Life Aboard

Bronze vs. Stainless Steel, The Solution!

Bronze is just as strong and a little softer than stainless steel. This means that components can be manufactured to the same specifications in either material which also means that they are interchangeable on the same boat. Their working loads and breaking loads for the same size of component will be close enough that they are still interchangeable from a structural standpoint as well. What’s the difference? Softness.

Isn’t softness kind of a downside? While bronze isn’t soft enough to cushion the blow when you stub your toe on a component on your deck, it is soft enough to avoid cracking when overloaded. Under normal loads, both materials operate on your yacht in an identical fashion. The difference only emerges when the two materials are pushed to their breaking point.

Stainless Steel is harder than Bronze, and this means that it will hold its shape all the way until the end when it cracks. Once the metal has cracked, it looses all of its strength and the component will fail in a catastrophic manner! Bronze on the other hand is softer than Stainless Steel and as a result will not crack and fail all at once. Instead, it will deform, bend, or stretch a little. It is now weaker but it is still functioning at a reduced capacity. This means that when a bronze component is pushed to its breaking point, it will not fail in a catastrophic manner, but instead will deform and wait to be replaced while still performing its duties as a necessary component of the yacht.

If bronze is so great, why do new yachts all use Stainless Steel? Well, that is more of an aesthetic choice. Since the components are interchangeable on a yacht, there is no real difference in having a yacht finished with Stainless Steel components compared to one finished with Bronze components. This means that when a yacht is new, either material works just the same. Does the term “Brightwork” ring a bell? Well it should because that is where the difference comes into play.

Brightwork on a yacht are all the components that shine and are pretty, but as the name implies, it also takes work. Lots of work! Brightwork refers to wood that is then oiled and varnished, and it also refers to all the shiny bits of metal on the yacht. Wood can be left natural, where it will dry and turn grey which is infinitely less work to maintain than the same piece of wood maintained “bright” by someone who has to constantly oil and varnish that piece of wood. Let’s be honest, it looks pretty but it’s so much work to maintain! Bronze, if left natural, will develop a patina on its surface. It will not corrode and this patina causes no structural damage to the metal, but it is dull and dark looking. By contrast, you could spend the rest of your days polishing all the bronze on your yacht to keep it bright! As you can see, brightwork is a lot of work!

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Now to the business side of things. When someone is selling a yacht, the person offering to pay a lot of hard earned money for this yacht is literally handing over a lot of money for “something” in exchange. That “something” is going to be a lot of work (and there is no way around this part, boats are work!) and the more brightwork on the boat, the more that new owner is going to have to work to maintain its level of beauty! An astute owner knows what they are getting into and is prepared for that level of dedication to keep brightwork bright, but an uninformed buyer just knows that “it’s a lot of work” and might get frightened away by the unknown amount of work ahead of them!

Yacht manufacturers have adapted to make selling a new yacht easier. Just as bow and stern thrusters allow yacht brokers to say “it’s so easy, just like parking a car” which then allows them to sell an even bigger boat (that is way more expensive) to someone with no experience at all. By reducing the amount of brightwork on a yacht, they can then reduce the amount of apprehension about maintaining all of that brightwork from potential buyers! This is why all the wood trim has been removed and yacht decks are completely covered in slick gelcoat!

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But there is one problem with removing all the brightwork; people like shiny things! If you take all the brightwork away, there won’t be anything shiny on the boat and you won’t catch the eye of potential buyers. So, the metal bits have remained on the boat, but instead of being labor intensive bronze components, they have been replaced by polished or electroplated stainless steel components. Why? Maintenance Free*!

Why the “*”? Because nothing is Maintenance Free on a boat. How often do you see pitted stainless steel components or rust streaks on the boat from a part that was supposed to be shiny? Stainless Steel is “Stain-Less” not “Rust-Proof” and if neglected in a salt water environment, it will corrode! But the important part is it happens slowly and over many years, allowing the owner to blame time and not lack of work for the deterioration of the boat.

So stainless steel replaced bronze on yachts simply because it looks prettier longer and that makes it easier to sell the boat in the first place! So many aspects of yachts have switched from reliability to showmanship because the manufacturers are more concerned with selling the boat instead of the boat performing as a sailboat. Think about what else has changed on a yacht:

  • Cockpits got larger to allow more comfort while “hosting a party in the cockpit” while a true seaworthy cockpit is small to keep you safe and minimize the amount of water weight it will hold when the boat is swamped by a boarding wave.

  • Salons now have huge “windows” to let it a lot of natural light while a large portlight is a dangerous feature on a bluewater yacht. Imagine if the “window” breaks, now you have a massive hole in your boat where waves can pour through to sink your yacht.

  • All the interior joinery is crisp and sharp, like something from an IKEA catalog while in a seaway, such sharp edges pose a serious risk to your health. Imagine the boat being tossed around in a large sea way. As the yacht is picked up and tossed into the next wave, you are picked up and tossed right onto that sharp edge! Yacht interiors need to have rounded edges on all surfaces. Anything sharp or pointy can seriously injure you if you fall on it, while having a blunted edge makes it hurt a lot less (you will still get covered in bruises, it happens). The problem is rounded edges are not the modern design aesthetic in fancy house magazines, and fancy house magazine interiors is what they want in their fancy new yacht.

As always, when the mass market craves something, astute business people will find a way to provide it to them! Since everyone wants stainless steel for every part of their yacht, stainless steel is all you will find for sale everywhere you look. When you know better, you will become very frustrated because finding quality parts in bronze becomes an almost impossible journey to embark on.

Until now! 8 years after I bought my boat and resorting so far as to cast my own bronze components, I finally found a supplier who sells everything you can readily find in stainless steel, but in bronze! They offer components in both Silicon Bronze and Manganese Bronze, and in every size imaginable! The only catch is they are literally on the other side of the world if you live in North America or Europe.

Classic Boat Supplies is located in Australia, but they do ship internationally. This means that you will still have to wait to receive your bronze components. You can’t just drive over to West Marine and pick it up like you can anything made out of Stainless Steel! While shipping and waiting times are an issue, the important part is that you can actually get your bronze components and you don’t have to go on a wild goose chase with no end in sight!

Dental Health While Traveling

As a dentist, I know how important it is to take care of your teeth, and also how easy it is!

The best thing you can do for your teeth to prevent any issues while at sea on a long voyage is to brush your teeth! When you are sailing, time drags out and you have long periods with nothing to do. This is excellent because this is when you can brush your teeth like a dentist.

Everyone knows that you should brush twice a day for two minutes each time. That’s nice but it doesn’t really work. You need to brush twice a day and you need to do it well! The average American brushes for about 7-15 seconds! Now that you are at sea, you have plenty of time to do it right.
The first thing you need to do is stop brushing your teeth and start cleaning each tooth individually.
The toothbrush is not a chore machine that you pass over your teeth, it is a tool to help you clean your teeth.
Focus on cleaning each and every tooth. Start on the bottom back right and clean the last molar, now after it’s spotless, scoot forward one tooth and clean the molar in front of that, next the premolar, and on and on. When you finally finish the bottom arch, it’s time to clean the top arch.
How do you know when your teeth are clean? This one is very easy, you just need to use a very sensitive and agile appendage to feel your teeth: Your tongue!

Rub your tongue over each tooth. If you feel anything rough or sticky or anything other than slippery smooth, brush it a little more and recheck.
You have 32 teeth if you never had your wisdom teeth removed, and if you did, then you only have 28 teeth to clean. This whole process takes me about 4-5 minutes to carry out and my teeth are spotless at the end of it all.
In all honesty, this is fine on calm days when the time drags on forever; but on days when the wind will not relinquish you from the whips of furry brushing is the last thing on your mind.
When we have found ourselves hove to in a gale for days or just in terrible seas, brushing my teeth is the last thing on my mind. If brushing occurs that day, it will be fast and sloppy because the last thing I want to do is fall over with a tooth brush in my mouth! I honestly forget to brush unless Maddie reminds me of it. Once the weather calms down and we switch out our storm sails for our working sails, I get to relaxing in the cockpit and my tongue will notice how fuzzy my teeth feel!
And so begins the ritual of brushing my teeth in calm weather.
Fun tip: if you pull up a bucket load of clean ocean salt water, use that to brush your teeth. The salt in the water will do wonders for your gums and your mouth will feel great! I honestly prefer brushing my teeth with ocean water over using regular fresh water or even rain water!

A toothbrush is a wonderful tool to clean your teeth but it won’t repair neglect or decay! Always visit with your dentist and have them take X-rays before you set out in a long voyage. If your insurance won’t cover X-rays because of frequency limitations, pay it out of pocket! Catching a problem and fixing it while on shore is so much better than having an issue flare up while at sea and far from a dentist.

Sailing to Morocco

Ever dreamed of crossing an ocean? How about sailing to Africa!
after making our way across the Atlantic, we find ourselves at the doorstep of a new continent to visit on our cruising adventure.

Private French WiFi

I stand corrected. In France, free and public WiFi at restaurants or bars (our usual uploading places of choice) have incredibly slow WiFi.
In Spain or Gibraltar, we could upload a video in about 30 minutes while eating at a restaurant. In France, the same upload would say something like “1,522 Hours Remaining”! It was torture.
as a result, we began to form a backlog of videos to upload until Maddie’s parents came to visit.
They rented an Air B’n’B and this rentable personal home in Paris had private WiFi. I frequently run speed tests at places to see if it is worth the effort to do an upload and the fastest I had ever seen at a restaurant (in Gibraltar) was 98Mbps. At this house, the upload speed was 168Mbps! We were able to upload 10 full episodes in only 4 hours.
This is most excellent because every Sunday, when the episode goes public, we release the next episode to our Patrons. We had run out of episodes for them as we couldn’t get our work uploaded, but now we have!

Perspectives on Cruising

Before I had a boat, my dream was to go cruising.

When I bought Wisdom and moved aboard, my dream was still to go cruising.

Then I met other cruisers, and the ones who confused me the most were those that were selling their boat and moving ashore. They were done with boat life and wanted to be a dirt dweller. My dream was to go cruising and I could not comprehend this decision to end happiness.

Then one lucky day in 2015, Maddie and I went cruising for just 1 month. We sailed down the Chesapeake Bay and out into the Atlantic Ocean. We sailed about 1000 nautical miles, experienced many beautiful sights on the water and had a few adventures ashore in distant places.

When we returned to the marina in Baltimore, Maryland, I kept looking at pictures from our trip. That really was the happiest I had ever been in my life and I wanted to return to that state of being so badly! Thankfully, Maddie felt a similar way and gave to OK to a 9 month voyage that would start in 2017.

July 10, 2017, we set sail for a 9 month cruise. Soon, Maddie extended the end date to a full year cruise. At the end of the year, Maddie OK’d another year, making this 9 month cruise a 2 year cruise. Life was good!

We are now 3 years into our voyage and in the Mediterranean Sea! We have sailed about 17,000 nautical miles and are very very far from our starting port.

We are nearing our turn around point, being the point where we stop sailing away from our end point and begin to sail back to it. Turn around point will be Italy, because both of us independently wanted to sail to Italy!

Once we reach Italy, we will begin sailing back to the United States where we will find a new port to settle down in, and eventually buy some dirt to live on.

This turn around point is especially important to me because Maddie and I talked about where we would turn around when we were in Gibraltar. The reason this is special to me is around the same time, I was reading “Mediterranean Adventures” by the Pardey’s and they had a similar discussion in the Mediterranean.

They were cruising in their first boat and had just received the plans to their second boat. They were deciding on how they would sail to California where they would then begin construction on their new boat. Should they sail back out the Strait of Gibraltar and cross the Atlantic or keep going and cross the Pacific? They ended up going the Pacific route and completing their first circumnavigation. We chose to return through the Atlantic.

So far, every mile we have sailed has been a mile towards a new destination. Once we decided on the turn around point, every mile became a futile mile that we will have to sail back again. Once we reach our turn around point, every mile will be a mile closer to the end (even though the end is thousands of miles away).

This feeling that we are sailing towards the end of our voyage is an odd thought as this has been my dream for over a decade and our life for the past several years! To think that we are going to come back and start a new chapter in our lives feels odd and foreign. Fear of the unknown I suppose.

This frustration with perspective also makes me wonder about the perspective of someone who has completed a circumnavigation. In essence, they are done. They went around the world and probably spent close to a decade doing it. Now they are back where they started and the thought of sailing anywhere is either a repeat or a chore. I have met a few circumnaviagators and they seem frustrated that they have sailed it all and there is no where else for them to sail! Yes, you can sail to a new sea that you skipped while circling the globe, but it’s still frustrating in their mind. They can never leave this planet on a sailboat and they are stuck.

The world is a big place, but our minds can make it feel like a cage if we let it.