Friday 10 June 2016

Check lists for taking sea and preparing for landing

Experience has taught me that a good checklist is a real security tool for ensuring safety of the manoeuvres associated with taking sea and landing. Find below the first draft of the first two I am currently developing:

Area
Check list before taking sea
Kitchen

Lock all drawers
Put dishes in cupboards
Close the dish dryer
Cover the cooker with board
Carré

Check and close all roof windows
Secure the oil lamp
Bedrooms

Lock all doors and drawers
Close the roof window
Chart desk

Switch on “Dérive” and “Propulseur” on the central electrical board
Switch on “Centrale navigation”, “VHF” and “HIFI”
Close all 220v switches
Bathrooms
Lock doors and drawers
Close roof window
Drain the shower
Close toilet lid
Deck
Check that no lines are falling in water
Remove electricity line
Remove all covers, including roof console
Get the winch cranks
Instruments
Switch on the pilot on the stair console
Switch on the chart plotter on the helm console
Switch on the bow thruster on the helm by pressing the two ‘on’ buttons
Check the position of the centre board on the chart plotter, and test the centre board commands
Start engine
Press the ‘on’ button on the Volvo panel on the helm.
Wait until the sound signal
Start the engine, thrust on low
Listen for the water getting out through the exhaust
Prepare sails
Open the lazy bag
Remove the main sails straps
Free the jibs sheets

Area
Check list for preparing landing
Sails

Furl the jib
Secure jib sheets
Strap main sail and close lazy bag
Deck

Remove the bowsprit
Install fenders
Prepare mooring lines, front, middle and back
Instruments

Switch on the bow thruster on the helm by pressing the two ‘on’ buttons
Check the position of the centre board on the chart plotter, and test the centre board commands
Engine
Press the ‘on’ button on the Volvo panel on the helm.
Wait until the sound signal
Start the engine, thrust on low
Listen for the water getting out through the exhaust

Wednesday 8 June 2016

Cruising the outer archipelago, 6 June

On Monday 6, we get back to Stockholm through the outer archipelago. 2 nautic miles north-east of Huvudskär, you can find a typical 'skier' of the archipelago. A skär, or skerry in English, is a small rocky island without trees, and this one has a small stuga on it, the traditional Swedish summer house, which may have been a fisherman summer outpost in previous centuries.
The Island of Skären, 2 nm North-East of Huvudskärn


Monday 6 June 2016

Huvudskär, 5 & 6 June 2016

Huvudskär is one of our preferred destination in the archipelago. It is therefore quite often the case that we start the season by a weekend in Huvudskär. Huvud skär means the 'head' 'rock', of the Skärgården, the 'garden' of 'rocks'. This is because it is the first you come along when sailing from the South. Early June, it is desert.

Belisama in Huvudskär on sunset, 5 June 2016