About us and the boat

About us and the boat:

We were lucky enough to retire early at the start of 2013 so we could head off and "live the dream" on board our Nordhavn 47 Trawler Yacht. The idea is to see some of the planet, at a slow 6 - 7 knots pace. There are no fixed goals or timings, we just had a plan to visit Scotland and then probably the Baltic before heading south.

The idea is to visit the nicer areas in these latitudes before heading south for warmer weather. If we like somewhere, we will stay for a while. If not, we will just move on. So, for the people who love forward planning and targets, this might seem a little relaxed!

If anyone else is contemplating a trawler yacht life, maybe our experiences will be enough to make you think again, or maybe do it sooner then you intended!

The boat is called Rockland and she is built for long distance cruising and a comfortable life on board too. If you want to see more about trawler yachts and the Nordhavn 47 in particular, there is a link to the manufacturers website in our "useful stuff" section. For the technically minded, there is a little info and pictures of the boat and equipment in the same section

Regards

Richard and June

Tuesday, 12 March 2019

All re-electroniced (and broke)

Well, somehow all the boxes got cabled together and worked bar one issue with the new analogue radar (the reed switch that tells the scanner when it was in the ahead position was not plugged in properly from the factory and needed a little attention)

It went from this:




and this:




to this:



The pilothouse looks a little bit different now with bigger clearer screens and a much smarter navigation system overall:

Shame that it is still operated by the less than smart captain. We think it will be like a modern mobile phone where you (well, we at least) end up using 10% of the functionality most of the time and still struggle with that small bit..

For the mildly interested, here is how the FLIR sees things at night:




That is Swanwick Marina, like a 1960s' black and white TV picture. Shame that we are old enough to remember those.  Here is the Lymington river in pitch darkness with a yacht entering the nearby marina:



Yes, impressive kit. For the boating folks contemplating getting a FLIR - just do it. We were told by the original owner of Due North, the lovely N63 that was at the Southampton show this year, that he considered a FLIR as a must have tool for night cruising. We get why now. Eye-wateringly expensive kit of course but somehow it feels almost worth it where some things we buy for the boat just feel like a straight renewal job.

Overall impressions of the Time Zero Touch 2 kit from Furuno? Very positive so far. As folks who were very anti touch screens on a boat, we get how the TZT2 system helps for setting up things in port and gentler seas. When it is very rough, we have the controller to use. Or we can occupy ourselves by hanging on to something solid in the boat. The configuration of everything is not trivial, we found a few issues on our first run but nothing that needed surgery - just some config changes that even the captain could manage with emailed advice.

More on the kit after a few decent trips. For now, we are happy but poorer.

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Thanks for your ideas / cheek / corrections / whatever! They should hit the blog shortly after the system checks them to make sure they will not put us or you in jail.....