We just spend a productive week working on the hulls. I think the pace was a little less crazy than it was during our previous trips up here, but we did do a couple very late nights. I’m not keeping a detailed hour log on this project, because it feels too much like a job, but I thought I’d try for this week, just for the sake of remembering what these fulltime weeks were like. Well, I started and by tuesday I was tired of trying to track it, so I quit. I did take pictures each day, so this will be a photo log rather than a detailed hour log.
Saturday: We got here in the early evening, and it took a few hours to unload and set stuff up. I also got the foam for the topsides cut to shape (not attached) and the knuckle strips laminated.

Sunday: I slept in a little, and then had Heather help me attach the topside foam. Then the knuckle. After I took a long epoxy curing nap, We stayed up until 6am attaching the curved strips that go from the knuckle to the keel.

Monday: Staying up all night is nice becuase Ethan is sleeping, but it kills me the next day. All I managed today was to groove and glue the joints between the strips.

Tuesday/Wednesday: Sanding sanding and more sanding. I sanded all that goop I spread into the joints of the foam strips. I also shaped the knuckle. All set for glassing.

Thursday: Did a bit of final clean up before we started glassing. It’s nice to have a clean shop before we slop epoxy everywhere. We started the glassing at 2pm and finished at 4am. ugh. what a long run. It’s nice to get it both layers of 400g biax at once though, so I don’t have to sand between layers. Wet on wet = win. When I finally woke up in the morning, Ethan climbed into bed and said my breath smelled like epoxy. No, I wasn’t drinking any of it, although it does look yummy.

Friday/Saturday: Quite a bit of sleeping on friday, and then I was off trying to muscle the two hull halves together. It took awhile, but with the help of a lot of ratcheting straps, I got them into place and they fit really well. I’ve been worried about that step for some time, and it was no problem. Heather also cleaned all the blush from the epoxy, and I spent some time sanding the keel to prep for glassing the two halves together, but that will have to wait until next time.

Sunday: Packing up and heading home.