John Not too many magic solutions out there (well, paying somebody else to do it is one). Boaters with teak have made a religion out of varnish work. Probably the best book on the subject is Brightwork-Finishing by Rebecca Wittmann. As others have said - it's all in the prep plus 12-20 coats of varnish. http://www.amazon.com/Brightwork-Finishing-Rebecca-J-Wittman/dp/0877429847
Forrest Paddock Cape Dory 30 Houston, TX --- On Fri, 12/25/09, John Jennings <[email protected]> wrote: From: John Jennings <[email protected]> Subject: Re: [IC27A] Bright Work To: [email protected] Date: Friday, December 25, 2009, 4:13 PM Well, you can tell the type of Christmas I am enjoying -- sitting around thinking about sailing. This spring will be time to take care of some neglected outside bright work. First I need to strip the old stuff off. I need suggestions and recommendation of the best way (inexpensive, little manual labor, and tidy) to do it. I think removing the wood work is not an option. What is the magic solution? John Jennings Barjoh 83 C27, #5267 Middle River, MD Dec 25, 2009 01:52:10 AM, ic...@yahoogroups. com wrote: Jack, thanks much for the anch. tips. season greetings//leroy --- In ic...@yahoogroups. com, "Jack Brennan" wrote: > > There's No Name Harbor at the southern end of Key Biscayne, near the > Cape Florida lighthouse. It's in the state park, so you can take walks. The > harbor is a good place to swim and/or do the boat bottom in warmer weather. > It costs about $10 to anchor. You can't tie up at the dock at night. > There's an anchorage near the entrance to Crandon Park marina that is > also a popular swimming place. Only good for east/southeast winds. Don't > bother with Crandon Park. There are better places to stay. > A little farther south, you can go to Boca Chita Key just to the north > of Elliott Key. It has a keyhole harbor. It's an uninhabited island that's > part of the national park. Very cool place to visit, as long as the > mosquitoes aren't out. The park service won't spray, saying skeeters are > part of the natural experience. Get into your cabin and put up the screens > before dusk. It's deserted during the week and crowded on the weekends, to > the point where you can't find space at the dock > Of course, there's Elliott Key. Elliott Key is also uninhabited. You > can anchor near the dock on the north end of the island. The dock itself is > just under four feet of depth at low tide. It's usually a party place on the > weekends. Same applies with mosquitoes. The marina at the south end of the > island has a channel with about 2 ½ feet of depth, unless the park service > has dredged it (unlikely). > You can also pick up a mooring at the new Dinner Key mooring field that > Miami just opened. There is dinghy access to the Grove, which is great for > those who like to party. > > > -----Original Message----- > From: ic...@yahoogroups. com [mailto:ic...@yahoogroups. com]On Behalf Of Leroy > Sent: Thursday, December 24, 2009 5:37 PM > To: ic...@yahoogroups. com > Subject: [IC27A] Re: Windsong II > > > nice vessel Paul. Do u sail in Biscayne bay? I have a 1983 tall rig ( see > pics of " MIRIAM TWO ", which i keep in Dania. Planning on a week of sailing > in the bay in early january. Have u ever anchored overnight in the bay ? and > where . tks// leroy > --- In ic...@yahoogroups. com , "PAUL" > wrote: > > > > Well, Merry Christmas everyone. I'm pumped! I will pick up my new (well, > 1985 model) C27 and sail her home this week. Here's a link to my web album > of photos: http://picasaweb. google.com/ jumbonav/ WindsongII > > > > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
