Cool weather cruising... last trip - Nov. 4 at Williams Is. TN River |
I made a great trip to Fontana Lake with Roya. We hiked from Eagle Creek up to the Shuckstack tower on the Lost Cove trail, the steepest trail in the Smokies. It seemed really hard. Beautiful weather.
Fontana Lake Sunset |
Forney Creek Trail - GSMNP |
Click on photo to get the full view --- View from Shuckstack Tower - Appalachian Trail |
Trailering |
After the Fontana Lake trip, I took 3 trips alone up the TN River through the beautiful TN River Gorge to Chattanooga. I spent one night on the river each time. I get really decent internet through my phone on Verizon so I signed up for an unlimited data plan so I could watch movies and stream TV on my laptop. Makes cruising pretty nice.
I took my bike each time and spent a fair amount of time in Chattanooga, meeting up with friend Bill once for a nice pub dinner and a beer. Bill also gave me a tour of his ceramics plant. I also stopped at the Raccoon mountain dock and biked to the top of the mountain. Another stop I took was Williams Island... a large river island near Chattanooga that has campsites and a working farm with cattle. I mountain biked around the island.
At the Raccoon Mountain dock - TN River Gorge |
Biking at Raccoon Mtn. |
Morning in the TN River Gorge |
The above photo was taken at Williams Is. dock in Chattanooga. It's a large island, 450 acres. This article on Williams Island mentions the history and the farm. As you can see, that last trip was cool weather so I had the canvas up and the heat on much of the time. I don't mind cool weather cruising, actually prefer it to hot weather cruising. My cabin is pretty cozy and I have a DC electric blanket that works quite well to take any chill off.
For the first time, I found a place to dock on the north shore of Chattanooga. It's an old landing, a grassy bank with a metal rail to tie up to on an abandoned lot. You can see in the photo if you look hard my boat tied up to the north shore. The north shore is pretty awesome, it has a great number of shops and restaurants, all in a very close proximity including Whole Foods.
North Shore of Chattanooga |
I've been very focused on training in the spring and have ignored (but not neglected) the boat for most of the spring and summer. I can see right now if I get more into boating, I could be spending some money on the boat. It sorely needs the seats redone, and it hasn't been buffed and waxed in forever. The back canvas could use some repair as well. The exhaust manifolds and risers is a major engine job - actually pretty simple in theory - that I'm going to attempt myself in the spring. I want to learn to do more maintenance by myself, including replacing the lower unit water pump when needed. Youtube instruction videos are a game changer. The trailer bearings need to be replaced and I even priced a new trailer because it would be nice to have electric trailer brakes and my trailer brakes haven't worked in yrs. To get my present trailer fixed with new bearings and new electric brakes if I paid someone to do it could cost $1500. I could sell that trailer for $1000 and buy a brand new one for $5000 with all the bells and whistles that would be safe and last me the rest of my life.
I'd like to also build a boat shelter for it in Sewanee, a barn / workshop and on a concrete slab. So... the engine work, a new trailer, new interior/ seats... that's close to $10k right there. A slab and a simple roof (like this) would cost $10k. I'll probably put priority on the mechanical and perhaps the pole barn. I'll repair my trailer bearings, probably not worry about the brakes. The trailer bearings have never failed, they just leak grease but I keep them packed. They are the original bearings over 30 yrs old so I don't want to wait for trouble. I think I'd like to do this myself because if I ever have a bearing issue on the road, I want to know how to repair it. I'd save 5 to $600 if I did it myself. I'd save over $1000 in doing the manifolds.
One of the reasons I've been reluctant to boat in mid summer is the southern heat. But, I've even thought of rigging a compact a/c unit for the cabin (like this) coupled with a portable generator (like this) that I could build a mount above the swim platform.
Anyway, don't want to get carried away with spending on the boat but it may prove to be a fun hobby, including the learning the maintenance. Truly amazing that I've had this boat 27 years.
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