The anchoring field was busy in June |
Greece:
2016 began with the usual boatyard chores in Aktio - two weeks of hard slog, but who can deny it's a pleasant life. WJ3 was treated to a professional polishing, the shower sump was unblocked, the anchor line replaced, rusty bicycles serviced and bow thruster batteries sorted out (they had not charged in our absence). We needed an electrician to sort the battery issue out. Finally, WJ3’s rigging was inspected – an insurance requirement.
Aktio in Preveza - a great place to haul your boat |
Within a day of splashing, we moved into the Preveza Marina and so our precious Visa Days ticked by whilst we attended to:
Generator Coolant Pump. It was leaking and I wasn't sure how to remove it as it's part of the engine, not a separate item like the saltwater pump. I had a local German mechanic look at it (we’d used him before) and, on inspection, he pronounced it dead. It was badly corroded and needed to be replaced with a new one. This was at the start of the season at Preveza, Greece, and so we had to wait three weeks for the replacement part to be quoted, ordered and then delivered – from the US of course. It took about an hour to put the pump on. The generator ran fine thereafter. I won’t mention the cost except to say that it was enormous, even the mechanic was embarrassed to tell us.
Time for a last swim at Jumping Fish Bay |
Refrigerator Re-gassing. Ahhh, yet again we had to have the refrigerator motor/evaporator re-gassed with the unusual hard-to-locate gas required for our Grunert 110 volt fridge. Our reliable mechanic, although licenced, was not available so we contacted a local guy recommended by the marina. Short story is he tried to rip us off by quoting and then trying to raise the price on the day. Also, he tried to convince us to do more modifications than necessary. Anyway, the fridge worked once it was re-gassed. This little episode, apart from expensive now annual re-gassings, prompted much discussion on “a better way” to refrigerate given that our little WAECO battler was working brilliantly and running diligently on 12 volt sunshine power.
AIS. We had purchased a GME AIST 120 and I fitted it next to the chart table, connected to our laptop via the program CD that came with it, and yet another antenna was fitted to the pushpit. It works okey but we have since passed a number of ships at quite close range and there has been no signal received from them at all. I certainly would not rely on it.
There's more to follow....
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