My Catlina trip & Theo's answer. Very long!
Posted: Tue Apr 25, 2006 3:45 pm
Theo,
Heres my Catalina story:
Left from work (Boulder) at 12:00 noon on Tuesday. About an hour later Im coming down Loveland pass, and my truck decides to throw out an engine problem trouble light. Fortunately I have a Scan Gauge on board, so I scan for the codes. It spits out 2 codes. I text my wife, and she searches on the web for the problem. It comes back as O2 sensors have gone out. (I have over 150,000 miles on my 2001 Dakota) She calls one of her mechanic friends that she used to work with at the Dodge dealership, and his response is, Dont worry about it, they all will throw out trouble codes when youre working the engine hard IE: towing 4000+ pounds up 6000 feet. He was right, a few hours later the light and codes go away.
We pull into Las Vegas after midnight and decide to crash in the boat at a truck stop. Wind is blowing around 40-50 MPH gusts, and its pouring rain. Get to bed around 1:15am. Im trying to sleep, but a pickup truck with 2 guys in it decide to park right next to us while they drink, and carry on with their stereo and cell phone use. I wake up to their truck door slamming shut, and their motor starting up. Just as I get a chance to pop up and look out the window, I see them peeling out as they leave the lot sideways! Im now thinking wonder what they just did to the boat, truck or who knows what? But, Im too tired to check, and even if they did something, theres nothing I can do. Theyre already gone. We get up around 7:00am and check out everything. Nothing was done. Everything is A ok. We continue to Long Beach.
We get to Barstow around 9:00-10:00 (Wed AM) (I forget. . . time changes etc.) Grab breakfast at the Dennys. Every stop (180-200 miles) were checking everything on the truck, trailer, & boat. I made a checklist, and we dont pull away until we check everything off. One thing I noticed was at each stop, the base of the pivoting mast, was getting looser and looser. We finally pulled of at an on ramp, and in the rain & wind, pulled the mast base off, and tightened up the bolt that the mast pivots on. I found this very strange that it would loosen up so quickly.
We followed your directions and I must say, they were great. Got there on the first try! Yay! We pulled into the parking lot, and paid for 3 days. We checked out everything and noticed that there was no hose for rinsing off the trailer or boat. Since we havent showered, we decided to look around for the public showers. We couldnt find them so we asked someone, and he politely told us that if we dont have a boat slipped here, were outta luck. Another bummer. We then headed out to find the harbor office to get some weather info, and a slip. Like you predicted, wind was strong, and the water was too choppy for us to go on Wednesday.
We finally found the office and when I asked the guy who worked there if he new what the weather was going to be like tomorrow, he had no idea. Instead, he gave me the phone number for the lifeguard? I said, you work here, at a marina, and you cant tell me anything about the weather tomorrow? He said, call the lifeguard, maybe hull tell you. When I asked about where can we rent or get a hose to rinse off stuff, he said they dont have one! I then said, okay, since we arent allowed to spend the night on the boat in the parking lot, can we get a slip for the night. He said, we dont have any slips available! (With every answer Im getting a little more irritated!) I then say, we just drove 20 hours from Colorado, and paid for 3 days parking, since we cant leave the marina due to weather, and you cant give us a slip, can we at least get our money back? Nope, we dont give any refunds. All I can say is, Alamitos marina personnel are NOT on my Christmas list!
We pull out of the lot, realizing that we are not going to be able to get back in without paying AGAIN. Oh well!
At this point Im desperately seeking a margarita! I call one of my cousins in Murrieta, and we decide on dinner at a Mexican restaurant of her choice. Not wanting to just drop in for the night we decide to get a motel room. We pull into a gas station and ask for directions to the nearest motel. Theres none in Murrieta they reply. The nearest one is in Lake Ellsinore (sp?). We pull into this Travelodge and realize that to turn around all 51 feet of us, is going to take some doing. We pay for a room, and while Im in the process of parking the truck & boat 180 degrees from the only entrance/exit. Ive now got the permanent residents in awe, as this looks like the only excitement theyve seen in a long time. We open the door to the room, and between the dead spiders in their webs on the ceiling, and the coating of whatever, on the used to be carpet. . . I think, we get our highly needed shower.
Not risking leaving the boat in the lot, we pull out and drive to Murrieta. We hook up with the relatives, and partake in some of the best Mexican food and drinks Ive had in a long time.
Its now about 10:30 pm so we head back to our wonderful room, which Im sure they also rent out on an hourly basis. After talking about sleeping on the boat and just using the room for the shower, we decide that our luck cant get any worse. We risk pulling down the sheets and behold, theyre clean. (at least to the naked eye.)
We get up around 9:00am (Thursday) convinced that the weather is going to be a repeat, and figure out what to do. Surprisingly, the weather is beautiful, so we drive back to Alamitos Bay. On the way, we stop at a Lowes, and get a hose. We pay again (just for 1 day) and are all fired up about sailing out to Catalina. We are now bummed that we didnt leave the motel earlier, as the weather is great. We rig the boat, launch it, and tie it off at the dock. Pull the trailer out and use our new hose to rinse. Load all our stuff. My daughter pushes off the bow, then the stern and jumps in. I push the throttle forward and nothing happens. MY CABLE HAS JUST SNAPPED. I have no throttle, no reverse, no nothing. . . and Im heading for another tied up boat. . . with the motor running in gear! I kill the motor. The mast is also down as we need to go under a bridge. I kill the ignition just in time and we stop the boat and tie off without making contact. I pull apart the shift mechanism and realize what I already know. . . theres nothing I can do. Even if I could get it repaired, its now 2:30pm Thursday. My window is now, or never.
To put it mildly, Im quite perturbed. Ive only had this boat for less than 1 year, and Ive been constantly reminding the dealer that my throttle is not right. Ive taken it in to them for repairs and adjustments, but I know something is still not right. Its too hard to shift. 40-50 lbs of pressure is not right! In fact, 3 days before I left on this trip, the dealer let me dry try a different type of cable and is going to hook me up with it for only $180.
Now we have another problem. How to get it back on the trailer. The water is too deep to wade in, and youd need like 100 feet of dock lines to pull it to the trailer. No choice but to motor it back on. Luckily, the cable broke in forward gear. When I start the motor, it instantly goes forward. At idle speed, but at least, forward. I get out and back the trailer down the ramp. Get back into the boat, and circle around for the trailer. Ive got a crosswind, so I drop about a foot of dagger board. (can you see whats coming?) Im lined up perfect with the trailer, and so concerned that I wont have enough momentum to get on the trailer that. . . whack. . . instant stop. Sh#%!. And the worst thing is, I have an audience! My daughter pushes me off the trailer, and I go around again. (Id have been lost if it werent for her.) This time no dagger board. Im crabbing? my way back to the trailer, closer, closer, contact! Houston, we DONT have a problem.
Only damage was a smashed clearance light, and one of the starboard bunk bolts was sheared off.
We pull the boat out, rinse and de-rig everything. Its now 5:30pm Thursday. Lets go get a room and just forget about everything.
When youre 51 feet long, you look at motels in a different way. Especially their parking lots. Motel after motel we try to get a room. There are no vacancies to be found. One of the managers said that the Grand Prix was in town hence the vacancy problems. We even tried a Wal-Mart. No overnight parking signs everywhere. We decided to head away from the Long Beach area, as the motels farther away may have vacancies. We finally find one in Anaheim. Got to bed at 1:30am Friday.
Got up at 7:30am Friday to do something fun. ANYTHING! How about Disneyland! Yeah, At least Ill be able to something boat related. . . Pirates of the Caribbean! ARRGGH! One of my favorite rides. Parked in oversized parking for $12, $79 each to enter, and you guessed it. . . Pirates of the Caribbean is CLOSED! What else is going to go wrong?
Luckily, nothing else. Got back home Sunday afternoon around 2:00pm. Definitely learned some things on this trip:
1. When you fix your mast for a road trip, tighten the 9/16 bolt that holds the mast base to the bow pulpit tightly. Going there, I just had the bolt through the nylon insert, and the large pivot bolt was vibrating loose. On the way back, I tightened it, and whalla, no loosey!
2. Bring your own hose.
3. Remember your placement of the dagger board!
4. When traveling with the mast in the crutch, have the sail slide groove side up. We had it pointing down, and the constant bouncing down the road chewed the aluminum. Nothing a little file and some sandpaper couldnt fix, but damage that could have been prevented.
5. Dont use nylon come-along tie down straps to secure your stern to the trailer without some sort of padding between the nylon strap & the gel coat. I guess the constant flapping in the breeze down the road, created nice rub marks in the gel coat. Some pretty deep. 1/32 of an inch in spots.
Overall, we towed over 2300 miles. Had to add some grease to the hubs only twice, and not one lug nut loosened. All were torqued to 100 ft lbs. Dry. In fact I have over 4000 miles on the trailer in less than 1 year, and zero lug/bearing issues.
Since the trip, my cables have been replaced with Uflex ones. Dont know the model but thats what the dealer said he did. And theyre blue! No, they dont match the boat. My god! Shifts are now effortless. Seriously, 2 finger shifts! Im convinced that the resistance created by the old cables causing the shifts to be so damn difficult, is what fatigued the cables causing the failure.
I pulled my dagger board this past Saturday, and no damage. I thought for sure that it could have been cracked or a chunk taken out, but surprisingly nothing.
Thats my 5 day trek.
---Harrison
Heres my Catalina story:
Left from work (Boulder) at 12:00 noon on Tuesday. About an hour later Im coming down Loveland pass, and my truck decides to throw out an engine problem trouble light. Fortunately I have a Scan Gauge on board, so I scan for the codes. It spits out 2 codes. I text my wife, and she searches on the web for the problem. It comes back as O2 sensors have gone out. (I have over 150,000 miles on my 2001 Dakota) She calls one of her mechanic friends that she used to work with at the Dodge dealership, and his response is, Dont worry about it, they all will throw out trouble codes when youre working the engine hard IE: towing 4000+ pounds up 6000 feet. He was right, a few hours later the light and codes go away.
We pull into Las Vegas after midnight and decide to crash in the boat at a truck stop. Wind is blowing around 40-50 MPH gusts, and its pouring rain. Get to bed around 1:15am. Im trying to sleep, but a pickup truck with 2 guys in it decide to park right next to us while they drink, and carry on with their stereo and cell phone use. I wake up to their truck door slamming shut, and their motor starting up. Just as I get a chance to pop up and look out the window, I see them peeling out as they leave the lot sideways! Im now thinking wonder what they just did to the boat, truck or who knows what? But, Im too tired to check, and even if they did something, theres nothing I can do. Theyre already gone. We get up around 7:00am and check out everything. Nothing was done. Everything is A ok. We continue to Long Beach.
We get to Barstow around 9:00-10:00 (Wed AM) (I forget. . . time changes etc.) Grab breakfast at the Dennys. Every stop (180-200 miles) were checking everything on the truck, trailer, & boat. I made a checklist, and we dont pull away until we check everything off. One thing I noticed was at each stop, the base of the pivoting mast, was getting looser and looser. We finally pulled of at an on ramp, and in the rain & wind, pulled the mast base off, and tightened up the bolt that the mast pivots on. I found this very strange that it would loosen up so quickly.
We followed your directions and I must say, they were great. Got there on the first try! Yay! We pulled into the parking lot, and paid for 3 days. We checked out everything and noticed that there was no hose for rinsing off the trailer or boat. Since we havent showered, we decided to look around for the public showers. We couldnt find them so we asked someone, and he politely told us that if we dont have a boat slipped here, were outta luck. Another bummer. We then headed out to find the harbor office to get some weather info, and a slip. Like you predicted, wind was strong, and the water was too choppy for us to go on Wednesday.
We finally found the office and when I asked the guy who worked there if he new what the weather was going to be like tomorrow, he had no idea. Instead, he gave me the phone number for the lifeguard? I said, you work here, at a marina, and you cant tell me anything about the weather tomorrow? He said, call the lifeguard, maybe hull tell you. When I asked about where can we rent or get a hose to rinse off stuff, he said they dont have one! I then said, okay, since we arent allowed to spend the night on the boat in the parking lot, can we get a slip for the night. He said, we dont have any slips available! (With every answer Im getting a little more irritated!) I then say, we just drove 20 hours from Colorado, and paid for 3 days parking, since we cant leave the marina due to weather, and you cant give us a slip, can we at least get our money back? Nope, we dont give any refunds. All I can say is, Alamitos marina personnel are NOT on my Christmas list!
We pull out of the lot, realizing that we are not going to be able to get back in without paying AGAIN. Oh well!
At this point Im desperately seeking a margarita! I call one of my cousins in Murrieta, and we decide on dinner at a Mexican restaurant of her choice. Not wanting to just drop in for the night we decide to get a motel room. We pull into a gas station and ask for directions to the nearest motel. Theres none in Murrieta they reply. The nearest one is in Lake Ellsinore (sp?). We pull into this Travelodge and realize that to turn around all 51 feet of us, is going to take some doing. We pay for a room, and while Im in the process of parking the truck & boat 180 degrees from the only entrance/exit. Ive now got the permanent residents in awe, as this looks like the only excitement theyve seen in a long time. We open the door to the room, and between the dead spiders in their webs on the ceiling, and the coating of whatever, on the used to be carpet. . . I think, we get our highly needed shower.
Not risking leaving the boat in the lot, we pull out and drive to Murrieta. We hook up with the relatives, and partake in some of the best Mexican food and drinks Ive had in a long time.
Its now about 10:30 pm so we head back to our wonderful room, which Im sure they also rent out on an hourly basis. After talking about sleeping on the boat and just using the room for the shower, we decide that our luck cant get any worse. We risk pulling down the sheets and behold, theyre clean. (at least to the naked eye.)
We get up around 9:00am (Thursday) convinced that the weather is going to be a repeat, and figure out what to do. Surprisingly, the weather is beautiful, so we drive back to Alamitos Bay. On the way, we stop at a Lowes, and get a hose. We pay again (just for 1 day) and are all fired up about sailing out to Catalina. We are now bummed that we didnt leave the motel earlier, as the weather is great. We rig the boat, launch it, and tie it off at the dock. Pull the trailer out and use our new hose to rinse. Load all our stuff. My daughter pushes off the bow, then the stern and jumps in. I push the throttle forward and nothing happens. MY CABLE HAS JUST SNAPPED. I have no throttle, no reverse, no nothing. . . and Im heading for another tied up boat. . . with the motor running in gear! I kill the motor. The mast is also down as we need to go under a bridge. I kill the ignition just in time and we stop the boat and tie off without making contact. I pull apart the shift mechanism and realize what I already know. . . theres nothing I can do. Even if I could get it repaired, its now 2:30pm Thursday. My window is now, or never.
To put it mildly, Im quite perturbed. Ive only had this boat for less than 1 year, and Ive been constantly reminding the dealer that my throttle is not right. Ive taken it in to them for repairs and adjustments, but I know something is still not right. Its too hard to shift. 40-50 lbs of pressure is not right! In fact, 3 days before I left on this trip, the dealer let me dry try a different type of cable and is going to hook me up with it for only $180.
Now we have another problem. How to get it back on the trailer. The water is too deep to wade in, and youd need like 100 feet of dock lines to pull it to the trailer. No choice but to motor it back on. Luckily, the cable broke in forward gear. When I start the motor, it instantly goes forward. At idle speed, but at least, forward. I get out and back the trailer down the ramp. Get back into the boat, and circle around for the trailer. Ive got a crosswind, so I drop about a foot of dagger board. (can you see whats coming?) Im lined up perfect with the trailer, and so concerned that I wont have enough momentum to get on the trailer that. . . whack. . . instant stop. Sh#%!. And the worst thing is, I have an audience! My daughter pushes me off the trailer, and I go around again. (Id have been lost if it werent for her.) This time no dagger board. Im crabbing? my way back to the trailer, closer, closer, contact! Houston, we DONT have a problem.
Only damage was a smashed clearance light, and one of the starboard bunk bolts was sheared off.
We pull the boat out, rinse and de-rig everything. Its now 5:30pm Thursday. Lets go get a room and just forget about everything.
When youre 51 feet long, you look at motels in a different way. Especially their parking lots. Motel after motel we try to get a room. There are no vacancies to be found. One of the managers said that the Grand Prix was in town hence the vacancy problems. We even tried a Wal-Mart. No overnight parking signs everywhere. We decided to head away from the Long Beach area, as the motels farther away may have vacancies. We finally find one in Anaheim. Got to bed at 1:30am Friday.
Got up at 7:30am Friday to do something fun. ANYTHING! How about Disneyland! Yeah, At least Ill be able to something boat related. . . Pirates of the Caribbean! ARRGGH! One of my favorite rides. Parked in oversized parking for $12, $79 each to enter, and you guessed it. . . Pirates of the Caribbean is CLOSED! What else is going to go wrong?
Luckily, nothing else. Got back home Sunday afternoon around 2:00pm. Definitely learned some things on this trip:
1. When you fix your mast for a road trip, tighten the 9/16 bolt that holds the mast base to the bow pulpit tightly. Going there, I just had the bolt through the nylon insert, and the large pivot bolt was vibrating loose. On the way back, I tightened it, and whalla, no loosey!
2. Bring your own hose.
3. Remember your placement of the dagger board!
4. When traveling with the mast in the crutch, have the sail slide groove side up. We had it pointing down, and the constant bouncing down the road chewed the aluminum. Nothing a little file and some sandpaper couldnt fix, but damage that could have been prevented.
5. Dont use nylon come-along tie down straps to secure your stern to the trailer without some sort of padding between the nylon strap & the gel coat. I guess the constant flapping in the breeze down the road, created nice rub marks in the gel coat. Some pretty deep. 1/32 of an inch in spots.
Overall, we towed over 2300 miles. Had to add some grease to the hubs only twice, and not one lug nut loosened. All were torqued to 100 ft lbs. Dry. In fact I have over 4000 miles on the trailer in less than 1 year, and zero lug/bearing issues.
Since the trip, my cables have been replaced with Uflex ones. Dont know the model but thats what the dealer said he did. And theyre blue! No, they dont match the boat. My god! Shifts are now effortless. Seriously, 2 finger shifts! Im convinced that the resistance created by the old cables causing the shifts to be so damn difficult, is what fatigued the cables causing the failure.
I pulled my dagger board this past Saturday, and no damage. I thought for sure that it could have been cracked or a chunk taken out, but surprisingly nothing.
Thats my 5 day trek.
---Harrison



