After the reality check with the Alpha drive, the prop, and the impeller, it was time to roll up my sleeves. Owning a boat isn’t just about cruising into sunsets — it’s about crawling into tight spaces, getting greasy, and learning what makes your boat tick.
Tools in Hand
I showed up at the marina with a box of supplies: cleaning gear, a basic marine tool set, and a notebook for my growing list of “to-dos.” The plan was simple:
- Clean the bilge and check the pumps
- Inspect belts and hoses
- Test electrical connections for corrosion
- Patch up a few cosmetic issues (seats, gelcoat scratches)
- Start organizing the cabin with the essentials
It sounds straightforward, but nothing on a boat is ever straightforward.
The Learning Curve
The first surprise was how many things you need just to start maintaining a boat. Brushes, cleaners, lubricants, sealants, spare fuses, ropes, filters — the list kept growing. Every time I thought I was done, I’d find another latch, hinge, or fitting that needed attention.
Then came the belts. On a car, you pop the hood and everything’s right there. On a boat, you contort yourself into positions that would impress a yoga instructor just to see the pulleys. I didn’t replace them that day, but I added them to the list.
Electrical connections were another eye-opener. Years of moisture meant some terminals were showing rust. Nothing critical yet, but enough to remind me that preventative work now saves headaches later.
The Small Wins
Not everything was a battle. I patched a seat, replaced a latch on the windshield pass-through, and stocked the cabin with the basics: toilet brush, toilet paper, coffee filters, and cleaning supplies. It felt good to check off small items — proof that progress was being made.
And yes, I finally bought proper trailer tie-downs. Peace of mind is worth every penny.
The Bigger Picture
By the end of the weekend, I was sweaty, sore, and a little overwhelmed. But I was also proud. The boat wasn’t just sitting there waiting for “someday.” I was actively shaping her into something better.
This wasn’t glamorous work, but it was foundational. Every patch, every tightened bolt, every cleaned surface was one step closer to turning this 1994 Monterey into the boat I envisioned.
4 replies on “The First Maintenance Weekend”
Ok I’ll admit it now skipper Don asked me to sign up for his blog and I did it as a favour. Now honestly I enjoy reading it (not the technical stuff) but the human trials and joys of successes. Today I must tell him never put toilet paper, toilet brush and coffee filters together, cause I can’t get that vision out of my head lol.
Haha, fair enough — I owe you a coffee filter-free apology for that mental image! 😅 But seriously, I’m glad the blog’s human side resonates. The tech bits are just the scaffolding for the real story: the mishaps, the triumphs, and the joy of getting back out there.
You nailed it: great adventures don’t just happen — they’re earned through upgrades, tweaks, and the occasional head-scratching moment in the bilge. Improving the boat’s capability isn’t about perfection; it’s about possibility. Every fix, every mod, every “why is this wire warm?” moment is a step toward more freedom, more fun, and fewer coffee filters in the wrong drawer.
Thanks for sticking with me — even if it started as a favor. You’re part of the journey now, and I wouldn’t have it any other way.
Sounds like with all this work you need a vacation from your vacation.
True — but at least I’ll come back with stories instead of souvenirs.