Apologies again for fading in and out so much more lengthily than on previous occasions. First there was the boat moving, and now there is the boat painting. All of which requires all electronic devices to be kept in a safe (inaccessible) place so they won't accidentally be dropped in the canal/river.
(We've already lost one phone, one powerbank and one pair of prescription glasses to the water, as they fell out of pockets and even off my face. Hopefully that lesson is learned.)
Catching up from the last post, we waited for three days for an engineer to come out to us. He was like 'well, I can do you a quick fix which is good enough to get you to a boatyard, but it won't be good enough for permanent use.' So he did that and we thanked him.
Then we cancelled the painting dock that we had been heading for, that we would not now be able to reach in time. They said 'Oh, I'm sorry to hear your news, but you can get it fixed and then re-book, no problem.' Which was great.
So we turned the boat around (again, very blessed to have had this happen within winching distance of a turning hole,) and headed a day's journey back upstream to Fox's boatyard in March. They took us in, said, "Yeah, we can fix that tomorrow," and then did fix it by 9.30 am the very next day.
We thought 'hurray! We'll re-book the painting dock and we can get there by Monday next week, with one week of DH's pre-booked holiday still to go and not too much time lost.'
So we phoned the painting dock to re-book and they said, 'Oh yeah, we're not doing that any more. Sorry.'
By this time we'd been travelling 6 hours a day for a month to try to get to this damn dock (a place which was covered so you could paint in the rain, there was access to both sides of the boat at once, and electricity on tap for power tools.) We had been two days travel away from the plan going like clockwork, and now we had nothing, and had moved the boat all this way for nothing.
We loudly expressed this to anyone who was listening. Which happened to be the guys from Fox's boatyard who had been fixing the tiller. They said "We have a painting dock, you know. I mean it doesn't have cover, so you'll have to stop when it rains, and you have to turn the boat around to get to the other side, but..."
We said, "Taken! Thanks!"
And now we are moored up at Fox's boatyard for the month, and we've spent a full week getting the paint off the roof. It is so thick it had to be scraped off with an angle-grinder, (while working in 30C heat) and it really needs a final sanding before we start to put paint back on it.
But we're due thunderstorms today, so last night we put a coat of rust-proofing oil on it, which should be dry by now, and we'll pick up with sanding the gutters and then the sides tomorrow when the weather should allow it again.
Amazing progress, considering the pit of despair we were in on Friday, and massive recommendations for Fox's boatyard and marina in March, who continue to be immensely friendly and helpful.
no subject
Date: 2023-07-14 11:37 am (UTC)From:no subject
Date: 2023-07-14 01:21 pm (UTC)From:Indeed! It has pushed me to start a facebook page with some examples of my work, though. And I'm going to get some business cards and see if I can drop a stack off at the marina in case anyone asks at the reception. So it's given me the impetus I needed to actually do the things I need to do to get commissions in future. (But it's still annoying even though I was half expecting it!)
no subject
Date: 2023-07-15 07:25 pm (UTC)From: