Monday, July 11, 2016

Rage


God of Love and Justice,
I do not pray for peace.
I pray for rage,
rage at the ways of evil and injustice,
rage that burns and transfigures this sick world.
I do not pray for mercy, but wrath
upon us who have power to speak and do not.
I do not pray for comfort, but for disturbance
that will not let us rest or wait,
but make us work and witness until we are done.
I do not pray for safety but fear,
fear for the souls of all of us
who shelter ourselves behind violence,
whose prayer shawls are soaked
with the tears of the oppressed.
I do not pray that you save us
from our evil. Let it burn in our hands
until we renounce it.
Let us who have exiled ourselves
suffer our loneliness
until we re-unite with those we have dismissed.
Let us stand outside the gates of paradise
until we enter the lives of those who suffer.
O God, you are today no Good Shepherd
but the Crucified Prisoner,
God of love and Justice,
for the sake of love and justice,
disturb us.



From the the daily blog Unfolding Light by Steve Garnaas-Holmes,
pastor of St. Matthew's United Methodist Church,
Acton, MA, and used with permission.


Sunday, July 10, 2016

GEM Is Sold, New Horizons Abound

Yes, Gem sold last February.

We actually had three prospective buyers, plus four more prospects waiting on the edge of the dock. We feel very good about Gem's new stewards.

And now, looking at new ways to cruise, last year we bought a Land Cruiser, a 1999 Airstream motorhome. Yes, Land Cruiser is the name of the model. A bit of a classic as Airstream stopped manufacturing class A motor homes in '05. A well layed-out coach on a Chevy chassy, with a workhorse 454 engine.

We had hopefully planned a big trip last summer, but a failed dashboard air conditioner squashed that hope (southern CA and the southwestern states without air? You must be kidding!). We kept trimming down the trip at the same rate that we discovered more things to fix, and finally just stayed home enjoying local overnights.

Before that, a couple of years back we towed a KZ 14 Sportsman travel trailer we picked up in Lincoln NE. Lots of local trips with her - - Sequim, Port Townsend, and one great 8,000 mile trip Nashville, Lincoln NE, the Dakotas, Glacier National Park to catch what's left of the disappearing glaciers as well as enjoy the great majestic scenery. We've also tripped through the Grand Canyon, the Natches Trace, and Yellowstone. The trailer was great with good room for it's size, even a separate tub/shower in the bathroom - - no soaked TP after every shower.

But then life wonderfully changed. June retired on  June 30th - - YEH! - - after more than 45 great years as a church lay professional (spiritual development, adult education), opening up the possibility of more than just summer road trips. The thought of doing more extensive travel with the KZ didn't sound all that comfortable, especially converting the dinette table into a double bed every night. The KZ was sold, and now comes the Land Yacht,  christened "Gypsy Heart".



On March 23rd we will be heading out for a couple of months on Gypsy Heart, towing our new 2013 smart car named Bleue (we're told a smart is a car, so no need to add 'car'. One wouldn't say, for example, a Ford car). We'll head first south to Santa Rosa CA,  and then to Escondido CA. Then east to Sedona AZ, Santa Fe NM (a big favorite), the Natches Trace, on to Nashville, Lincoln NE, and then west as we meander home to Kingston. A rough itinerary, but lots of flexibility in it.

While you may think us now exclusively road warriors, not so. While two former Christ Crafts, a Richardsons (with 16 year living aboard), and most recently our '32 classic Gem are no longer under our stewardship, we are not completely on the hard. Airstream calls are motor home a "Land Yacht", so we'll go with that.

We still have the Boston Whaler!




Saturday, January 9, 2016

1932 Stimson Dreamboat GEM 25' For Sale

GEM IS BACK ON THE MARKET!

26' 1932 STIMSON DREAMBOAT 'GEM'

FOR SALE AT $19,500
Located at the Port of Edmonds, Washington

1932 Stimson Dreamboat, built by Stimson Marine in Seattle, now completely rebuilt with elegant classic lines of a by-gone-era. 

This 26’ raised bridge deck vessel was restored by her previous owner over a 15-year period. Materials used in the new construction include teak, Port Orford cedar, Alaskan cedar, vertical grain fir purple heart marine fir plywood, and okoume plywood. All plywood has been edge sealed with epoxy; plywood deck and below has been totally encapsulated with epoxy. Fasteners are silicon bronze and stainless steel. Brightwork is rubbed teak oil finish or Sikkens Cetol.

Decks and cabin top are tongue and grove cedar with canvas cover. Soles and hatches are ½” marine fir plywood with 5/8” teak planks. The pilot house has new teak drop windows, interior walls are new 5/8” Alaskan cedar over new vertical grain fir beams. The new (2014) entrance Dutch-door is matched mahogany.

This beautiful vessel has an enclosed pilot house, which includes the galley area and two helm seats. The galley has counter and sink with a Wallas diesel stovetop/cabin heater. Drawers and lockers are on both sides. Forward is the cabin with two upholstered single bunks with stowage under. There is a functioning skylight amidships. An enclosed head with Raritan manual pump toilet and sink with lockers under is in the fore peak. Aft of the enclosed helm is the cockpit with a cushioned bench and lockers on either side and under the bench. Throughout the boat all upholstery is new, 2014.

Power is a single Yanmar 3GMD 27hp FWC inboard with new motor mounts installed 2014. 24 gallons of diesel is carried in two powder coated black iron saddle tanks. She cruises between 5.5kts (1800rpm) and 6.5 kts (2500rpm; top end 7kts (3100rpm). The hull is garvel planked 1-1/8” Port Orford cedar fastened with copper boat nails, over steamed 1-3/16” x 1-3/16” white oak ribs.

Last surveyed October 2013 (available on request), the surveyor commented, GEM is a classic and well maintained motor yacht - - true to her original fittings. Robust, significant restorative and preservation activities has materially extended her service life and enhanced desirability. Quality joiner work is a rarity and consistent with historical themes. GEM is in vastly better condition than the vast majority of her sister ships.”

GEM was taken off the market a few months ago to address a persistent leak issue. This leak has now been corrected and the boat is again perfectly sound and back on the market.




FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CONTACT Mike Jackson at 206-909-3336, or comprose@earthlink.net

Specifications


Description: LOA 26' - Beam 7'11" - Draft 3'6". Raised bridge deck dreamboat. Enclosed salon helm.Built by Stimson Marine, Seattle WA.

Construction: Hull - garvel plank, Port Orford cedar 1-1/8" fastened with copper boat nails. Ribs - steamed white oak 1-3/16" x 1-3/16". Decks and cabin top - tongue & grove cedar covered with canvas. Entrance - new teak dutch door. Floors and hatches - 1/2" marine fir plywood with 5/8" teak planks. Pilot House - new teak drop-down windows, new 5/8" Alaska cedar interior walls, new vertical grain fir floor beams. Materials used in new construction - teak, Port Orford cedar, Alaska cedar, vertical grain fir, purple heart marine fir plywood, okoume plywood. All plywood has been edge sealed with epoxy in cabin and trunk cabin structure. Deck and below all plywood has been totally encapsulated with epoxy. Silicon bronze and stainless steel fasteners. System Three epoxy.

Deck Hardware: Chocks - Spartan Marine 4" G chocks bronze, brass base trim.
Stripes - aft, formed copper; forward, brass. Anchor roller - Port Townsend Foundry silicon bronze. Mooring bitt - New Found Metals bronze. Port lights - Perko polished Bronze. Deck fills - ABI bronze, Name & hailing port letters - Port Townsend Foundry bronze. Running lights - Perko brass on teak. Hand rails - ABI and Alaska Copper & Brass. Cockpit corner posts and bases - Alaska Copper & Brass. Interior cabin lights all brass. All other hardware solid brass.

Anchor & Rode: Bruce anchor 22lbs 30' of 3/4 chain and 150' of 1/2 octoplate. Medium sized Danforth anchor 20' of 5/16" chain and 60' of 3/8" octoplate.

Interior: Sleeps two in two single bunks. Hot and cold pressure water system with 6-gallon stainless steel 110v heat exchanged hot water tank. Raritan model PHII manual pump marine toilet. Dallas diesel stove top and cabin heater. Coolmitic 12v/110v refrigerator. Boss Audio MR 1620 stereo. All new (2014) upholstery and cushioning.

Mechanical & Electrical; Single Yanmar 3GMD 27hp FWC inboard. Two powder coated black iron fuel tanks, 12 gallons each. Cruises 1800rpm at 5.5 knots, 2500rpm at 6.5 knots, top end 3100rpm at 7 knots. One house and one start battery: Optima D-31M sealed blue top. 20amp C-charger with three battery capacity. Twenty-five foot 30amp shore power cord. Heart Interface power panel 12v and 110v.

Navigation & Communication: ICOM IC-M2A VHF. Garmin 188 GPS map/sounder (depth sounder non-operative). Dirigo 4" bezel brass/bronze gimbaled compass.

Additional Equipment: Dark blue full boat cover. Miscellaneous paints, stains, caulking, etc., etc.  

Friday, September 19, 2014

Seattle's Lake Union Seaplane Operating Area

Many years ago my wife and I took a ride over Seattle's Lake Union in a friend's open cockpit bi-plane, an authentic  replica of that flown in "Raiders of the Lost Ark". It was a fun adventure, complete with leather helmet, big goggles, and flowing white scarf. As we started our landing approach on the lake I wondered just how Jim would find a clear piece of water. It was simple. From our 3-dimensional advantage there was lots of space, and we landed and taxied to the wharf with no difficulties. 



But times have now changed. Earlier this Summer, at Kenmore Air's request, a landing zone was established on the lake. This rectangle, 2300’ long and 200’ wide, is located in the mid- to southern area of the lake. It's marked by eight buoys and six floating signs. It has been needed usually 2:00 PM Friday to 7:00 PM Sunday. You can see this charted on the  USCG Local Notice to Mariners, Week 32/14 (You'll need to scroll way down to  Enclosure 7) 

Actually, this is not something really new. Provision for such has been part of the Seattle City code for years, but never really needed, until now.

Talking recently with John Gowey, Director of Operations for Kenmore Air Seaplanes, John explained that this is really a safety issue. While, for the most part the floatplane pilots have little problem with the commercial and recreational power and sail vessels, it is the greatly increased number of kayaks and paddle-boards now on the lake that present the issue. They move slowly and sometimes quite randomly, making it hard for pilots to judge a clear landing space.

Now that the Summer is drawing to a close, John has asked the USCG and City to discontinue the zone after this coming weekend, September 20-21, with the probability of reinstating it again next year. A hoped for improvement would be to have strobe lights on the buoys that can be activated by a pilot landing or taking off.

Not only does this all apply to the commercial float planes, such as Kenmore Air and Seattle Seaplanes, but also for private and itinerant planes, many of whom have to land on Lake Union to access Seattle's only US Customs Inspection station, at the seaplane base at the southwest end of Lake Union.

In the air and on the water, be safe!


Wednesday, August 20, 2014

The Incredible Navigation Powers of Birds!

And some of us get lost simply cruising the Salish Sea?

An excerpt from The Thing With Feathers by Noah Strycker, as posted by today's DelancyPlace:

"Just before World War II, a Welsh ornithologist, Ronald Lockley, captured two Manx shearwaters, a type of streamlined seabird, on Wales's Skokholm Island, and flew with them by airplane to Venice to try an experiment. On arrival, Lockley walked to the nearest Italian beach and released his two birds. He wondered whether he'd ever see them again.

"Fourteen days later, one of them turned up back in its burrow on Skokholm Island, not long after Lockley himself had returned to his home there. He was shocked. The black-and-white, football-sized seabird had traveled more than 930 miles, averaging at least 65 miles per day over mountainous terrain entirely unfamiliar to its kind. Manx shearwaters of this subspecies spend nearly their entire lives at sea, dine exclusively on fish and other marine creatures, and don't normally inhabit the Mediterranean region at all; they reach land only to nest on rugged islands like Skokholm along the fringes of the wild northern Atlantic. A water route from Venice to Skokholm would have required a circuitous 3,700-mile passage southeast around the tip of Italy, westward past Spain and through the Strait of Gibraltar, and northward past Portugal and France, but this bird had apparently taken a more direct flight. Upon release, instead of heading for the open Mediterranean, it oriented in the opposite direction and disappeared inland, toward the Italian Alps -- and, eventually, arrived home in Wales. Just as though it had a map and a compass. ...

"After the Venice test, he looked for an opportunity to send one even farther afield. A couple of birds packed by steamship to America did not survive the trip in good enough health to return, but when the American clarinetist Rosario Mazzeo visited Skokholm after the war ended, Lockley seized another chance. He convinced his friend to bring two shearwaters home on the plane, to be released in Boston. 



"Mazzeo's own journey began with an overnight sleeper train from Wales to London. His little carton containing the pair of shearwaters, he later reported, 'caused no little wonder and merriment to the people in the adjoining rooms, who could not understand the origin of the mewing and cackling sounds which came from my room in the late evening.' The next morning he took a long flight to the United States with the birds tucked under his seat -- a trip that would be nearly impossible in today's security age. Only one survived. Mazzeo was met by an airline employee, who escorted him in an official truck to the easternmost edge of Logan International Airport, where they carefully opened the carton and watched its remaining occupant stretch its wings, flutter into the air, and glide away toward Boston Harbor. When the shearwater reached the shore, it abruptly turned east and knifed toward the open Atlantic, where 3,200 miles of ocean separated it from home.

"Twelve days, twelve hours, and thirty-one minutes later, Lockley found the shearwater, number AX6587, back in its burrow on Skokholm Island. The seabird had averaged 250 miles per day over the trackless Atlantic for nearly two weeks straight. Mazzeo received a triumphant telegram addressed to Symphony Hall in Boston but didn't get the full story until Lockley worked out the details. When the bird showed up at Skokholm so soon, Lockley was convinced that something had gone wrong; he figured Mazzeo had preemptively freed his shearwater in London. In fact, the friendly clarinetist had mailed a letter from Boston immediately after releasing his charge, but the bird outpaced even the postal service. Only when Mazzeo's letter arrived in Wales, a day after the shearwater, did Lockley realize the incredible trip the bird had taken from America back to its nest in Europe. ...

"To be able to find their way home from an unfamiliar place, birds must carry a figurative map and compass in their brains. The map tells them where they are, and the compass tells them which direction to fly, even when they are released with no frame of reference to their loft.

"Researchers have gone to great lengths to confirm that pigeons don't merely memorize their outward trip. In one experiment, birds were transported in sealed containers filled with purified air, mounted on tilting turntables between coils that varied the magnetic field, and exposed to loud noises and flashes of light, so that, unlike a blindfolded person in the backseat of a taxi who might remember the twists and turns of the journey, they had no external cues. In another study, pigeons were anesthetized and unconscious during the outward trip. They still made it home, proving the existence of an intrinsic map and compass system."

Tuesday, August 5, 2014

The Bremerton Wood Boat Show

Here's a great opportunity for boat lovers, especially admirers of wood boats, to view some wonderful classics. And for those living on the Kitsap Peninsula, this is in your back yard (or your back harbor, if you will), for the Bremerton Wood Boat Show takes place next week Friday through Sunday, August 15th - 17th at the Bremerton Marina. The show is sponsored by the Pacific Northwest and Canadian fleets of the Classic Yacht Association.

It's a not to miss opportunity to see, and come aboard, great classic workmanship and beautiful restorations.


A disclosure, Mike (editor of this blog) and June Jackson are new members of the Classic Yacht Association. They are the steward/owners of Gem, a 26' Stimpson Dream Boat built in 1932.

Sunday, July 20, 2014

New Rules for Big Older Vessels



If you're a classic boat aficionado with a boat built in 1974, or earlier, and your classic measures over 65 feet in length, then you had better pay attention to a new law, House Bill 2457, which took effect last month.


These new rules, initiated by the state Department of Natural Resources, and probably well supported by the U.S. Coast Guard, are a response to the issue of derelict vessels. According to the state's Derelict Vessel Removal Program figures published earlier this month in the Kitsap Sun, about $8.3 million has been spent removing hundreds of abandoned boats since 2003, with less than 1 percent of that cost being recovered from those boat owners.

So what's new? First of all, when you sell your boat your buyer will need to show proof of purchasing at least $300,000 in insurance coverage on the vessel. However, you are allowed to sell to a buyer who does not have this insurance, but beware. If, down the track your buyer didn't buy any coverage, or you didn't check (or can't prove checking) and your former boat becomes abandoned, a derelict or a "public hazard", then you, as well as your buyer, have a serious liability problem.

$300,000 coverage is not an unusual amount with most marine insurance policies, but simply getting any coverage is a challenge, especially with wooden boats, which leads to the second concern, the seaworthiness of the boat you hope to sell.

When you sell your big old boat, you need to provide your buyer with a marine survey report detailing the condition of the boat as well as it's estimated value. This could also be a U.S. Coast Guard Certificate of Inspection. If the report finds that the vessel is not seaworthy and that the anticipated cost of repairing is more than the value of  your boat, then your only option is to sell for scrap or else to a professional for restoring her.

Interestingly, existing owners are not, under the law, required to have insurance. However, your marina is required not only to be fully covered itself, but also to ensure that your vessel (unless you're only a guest) is properly insured. Most marinas are well on top of this, and have been for some years. I only know of one, in the Olympia area, where as recently as last October did not require tenants to prove that they had marine insurance.

While no doubt there are many commercial vessels that fall into this category, there are not so many recreational or private ones; the Classic Yacht Association's Pacific NW Fleet counts less than twenty on its roster. 

All in all this is good legislation, and prudent boat owners will see the necessity for it. If you're a boat owner in this category, or a marina operator, it would be well worth your while to check out the actual House Bill 2457.

Kitsap Sun photo is of the century-old tugboat Chickamauga which sank in Eagle Harbor, Bainbridge Island, October 2013. The vessel was not insured and with the state spending $55,000 to raise and remove her, and an unknown cost for clean up by the USCG for leakage and pollution.


Thursday, May 22, 2014

Edmond's Waterfront Festival





Don't miss this great annual event, the Edmond's Waterfront Festival which runs Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, May 30th, 31st, and June 1st at the Port of Edmond's marina.

The festival hours are:
Friday, 3:00 - 10:00 PM
Saturday, 11:00 AM - 10:00 PM
Sunday, 11:00 AM - 7:00 PM

The Port has again invited the Pacific Northwest Fleet of the Classic Yacht Association to be their guest at the festival, and many of these classic vessels will be moored at the guest docks, just in front of Anthony's Home Port restaurant. The MV GEM, our 1932 26' Stimson Dreamboat, will be making her début appearance!

The CYA vessels will be available for boarding on Saturday and Sunday, the 31st and 1st.

Sponsored by the Edmond's Rotary Club, the event includes performers, rides, arts and crafts, as well as many vendors. Admission to these events is $3, with children 12 and under free. The proceeds go to support programs and services in South Snohomish and North King County areas.

Don't miss this fun and eye-candy event! See you at the Festival. See you aboard.


Saturday, May 10, 2014

Mother's Day, Revisited

Sometime during the late 50's ors early 60's, my Canadian born mother, then living in California, applied for US citizenship. All went smoothly and she was well on her way until it came time to actually take the oath. As she heard it read, she balked, for the oath contained a clause that one would bear arms in defence of the country. Being a pacifist, she would go not further, and her citizenship efforts came to a halt. It was a few years later when this clause was removed, that the same judge contacted her, told her of the change,  offered to administer the oath of citizenship, and she became a citizen of the United States of America. 

The origin of Mother's Day actually started after the Civil War by women who had lost their sons in that war and as a protest of the carnage of war. In 1870 a Boston poet and suffragette, Julia Ward Howe, published a proclamation:

Arise, then, women of this day! Arise all women who have hearts, whether our baptism be that of water or of fears!

Say firmly: "We will not have great questions decided by irrelevant agencies. Our husbands shall not come to us, reeking of carnage, for caresses and applause. Our sons shall not be taken from us  to unlearn all that we have been able to teach them of charity, mercy and patience.

We women of one country will be too tender of those of another country to allow our sons to be trained to injure theirs. From the bosom on a devastated earth a voice goes up with our own. It says "Disarm, Disarm! The sword of murder is not the balance of justice."

Blood does not wipe out our dishonor nor violence indicate possession. As men have often forsaken the plow and the anvil at the summons of war, let women now leave all that may be left of home for a great and earnest day of counsel. Let them meet first, as women, to bewail and commemorate the dead.

Let them then solemnly take counsel with each other as to the means whereby the great human family can live in peace, each bearing after their own time the sacred impress, not of Caesar, but of God.

In the name of womanhood and of humanity, I earnestly ask that a general congress of women without limit of nationality may be appointed and held in some place deemed more convent and at the earliest period consistent with its objects, to promote the alliance of the different nationalities, the amicable settlement of international questions, the great and general interests of peace.

This year, May 11th, 2014, marks the 100th anniversary of the official national designation of Mother's Day. So send your mothers, grandmothers, aunts, and mother-friends some love, and remember how all this started.

Although she died in 1983 at the age of 75,  I still remember my courageous mother, Ivy Christine Jackson!

Picture above of my parents is
 by a street photographer
in San Francisco, c. 1943


Thursday, March 6, 2014

Velkommen Til The Port of Poulsbo



Cruise west across Puget Sound, through Port Madison and Agate Passage, or from the south up Port  Orchard, past the US Navy's underwater test facility (be sure to go very slow passing!), missing the tall concrete piling, you'll now be in Dog Fish Bay, known now as Liberty Bay. A cruise worth making!

Liberty Bay is a quiet, tranquil bay with three marinas. The first you come to is the Liberty Bay Marina, a private marina which is simply a wonderful, friendly and very well managed and maintained facility, one of the best I've seen anywhere on Puget Sound. We moored there for a few years until we sold our Richardson this past Fall.


Next in is the Poulsbo Yacht Club marina, and then comes the Port of Poulsbo and there it is, the City of Poulsbo. For many the port is the front porch (gangway?) to the City of Poulsbo. Lots of well kept guest docks, although 40' is their maximum slip size which means you have to stern-in if you're 47' as we were. Of course, with luck, you might snag an end tie at one of the two guest docks. The port recently lost a special election to expand the size of the its district to include areas of Liberty Bay beyond just the city limits, a move that would have increased the Port's taxing base. While there was opposition, strong outside the city limits, I can't help but think such an increase would actually have  benefited the whole area.

Those of us who live on the north end of Kitsap County are justly proud of our marinas, the Port of Kingston (subject of another posting) being another one. Poulsbo, with its authentic Scandinavian-with-a-maritime DNA is delightful. We've come to know many in the area: Hal and Helen Hoover, retired educators and much, much more, who have stories galore of the area; Jim Metteer, master boatwright and boat builder (whose workshop is a boater's dream), and Leigh Metteer, artist extraordinaire and organizer of the annual Arts in the Woods tour; to name but a few.

Sounding like a chamber of commerce pitch? Well, we simply like the place and thought it worth touting. Central Market, Sluy's Bakery, the many shops along Viking Ave, JJ's Fish House, all make it well worth a visit. So . . . . 

Velkommen til Poulsbo!

To get on the Port's mailing list email manager@portofpoulsbo.com