiddling with the...


Continue reading...
 

The Exploding Head- the final chapter (I promise!

October 7, 2010

 

Diana and I woke to a drizzly day in Newport. After we had polished all the brass on the boat for the 4th time, we just had to get out of there. Drizzle or not, after a bit of excitement pulling up the anchor and almost chopping our neighbors anchor line with our propeller, we headed out and down the coast for Dana. ( Long story short, I need to learn patience and teamwork.) Outside the harbor The seas were high and riotous and the winds were strong. We were making very good time , over ...


Continue reading...
 

The mystery of the exploding head: part Duh.. and Diana visiting

October 3, 2010

As John Wayne said (at least I think he said it.. “ Life is hard, and its harder when you are stupid!”

OK all was well with my repaired toilet, all was working perfectly, no leaks, until I went to the pump-out station to pump it clean. I was out on the dock working the vacuum at the pump-out deck fitting when I heard this loud pop from inside the boat. Not sure what it was from. I went below to add a little fresh water to the tank to rinse it and as I poured it in I noticed it running ...


Continue reading...
 

Food

September 30, 2010

Everybody asks me how I am eating here on the boat. Since it’s been a quiet week, not much exciting to write about, I will fill in you in. I eat pretty much like I did on land. I have always been a pretty basic eater. “Bohemian” you might say. Many of you know that I ate a Power bagel (from Einstein’s) every day for breakfast for over 15 years. I finally got tired of them and haven’t had one in over a year, but it underscores the point that I am a simple man with simple tastes. Ve...


Continue reading...
 

Dana to Newport 3 Hour Tour - Gilligan Style

September 26, 2010

OK you guessed it, it took a bit longer than 3 hours to get to Newport. 30 hours actually. It usually takes 3. My buddy Jon had his boat here in Dana for some service and needed to move it back up to Newport where he lives, and invited me to come along. His motor wasn’t working so we knew there was a chance of not making it in one day, but we both like a good adventure and prefer to sail rather than motor anyway so we were game for whatever might happen. Or not happen, as it turned out. N...


Continue reading...
 

Los Pelicanos

September 23, 2010

Making good progress on re-doing the bathroom on the boat. I have been putting several coats of paint on all the wood and had to let it be drying, as well as adding a layer of epoxy fiberglass to the tank that leaked, and re-caulking the seams. I think it is going to turn out great.  Whatv do you think of this possible new configuration?

  

Today I helped my dock neighbor friend Mike and his wife Suzy finish moving stuff out of their apartment and into the new town home they bought.

...


Continue reading...
 

The Mystery of the Exploding head (Long beach: part DOH!)

September 20, 2010

 

When we last spoke I was telling you about my hanging out in the Long beach area. I had been noticing a slight VERY SLIGHT leak coming from the base of my toilet. (On a boat the toilet is the “head.“ probably a play on words about the captain…). On my boat the head is a nice porcelain throne perched atop a square fiberglass holding tank. It is plumbed into the boat with a fresh water flushing supply tank, and a hose to a deck fitting to pump it out at the sanitation station at the ...


Continue reading...
 

Another wild hair gone wild (Long Beach and beyond)

September 17, 2010

 

As usual, a simple “day sail” led me up the coast for an over-night in Newport. It had been a long hard beat against the wind andI was pulling in to anchor at Newport just before dark at 7:00. I had pulled out of Dana fairly early but spent almost 3 hours bobbing about going nowhere with no wind until the winds picked up about 11:00, allowing me at least to start the “beating…

The forecast for the next many days is for solid moderate winds from the west /northwest. I woke up ear...


Continue reading...
 

Kyle the mechanic

September 15, 2010

As much as I want to be able to sail everywhere I go without an engine, I admit I am glad I have one. It is certainly convenient from time to time. The engine on No Bad Days is an old 2 stroke Nissan 9.9 horsepower. It has been kept in good shape, and runs pretty good but seems to be hard to start. I crank and crank sometimes to no avail and end up giving it a squirt of starting fluid which usually does the trick and it roars into life.

Today a guy was at the boat next door working on his...


Continue reading...
 
Make a Free Website with Yola.