The long wait is over. Last winter, I
sailed the west coast of Florida to drop off Distant Horizon in
Cortez, Florida. The plan was to have some preventative maintenance
performed. The most important being the removal of the teak decks.
Traditional teak decks are screwed down to the boat. With age, teak decks are
known for leaking. The water makes it's way along the screw
holes into the core of the deck. Then, the core gets saturated and
may even start to rot; causing soft or spongy decks. This would be
bad. On the ocean, you want a boat to be stiff.
After removing my old teak, the decks
were found to be in great shape. No additional repairs were required.
Since the old teak cannot be reused once it has been removed, new
teak decks were in order. I could have left the decks fiberglass like
most modern sailboats, but the teak adds character and is great for a
firm footing on the ocean.
The new teak decks were manufactured by
Teak Decking Systems in Sarasota, FL; a few miles from where I left
Distant Horizon. These decks are not screwed in place. Jon... The
short version is: they are epoxy bonded to the fiberglass. No screw
holes... no future leaks.
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| Distant Horizon with her new teak decks and refinished brightwork |
By the way, brightwork refers to the wood trim and polished metal. In this case, I am referring to the refinished wood trim.
I will let the decks weather. So the
nice warm colour will gradually turn to a more patina. This will,
however, provide much better traction when walking on the decks.
I brought Distant Horizon to Yachts Solutions in Cortez, FL to have the
deck work done because the cost was far less than having it done in
the Chesapeake or in Maine. In each of these locations, the decks
would have been manufactured by Teak Decking Systems. The added bonus
was the factory people: measured; built the templates; and installed the decks. That would not have been
the case in the Chesapeake or in Maine. This was the primary reason
for this particular shake-down cruise.
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| New teak decks |
I have to thank Joe from Yachts
Solutions and Mike from Teak Decking Systems for putting this
all together. Several months of planning and a couple months work, and
no issues or complications. By the way, it truly is a small world.
Mike is from North Syracuse!
This next picture shows the refinished
wood trim. In the foreground is a dorade box with a ventilator on
top. The main piece in the middle is the butterfly hatch. Each side
opens up to allow a lot of fresh air in, or a lot of hot air out.
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| Cabin top with finished brightwork |
The staff from Yachts Solutions, Inc
refinished all the bright work. Fernando and his crew were absolutely
fabulous to work with. Especially Joe who was the project manager. He
pulled everything together between the boatyard and Teak Decking
Systems and communications between me and the boatyard while I was
away in B'ville, South Carolina, or North Carolina.
Yachts Solutions, Inc completed a long
list of other maintenance tasks for me also. So a special Thank you
goes out to Fernando for everything... "Obrigado". Another thank you
goes out to Manny for doing such a fabulous job removing the old Wind
Pilot Pacific and installing my new Hydrovane.
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| Hydrovane Installed |
I will depart Cortez on Monday, July
20th and begin the next chapter of the shakedown cruise.
Next stop, Marathon, FL. Yes, I am returning there. Keys Rigging will
be finishing the refit of my rigging.
I'm planning to make a straight run for Marathon. Originally, I planned 36 hours. Now, with a series of small high pressure systems crossing the lower gulf, I'm planning 45 hours. It will be tough. The more I sail, the more I can use the Hydrovane. If the winds die and I have to motor, I have to hand steer. There is no autopilot at this time. I still have to fabricate an attachment for the autopilot to work with the Hydrovane.
I should be in Marathon for a week to 10 days.
I'm planning to make a straight run for Marathon. Originally, I planned 36 hours. Now, with a series of small high pressure systems crossing the lower gulf, I'm planning 45 hours. It will be tough. The more I sail, the more I can use the Hydrovane. If the winds die and I have to motor, I have to hand steer. There is no autopilot at this time. I still have to fabricate an attachment for the autopilot to work with the Hydrovane.
I should be in Marathon for a week to 10 days.




Decks look beautiful! Looks like the the time and effort paid off. Have fun going south. We haul out in 2 weeks.
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