Terceira

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The third island from Portugal, and such named “Third” in Portuguese is gorgeous! One of the splendors is to look out over the “Five Peaks” of ancient volcanoes as well as the giant valley created by lava flows long since past.  

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The island has almost entirely been converted into farm plots which form a grid structure on the surface of this land. Unlike in most countries, where farm land is flat and any hills are demolished or terraced, the Azorians seem to just build over the land as it is before them. 

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It almost looks like a representation of spacetime and the effect mass has on it. But instead of massive objects stretching the fabric down, here the stretch is up! Hills are simply part of the landscape and the side of a mountain is just as fine a surface for pasture as the flat portions in the valley. 

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The view from this lookout is breathtaking! You stand high up on an old volcano, looking down at the remnants of the other volcanoes responsible for forming this land eons ago, and yet it is all stretched out before you, within view but out of grasp.

Azores Treasure Box

At first, I thought it was something done only on Terceira, Azores, Portugal; and then I saw it again when we went to Flores, Azores, Portugal. 

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When the bill comes for your dinner, it’s not in a folded black binder with a credit card holder. No, it comes in a nifty box!

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Inside the box is the bill, and when you pay, you simply place your cash in the box. Your change will be brought back to you in the box. 

The style of box changes with each restaurant, but the concept remains and we find it to be very cute! 

The Power of Mother’s

Mother’s Metal Polish, that is! 

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Our Diesel Heater has had a rough time lately. The metal had become discolored from the high heat of the flame, but then the Atlantic Crossing brought many boarding waves over the deck, and the small leak around the chimney/deck fitting let in saltwater. Lots and lots of saltwater, which led to the gradual degradation of the stovepipe.

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Some elbow grease with a wire brush managed to take all the rust off the stovepipe, and then some vigorous rubbing with Mother’s Metal Polish brought the shine right back to the pipe.

Mother’s can be found on Amazon: https://amzn.to/2DSWqE7 

When you use Mother’s the paste will go on with a pale creamy color, then it will turn black as the surface of the metal is smoothed. After a while, the remaining darkened residue can be removed with a clean rag to reveal the amazing shine of the metal that once was hiding beneath the corrosion. 

Building Your Own Tools

We had some serious rot in our bulkhead. The bottom portion of the bulkhead rotted away from years of abutting the shower. 

The rot was so extensive that it converted all the plywood into mulch. Not decayed wood or soft wood, but mulch. Mulch! 

Since I felt more like a gardener getting the mulch out of the hole in the wall, I figured it would be best to use gardening tools for such a project. 

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I needed something that was like a robust spoon, and something that would scrape the rotting wood off the fiberglass hull. I picked up this cheap metal fork-like instrument at a local dollar store, which was easily bent into the ideal shape for the job.

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Large channel locks provided the leverage to easily bend the cheap metal into more of a scraper, and a little more bending would make it a robust and scratchy spoon! 

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This nasty gizmo worked well to scrape up rotten mulch from the hole in the wall, as well as pull the mulch out of the hole so that it could be dumped into a dumpster!

Getting rotten wood out of your boat is a great way to inspire creativity in tool design. Yay! 

Tearing Out the Head

The head in Wisdom is rather old and in need of some updating. The shower is tiny, and the cabinets are inaccessible when on starboard tack. The space under the sink is completely disgusting and unusable. So, after living aboard for 6 years and cruising for 1.5 years, we decided it was time!

This is the original head in the yacht. The cabinets are pretty with mirror doors that you can’t actually see into, and the sole is so high up that you can’t stand up if you are tall (as your head will bump). 

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Hidden behind the cabinet are the chainplates, which were hidden away and forgotten for decades. There was a tiny access hatch that I would use for inspection, but when salt water got onto them, corrosion began and I knew I needed to do more than just “look” at them through a tiny hole.

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The plan is to tear out the head and build new cabinets that will open fore/aft, allowing us to open them on either tack. A large usable mirror will be mounted on a wall, and the chainplates will remain exposed, probably painted with a contrasting color to create an “architectural bathroom” appearance; something with a bit of an industrial feel to it.

The head refit began as something of elective origin, something we wanted to do simply to make better use fo the space present in there, but shortly into the tear down, we discovered that rot had taken hold in much of the wood of the head. It is a good thing we decided to start the project because we caught the decay while it was still relatively early and had not gotten too advanced to be patched. 

Trust me, more on the rot will soon follow.