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Ainia is back to being a sailboat after 10 months of sitting on the hard only costing us money. Not wildly impressed with Grenada Marine if anyone is coming this way. It seems fairly expensive and the customer service is not particularly good.
We spend close to a week working on the boat on the hard, mainly redoing the bottom paint for the first time since Australia a couple of years ago. Not happy with with my Whale Gusher bilge pump (one of the larger ones that sits on a bulkhead). the diaphragm failed so I brought one of those with me and now the motor does not work. I haven't given it a couple of hits with the hammer, that is next on the list - it is getting power. We have one of those very large Edson manual pumps - it is a wonderful piece of kit for moving water around. When we came back there was a lot of water in the bilge - so much for paying US$50 to get the boat checked every two weeks. i specifically said that the bilge would have to be pumped manually. I got an email after each report saying the bilge was fine and there was no mould and mildew - right!?!
For the $500 a month crowd - best to take Grenada off your list of places to go. When we were here in 2009, the food shopping and other things seemed noticeably cheaper than Canada. Now it is noticeably more expensive. Ignore things like strawberries that are more than $10 a pound, even buying local produce and chicken is very expensive. In spite of low oil prices the buses (minivans) have gone up dramatically. Don't know if this is local or whether other islands will be similar. We are hoping that the French islands might not be too bad since inflation in Europe has been almost non-existent since 2008.
By the way, Robin Knox-Johnston's Open 60 is in the yard here. He sailed down here by himself after the Route du Rhum race - not bad for a 75 year old. It is an incredible site out of the water. The bottom of the hull is above the top of the cabins of the 40 and 50 footers surrounding it. They dredged the travel lift slip and built special supports for the boat. Apparently it will be here until April when there is another race for it to go in.
We spend close to a week working on the boat on the hard, mainly redoing the bottom paint for the first time since Australia a couple of years ago. Not happy with with my Whale Gusher bilge pump (one of the larger ones that sits on a bulkhead). the diaphragm failed so I brought one of those with me and now the motor does not work. I haven't given it a couple of hits with the hammer, that is next on the list - it is getting power. We have one of those very large Edson manual pumps - it is a wonderful piece of kit for moving water around. When we came back there was a lot of water in the bilge - so much for paying US$50 to get the boat checked every two weeks. i specifically said that the bilge would have to be pumped manually. I got an email after each report saying the bilge was fine and there was no mould and mildew - right!?!
For the $500 a month crowd - best to take Grenada off your list of places to go. When we were here in 2009, the food shopping and other things seemed noticeably cheaper than Canada. Now it is noticeably more expensive. Ignore things like strawberries that are more than $10 a pound, even buying local produce and chicken is very expensive. In spite of low oil prices the buses (minivans) have gone up dramatically. Don't know if this is local or whether other islands will be similar. We are hoping that the French islands might not be too bad since inflation in Europe has been almost non-existent since 2008.
By the way, Robin Knox-Johnston's Open 60 is in the yard here. He sailed down here by himself after the Route du Rhum race - not bad for a 75 year old. It is an incredible site out of the water. The bottom of the hull is above the top of the cabins of the 40 and 50 footers surrounding it. They dredged the travel lift slip and built special supports for the boat. Apparently it will be here until April when there is another race for it to go in.