It has been some time since I updated this!
The first six months of most years are insane for us, with book deadlines, audio program deadlines, then multiple conventions to prep for and attend. All that fun was punctuated with a delightful case of COVID we caught at one of the conventions. It was July before we had time to get back to the boat.
We finally finished our several-rounds-long tag team wrestling match in the bilge with the elbow/exhaust hose/muffler. (Who is the smart aleck who marked that hose as "flexible"?) As I am 6'2" and older than dirt, my petite wife did most of the heavy duty. Between us we got everything hooked up. Pushed the start button and she kicked over like she'd been running five minutes before. Hooray! We have a running engine!
To be super-safe, we got the remaining fuel polished. No one knows how long this boat has been a marina queen, but it is pretty likely some of that diesel has been in the tanks for more than a decade. This way, we could know the state of the tanks and know we at least had less of a chance of stalling 100 yards out of the marina when we take her out. The good news is the tanks and fuel were pronounced to be in great shape. (The fuel polisher shared some spine-tingling horror stories of Things He Had Seen in Other Boats.)
Next up, we're dealing with that antique blackwater tank that we have dubbed "Ol' Stink-'n'-Leak." That's going away and we're pondering putting in a composting toilet in the aft head. For the moment, the forward head will probably be at least temporarily disabled. Considering the seacock for the seawater feed to the toilet is, apparently, stuck in the closed position, I should probably say, "Will
continue to be disabled for the foreseeable future."
After that, those dilapidated, screwed-down teak decks are going, which will fix a disturbing number of leaks.
Thanks to all the work left to do, we probably won't be moving from the cozy confines (?) of the luxurious West Bay Marina in Olympia, WA up to Everett, WA for another year. We're up to #3 on the wait list for a spot at Everett, but we really doubt we'll get everything done that needs done before that spot opens up, and Everett allows no (as in "NO, absolutely not, don't even think about it!") work on the boat while it is in the slip. West Bay, on the other hand .... well .... let's just say they have a different policy. So we'll probably move back to the bottom of the Everett list and make our move in a year or so.
(For those who don't know the area, Olympia is at the far south end of Puget Sound. Everett is about 75 nautical miles north of Olympia. We live about 20 minutes from the Everett marina, but about 2.5 miserable driving hours from Olympia.)
Thanks, everybody, for your help on this. And if anybody near Olympia, WA wants to do a bilge dive and help pull out an old, leaky, steel blackwater tank, just let us know. Hello? Hello???? *taps microphone* Is this thing on????