Sunday, December 11, 2016

Checking out Little Wanderer 2

The new boat went on its first sea trial in Singapore on Dec 10, and later that day, the family made the drive out to the marina to have a look at it on the water. The AIS hasn't been fitted yet, so it's not ready for a trip out to sea.

But no matter. There's the business of clinking glasses of champagne, listening to music and checking out the boat, above and below deck. See the specs of the Sea Ray Sundancer 260 here.

We are thinking of having the boat's name moved to lower on the hull. 

A few amenities remain to be fitted, such as the shower head and the air conditioning system. But Eric knew we were coming to have a look at the boat, so he arranged for a temporary air-cond unit to be fitted to cool the below-deck space.

The space below is rather a uh... tight squeeze, but I suppose it won't matter when you are asleep. Mental notes were made about what to buy - cushions, bed linen, melamine crockery... and maybe a fake plant or two! 

Some Verve to mark the occasion. 

C sent his new Mavic drone up, and this is what it came back with: 

Little Wanderer 2 is in the upper row, sixth from top right.
Yes, it's bigger than Little Wanderer by a couple of feet, but still smaller
 than most of the boats berthed here! 

Another pic, with us posed! 

Looking forward to more adventures at sea. 
There's one feature we have on Little Wanderer 2 that we didn't have before: underwater lights! When the sun went down, we turned them on. 



Friday, December 09, 2016

Thanks for the memories, Little Wanderer

Yes, we are moving on ... to a bigger thing.

We bit the bullet a couple of months ago, and traded in Little Wanderer, our tireless steed of the sea, for a bigger boat - which will let us drop anchor and do sleep-on-board over-nighters off Singapore and maybe even Malaysia.

We had to pony up some money of course, but because Little Wanderer (a 2015 model Chaparral SunCoast 250) is still quite new - and we have taken good care of her - we got (what we thought was) a good offer from Eric of SG Boating.

Our new boat, a Sea Ray Sundancer 260, will have sleeping berths for four adults, a small on-board kitchen (microwave, stove-top), bath and head - all below deck - and seating space for about eight adults above deck. It will have an inboard engine, unlike Little Wanderer's outboard one.

Over the last two months or more, this boat has been on some cargo ship, taking the long route to Singapore from the US, via Australia. (Sigh, yes.)

On the night of Dec 7, this boat got towed from the port to Raffles Marina in the dead of night, in the company of police outriders.

The Sea Ray, still under wraps, arrived at Raffles Marina, late on Dec 7.
The next day, most members of the family - A and R excepted, because they were at work! - went to take a look at it. It was still parked in the wash bay for pre-handover inspection, her hull still virgin from Singapore waters.

The Sea Ray in the marina boat shed, many parts still under plastic wrap.

We are letting Little Wanderer go, but with a pang. She was ours for just over a year, and we had 20 memory-making trips, be they to the Southern Islands or just to float somewhere to fish or to chill.

C, and occasionally J2, have enjoyed piloting her. A and R have spent a lot of time in the seats up front, wind in hair and getting "marinaded" by saltwater. We have taken family and friends out, and bar none, the trips were memorable, whether or not we made an island landing, and yes, even when we were fighting off aggressive macaques.

There have been anxious times, like when we got into too shallow water (see this post), when the boat was practically beached (see this post), and when we had problems hauling in the anchor, which was stuck fast - twice, both in the channel off Puteri Cove, so we think it's a major Anchor Jinx.

In tribute to Little Wanderer, our new boat will be christened Little Wanderer 2.

Monday, November 14, 2016

Back on the water after 2.5 months

Date: Nov 13, 2016
Trip #20
Weather: Cloudy, then threatening, then clear   
Waters: Slightly choppy, especially off the SLNG terminal
On board: C and A  
New gear on board: DJI Mavic Pro drone

Litle Wanderer sits at the mouth of the Pulau Hantu lagoon at low tide. 
The deep brown patches are seaweed.
Mainland Singapore to the north of this. Photo by the new Mavic drone. 

That's the newspoint of this post, folks! It's a photo we've been wanting for a long time, and now that we've got it, it runs first, ahead of the preliminaries!

Now, the preliminaries: Talk of a long break from boating. It wasn't for the want of trying. Some weeks, we had stuff going on on Saturday, our designated boating day; other weeks, the weather screwed it up for us. Or the tides did.

With J1 still to return from Sydney and J2 in Milan on holiday, it was just the old fogies today. We were looking to fly C's new toy off the boat and getting aerial shots of Little Wanderer sitting amid the blue.

We arrived at the mouth of Pulau Hantu's lagoon to find it awash in seaweed. The tide was very low but just starting to turn. It was just calf deep even at the breakwater, so we cut the engine and floated there.

Fairly clear water. Pulau Bukom in the background. 

Seems to be the sargassum?

A short video of C putting the drone into take-off from the swim platform of the boat:






The skies turned dark as we ended the flight.



We waited it out. There was a thin drizzle, then the skies brightened. We headed for home base, and there, Raffles Marina laid out yet another one of its spectacular sunsets for us. We berthed the boat and C hurriedly assembled the drone again and got this from the dock:

It was so picturesque that a wedding couple were having a photo shoot there.
This was taken a few minutes before the pic above. C at left
at the controls of the drone, and A washing out the icebox.

This was Little Wanderer's 20th outing, and what a great day it was.




Sunday, August 28, 2016

Jahblessdawg wrests control of the P. Hantu gym

Date: Aug 27, 2016
Trip #19
Weather: Hazy   
Waters: Choppy most of the way out, calm on return leg
On board: C, A, J2 and R   
New gear on board: Canon EOS 80D 

So Pokemon has landed in Singapore and taken it by storm. We hear of people being warned against trespassing into military airport zones, of vehicles rear-ending the ones in front because of "distraction" and of people talking about stardust, Pokeballs and lures. 

We landed on Pulau Hantu just as the day's low tide was turning, and J2 (a.k.a. Jahblessdawg in the Pokemon universe) found a gym near the island's jetty. He promptly headed there and after five minutes, took control of the gym after beating a big blue bear-like Pokemon called Snorelax with his Exeggutor.  He was thinking that, by virtue of the island's inaccessability (except to daytrippers on ferries or their own boats or dive boats - certainly a smaller constituency than say, East Coast Park), he would reign in the gym for a while. 

Or so he thought. 

We had barely made it back to the comfort of our deck chairs by the lagoon when A reported that Snorelax had recaptured the gym. We reckoned that Snorelax's trainer must be among the few families that looked like they had encamped (somewhat permanently) in the shelters on the island. Ah well, so Jahblessdawg prevailed at this gym for no more than 10 minutes...  


A was plenty pleased that the aqua shoes (bought a few months ago
from Decathlon but used for the first time today) work like a charm.
They keep the sand out and protect the feet from rocks and possibly vicious
sea critters. Little Wanderer has five pairs of these on board. 
At $16 each, a good buy!


One of a dozen craft beers we brought to the island. 


C on anchor duty.

We brought lunch (ayam penyet again, by popular request: see previous entry), and, as usual, wine and some craft beers (we like Thirsty). Chilled on the beach for a while as the tide rose, and A tried out her new Canon EOS 80D. All in, a relaxing afternoon with dear ones, away from the madding crowd on the mainland, and after a hectic work week in which the nation watched as its Prime Minister nearly passed out during the National Day Rally and then took in the death, wake and funeral of a former president.  

Tuesday, August 09, 2016

A relaxing time on Hantu

Date: Aug 6, 2016
Trip #18
Weather: Sunny  
Waters: Calm on way out, choppier on return leg
On board: C and A   
New gear on board: ONAGOfly drone

With most of the family out of the country, it was just C and A today, a beautifully sunny day, with the waters fairly calm. This was the first day of our four-day National Day weekend! 

We headed for Pulau Hantu, our default landing stop. The island had some folks on it - a couple of anglers, a group of Caucasians who berthed their big boat outside the lagoon and made for the island on a rubber dinghy with their two dogs, and a group of local divers. 

The waters in the lagoon were cleaner and clearer than usual. Yay! The tide was high when we landed at 1.30pm or so, but going down.


It was chill time. Chairs laid out, ice box, music and beer. 

We were out of gas canisters, so cooking a meal was out. No matter. We bought ayam penyet with rice from the Bedok Corner food centre - a decidedly unhealthy but delicious meal. The token nods to health were represented by a leaf of lettuce, huge slice of cucumber and four cherry tomatoes, haha. 


Ayam penyet

It was peaceful on the island. We just sat and chilled. And drank some pretty good beers (going by C's beer app): 





C took his ONAGOfly drone (built through an American crowdfunding exercise) on its maiden flight after lunch. This palm-sized gadget replaces his now-busted, way-more-expensive Phantom drone. The cute little thing flew credibly well, but C didn't fly it for long; he was spooked by the thought of losing it to the water just 10 metres away!  

He didn't shoot any stills or video with it because he hadn't yet bought the micro SD card that it needed. 




I piloted Little Wanderer for about 15 minutes on the return leg and thought it a stressful thing to do. One has to keep on eye on the depth, the water surface for bits of junk and choppiness, keep a lookout for other vessels... while wrestling with direction and the stiff steering. Too much to tend to! 

  

Saturday, July 09, 2016

The day the marina couldn't launch the boat!


Pizza ordered from Peperoni, check. Beers, chilled, check. Ice to keep said beers chilled, check. Corn chips (Doritos, Nacho Cheesier!), check. Extra change of clothing, check.  Sunblock, check. 

Call put through to Raffles Marina to launch Little Wanderer, DOH!

The huge beeping crane at the marina was on the blink. We were all logistically and mentally prepared for a boat outing, but no go. The marina said they emailed "everybody" to announce that the crane was not working. We were the only ones who didn't get the memo, apparently.

So we hauled our still-warm  pizzas to the East Coast Park, near the Sailing Centre, for a picnic there instead. When life hands you lemons, make lemonade.

From where we sat, we were treated to a parade of dogs and their humans, en route to the second checkpoint of  The Amazing Inu Race near our picnic spot. Corgis, daschunds, a retriever or two, spaniels and Singapore Specials. 


It was a sunny afternoon at the East Coast Park near the Sailing Centre.
Laid out our chairs, turned on the music and used a discarded
wooden box as a table for our family-size pizza. 


Why climb a tree? Cos it's there. J1 finds it harder
than expected, earns the title of Resident Macaque.

Sunday, June 12, 2016

Afloat in a drizzle, two catfish and two other whats-its

Date: June 11, 2016
Trip #17
Weather: Drizzly  
Waters: Choppy
On board: C, A, J2, R, KH, J and ZQ  

The plan was to head out to Pulau Hantu for a picnic and a spot of fishing with KH and family, in an attempt to make up for the disappointment of the last trip, which turned out to be a non-starter because of the weather. (See post here.) 

But Man plans, God laughs, right? 

We arrived at the marina amid grey skies and choppy waters - even in the marina. We sat it out in the rocking boat in the marina, music on. Some of us even ate the delicious pastrami sandwiches that C made.  We tried to move out, but the currents within the marina were sweeping the boat back against the dock. 

A bunch of anglers sat out the choppy waters in the marina as well. They had gone out earlier and returned because of the roughness out there. They told C he was "mad" to try to get to Pulau Hantu in this weather. 

After an hour and a half, the waters seemed calmer, so we moved out (and so did the anglers). But the island landing had to be ditched; we had already lost more than an hour waiting in the marina. So we were going to just float about 1 km from the marina for some fishing. (In case the rain came, it wouldn't be a long trip back.)  This way, 10-year-old ZQ wouldn't have to go home again without an outing! 




We dropped anchor where we had seen some fishing boats on our past outings. ZQ landed two catfish from the stern within 10 minutes of each other, with a rod loaded with pieces of squid. We released the fish, since they probably aren't good for eating. (We think the same fish may have been caught twice, and made jokes about how it wasn't too smart.) 


KH handled this after ZQ landed it, because catfish can sting.


KH tried one of his lures (no bait) from the bow of Little Wanderer, and landed two whatever-fish, silvery with a bluish line along the dorsal fin, each about 10 cm long. These too, were released. 


Look, I got two!


This fish, species unknown, had wicked spines
 just behind its dorsal fin. Here, they are folded
down and not showing.
KH gave it a shot with one of these lures that C had bought online. It's light
metal and in an insane neon orange. In the water, it mimicked a fish
 in distress on the surface of the water - but sigh, no, KH didn't land
anything with this.  

The rest of us who weren't too excited about fishing or who had animal-cruelty issues just chilled, listened to music, drank wine and beer and snacked on lychees, potato chips, raspberry shortbread, marshmallows, gummies... 


ZQ got into the water with C, but the currents were strong,
so they stayed close to the boat. 

June used to be that scorching time of year. What's happened? It was scorching in the morning, but out there today, it was just grey, drizzly and dreary - and even chilly, when the winds whipped around our damp T shirts.  

But it looks like ZQ had a good time. After we got back to the marina, the routine hose-down of the boat became an obvious excuse for him to play with water. 





So when you have a boat, it isn't as if you can go out when you want. There is really only a small sweet spot on any given day when you can go out, perhaps make an island landing for a picnic and head back in time, untrapped by a rapidly receding tide or bad weather.