We’ve spent the last five days anchored out front of the Haida village of Daajing Giids relaxing, resupplying, getting our laundry done, and going to the mandatory orientation required for visitors to Gwaii Haanas. The weather has been mostly gray and rainy, though we had sunbreaks in the late morning on Saturday when we attended the very small farmer’s market, and on-and-off sunshine on Monday and Tuesday. The village is lovely and being somewhere with restaurants meant we could take a break from cooking dinner for a few of the days. Blacktail Restaurant provided us with an elegant arrival celebration dinner (the mushroom pasta was everything I hoped for), and the Korean fried chicken style sandwich Steller’s Jay Community Pub served up was spicy, sweet, delicious, and great with a cold beer.
Continue readingBoat work
Raymarine Axiom 2 Pro long-term mini-review
This is a bit of a departure from what I normally write here, but today I’m going to talk about our chartplotter, the Raymarine Axiom 2 Pro S 9″. Now, as a forewarning, this is going to be a pretty critical review but I’m not criticizing the software or hardware engineers who built this: the responsibility for the quality level lies solely on management and the bean-counters. They are the ones that determine product priorities and development budgets.
I call this a mini-review because it is not a comprehensive overview of all the software on the Axiom 2 Pro, but focused on what we use regularly and the issues I’ve noticed. With over two decades of experience as a software quality engineer, I’ve got a pretty good idea of why these issues occur in software, and usually a pretty keen eye for bugs and quality issues. Note that I have the latest version of the software installed and have continually kept the unit on the latest software version ever since installing it a year and a half ago.
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Early June in Desolation Sound
Heading back towards Desolation Sound, we stayed one night in Cortes Bay before heading onto Refuge Cove on Friday morning, the second-to-last day of May. In Refuge Cove, since there was nobody else anchored, we were able to take the one spot way in the back of the bay near the creek leading to Refuge Lagoon.
Refuge Cove is really, really pretty, but there isn’t a lot of anchoring room; much of the larger bay is pretty deep, and the area near the General Store (and the associated docks) has mooring balls taking up room not taken up by the docks, which also appear to have had a recent expansion added. As we were there at the end of May, the General Store hadn’t even started their high-season hours yet and were open for only a few hours Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, but we stopped in and I picked up a few lures for jigging bottom fish, since the area seemed like a good place to fish from the dinghy. On the short trip from Cortes Bay to Refuge Cove we’d attempted to troll for salmon with no success, but we’ll keep trying on days where we aren’t in a hurry and can move at the nice slow 2.5-3.5 knot speed we’d need to troll properly with the flasher and spoon rig.
Continue readingWatermaker Installation
The other major installation task we needed to finish before untying the lines was our watermaker. In our case, we bought a Schenker Zen50 from CruiseRO. I honestly cannot recommend CruiseRO enough. The owner, Rich Boren, is helpful and responsive, and that can make all the difference when installing a system like this.
Freezer Installation
This past week we were able to complete the installation of our freezer; though perhaps a more correct description would be the conversion of the (unpowered) icebox to a freezer. The results are so far very good–as I write this the freezer temperature is sitting at -3.4°F.
If you’re interested to see some of the installation details, read on!
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