Spring break brings the weekend people back to their homes at the lake. There is work to be done before Easter, and there are extra hands home from school to help.
Al went out for his first jet ski ride of the season. It was a very short ride, basically checking that everything was working. The water temperature was 73 degrees, still pretty chilly. Our afternoon temperatures are consistently in the 80s now. The lake will warm up quickly.
The rest of Al's morning was spent beginning cleaning up the ski boat for the season. Saturday is boat cleaning day all through the season. Al spends Saturday morning washing and detailing the boats, happily listening to bluegrass or blues. He socializes with the boaters heading up and down the canal, and he pretty much has a grand little time doing what would otherwise be a chore.
We aren't skiing yet, but it is only a few brief weeks away now.
We water ski in Florida on Lake June-In-Winter. We ski at dawn when the water is best. We are open water slalom skiers. We prefer the open lake to a slalom course.
Saturday, March 17, 2012
Friday, March 9, 2012
Priorities
Al and I love to water ski. Years ago when we talked about retirement, we both agreed that water skiing had to be part of it.
You have to set priorities if you want to spend your retirement water skiing. You need a good ski boat and ski gear. And the boat needs to be ready to head out and ski with no hassle--every day. We're not the type that works on boats or builds stuff. Maintenance and improvements for our boat, dock, and boathouse are important parts of our budget. This year we decided to upgrade the boat house and dock (again).
Our soil here is sand. Sand shifts easily with waves. We have a seawall all along the canal, but boat wakes are always an issue. We are in a drought. Lake levels are low. Boat wakes have more impact on the sea wall and the sand near the sea wall than usual. In wintertime the boaters are primarily old guys in small fishing boats. Old guys don't speed in the canals. Summer brings lots of young jetski riders and showboating adults who forget the "no wake" rules. Complaining about them is pointless. (People in glass houses and all that. We did our share of dumb stuff when we were younger.) The best fix is a low secondary seawall under our dock to prevent the wakes from breaking on our primary seawall. That both protects our primary seawall and gives us a place to dump the sand dug out from under the boatlift to give us more depth. So that was this month's project.
The guys from the marine contractor built the mini seawall this week. We also had them fix some issues with the jetski lift's cables. This weekend they guys will be back to dig the area under the boats to give the boat cradles plenty of room for launching the boats. (The cradle of the ski boat needs several feet more depth than the boat so the boat can float in and out of the cradle.)
The cost of all this? About what we'd spend for a short vacation at a beach resort. The value of being able to get our boats out without a hassle during the summmer? Priceless.
You have to set priorities if you want to spend your retirement water skiing. You need a good ski boat and ski gear. And the boat needs to be ready to head out and ski with no hassle--every day. We're not the type that works on boats or builds stuff. Maintenance and improvements for our boat, dock, and boathouse are important parts of our budget. This year we decided to upgrade the boat house and dock (again).
Our soil here is sand. Sand shifts easily with waves. We have a seawall all along the canal, but boat wakes are always an issue. We are in a drought. Lake levels are low. Boat wakes have more impact on the sea wall and the sand near the sea wall than usual. In wintertime the boaters are primarily old guys in small fishing boats. Old guys don't speed in the canals. Summer brings lots of young jetski riders and showboating adults who forget the "no wake" rules. Complaining about them is pointless. (People in glass houses and all that. We did our share of dumb stuff when we were younger.) The best fix is a low secondary seawall under our dock to prevent the wakes from breaking on our primary seawall. That both protects our primary seawall and gives us a place to dump the sand dug out from under the boatlift to give us more depth. So that was this month's project.
The guys from the marine contractor built the mini seawall this week. We also had them fix some issues with the jetski lift's cables. This weekend they guys will be back to dig the area under the boats to give the boat cradles plenty of room for launching the boats. (The cradle of the ski boat needs several feet more depth than the boat so the boat can float in and out of the cradle.)
The cost of all this? About what we'd spend for a short vacation at a beach resort. The value of being able to get our boats out without a hassle during the summmer? Priceless.
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