Following
smoke and heat damage to Envoy caused by fire on a nearby boat one of
our priorities was to find somewhere to stay since we can't live
aboard while the clean up, sanding and then GRP repairs and painting
are being done.
As the arrival of May signals the start of the local summer season and accommodation becomes more difficult we mention this to our contractor, Sailand, whose staff member Vassilis advises the house next to his is available for rent. Last Sunday we check this out to find a large four-bed-roomed, two-bath-roomed stone villa fully furnished and equipped, built in 1888 but completely refurbished while retaining its historical charm based on a mostly wooden interior decorated with antiques and artifacts. It's located high in the hills about 10 km from the marina where it's nice and cool with a stunning view over the Lefkas area and sea beyond. All of this for a most reasonable 600 Euros (about NZ$923) for a MONTH – that is about $30 per day. Ironically Di and I have often said we'd love to spend some time in a traditional Greek mountain village and the three nearby fit this bill perfectly.
Vasillis did say that as this is a country area to keep a watch out for snakes and scorpions but we've so far only seen one snake crossing a road.
As the arrival of May signals the start of the local summer season and accommodation becomes more difficult we mention this to our contractor, Sailand, whose staff member Vassilis advises the house next to his is available for rent. Last Sunday we check this out to find a large four-bed-roomed, two-bath-roomed stone villa fully furnished and equipped, built in 1888 but completely refurbished while retaining its historical charm based on a mostly wooden interior decorated with antiques and artifacts. It's located high in the hills about 10 km from the marina where it's nice and cool with a stunning view over the Lefkas area and sea beyond. All of this for a most reasonable 600 Euros (about NZ$923) for a MONTH – that is about $30 per day. Ironically Di and I have often said we'd love to spend some time in a traditional Greek mountain village and the three nearby fit this bill perfectly.
Vasillis did say that as this is a country area to keep a watch out for snakes and scorpions but we've so far only seen one snake crossing a road.
Our
agents, A1 organise a near new Nissan Micro 4-door rental car for us
at the extremely favourable rate of 20 Euros (about NZ$31) per day
including insurance.
To
top it off our London-based daughter Amy is going to fly over on
Sunday and stay with us for a week.
Now
to Envoy. It seemed to take ages for anything to start as we awaited
feedback from our insurers, but on Thursday a huge crane lowered our
RHIB down from Envoy's upper deck so that it could be cleaned and
Envoy's upper deck accessed for cleaning. Then a team from Yachtpaint
started the complete cleaning of Envoy's exterior and the sanding of
heat blisters from the hull and gelcoat.
Two days of work made a huge
difference and all of the soot and debris aboard Envoy has been
removed. What remains are some fairly extensive ingrained soot marks
on the starboard side white topsides gelcoat as well as a small area
of peeled burnt gelcoat.
The
blisters on the hull and stabiliser fin have been removed with the
hull being taken back to bare GRP in those areas.
The
surveyor is visiting again on Tuesday when decisions will be made
regarding what areas can be polished back to the near-perfect
condition that existed before and what areas will need repair and
painting. The more areas that require painting, the longer the job
will take since extensive masking will be required.
Thankfully
Yachtpaint are available to start the job as soon as the insurers
accept the surveyor's recommendations, but Envoy will need to be
moved undercover (site is available) and we don't expect anything to
start much before the end of next week.
Best
indication of time required at this stage is about a month so that
takes us through to about mid-June and even that is quite speculative
depending on what the surveyor suggests and how things go.
Meanwhile we're
making progress on sourcing replacement flat windows but having some
difficulty with the curved pilothouse window. The crack in this is
fairly minor (about 60cm) so we could cruise with it cracked and get it replaced
during winter, although people tell us the insurers might not agree
to this as they will want to wrap up the claim.
A local rigger
will also inspect damage to Envoy's rigging next week and quote for
her repair.
The time issue is
going to be GRP repair and painting since most other issues can be
dealt with simultaneously and by late next week
we should have a pretty accurate idea of what is to be done and the
time required.
1 comment:
What a story; I really hate to read this though, cruising is expensive enough without these kinds of problems. I hope you can continue cruising ASAP.
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