Mud bug time - South Shore Harbour Marina
Transcription
Mud bug time - South Shore Harbour Marina
APRIL 2013 • SOUTH SHORE HARBOUR MARINA NEWSLETTER Mud bug time by Keith Emmons Our annual crawfish boil is scheduled for Saturday, April 20, from Noon ‘till they’re gone! It will be in the South Shore Harbor marina parking lot in front of the office, across from pier 14. Tickets are available that day, and are $15 each; $5 each for ages 12 and under. That includes all the crawfish you can eat, hot dogs, and beer and non-alcoholic beverages. Guests are welcome, and no reservations are required. There will be entertainment as well. This is our first big gathering of the year, and always a lot of fun. Come see your marina friends you haven’t seen for awhile, and meet some new ones. This is a rain or shine event, which means it’ll happen no matter what. Bring your appetite, and I’ll see you there! Good pet neighbors I received a call from a friend a while back (who will remain anonymous). It seems he was walking through the marina and stepped in a little present left by one of our four footed friends. Needless to say, he was a bit upset. We’d all like to love your pets as much as you do, so please pick up after them, and don’t let them mess up the piers, people’s property, etc. Years ago, I was taking down my isinglass after the winter. I had it all washed up and dried, sitting on the pier. Along came a dock neighbor’s dog (not on a leash) that proceeded to relieve himself all over my nice clean plastic. It was not a nice experience, either for me, the dog, or the dog’s owner when I had a discussion with him. As far as my friend, I believe he said something about “rubbing someone’s nose in it.” Let’s try to keep that from happening! Also, remember that all pets must be on leashes at all times in the marina. Children may be scared by a strange dog running up to them, and I have heard a few rumors of bites or near misses. Remember that you could be sued by someone if your dog bites them. If your dog is found off leash on marina property, you may be asked to leave the marina. Flare guns and safety Need a good reason to check your flare gun and the expiration date on your flares? How about this? Imagine needing help and this happening on top of whatever emergency you already had going on. Recreational boats 16-feet and over used on coastal waters or the Great Lakes are required to carry a minimum of either 1) three day and three night pyrotechnic devices; 2) one day non-pyrotechnic device (flag) and one night nonpyrotechnic device (auto SOS More Good neighbors, page 2 Good neighbors Pat asked, “Could you do it for me?” Mike screamed, “You should get married Pat, settle down and have some kids!” Pat asked, “Do you know where I can find a pregnant woman?” continued from page 1 light); or 3) a combination of 1) and 2). Recreational boats less than 16feet on coastal waters or the Great Lakes need only carry night visual distress signals when operating from sunset to sunrise. Also never try to fire a regular shotgun shell from these plastic guns; they will blow up in your hand. Want to do a vessel safety check on your own? Check out this website and they have the same forms the U.S.C.G. Auxiliary or the U.S. Power Squadron use. You can then get a member to come out, check your boat, and give you a sticker. http://tiny.cc/lhy5tw. Sea humor Pat and Mike went fishing. Pat asked Mike if he would carry his fishing gear. Mike said, “Yes if you really want me to.” When they got to the fishing hole Pat asked Mike if he would bait his line. The answer was: “yes if you really want me to.” “Would you mind casting for me,” asked Pat. “If you really want me to,” was the answer. A little while later Pat’s bobber began to hop. Mike said, “You’ve got a fish Pat, reel him in.” The teacher asked the young students, “Was George Washington a soldier or a sailor?” One student stood up and said with authority, “He could not have been a sailor. A sailor would have known better than to stand up in a boat!” A preacher was boating towards an island for a special wedding. On the way he was stopped by the marine patrol. After a quick check of the life preservers on board one patrol officer noticed a box with a few bottles in it. “What’s in the bottles, Reverend?” “It's holy water,” came the response. The officer opened one of the bottles. Sniffing it he said, “It smells like wine.” “Hallelujah!” the preacher shouted, “He’s done it again!” Two fishermen were out on the lake when one of them dropped his wallet. As they watched the wallet float down to the depths of the lake, a carp came along and snatched up the wallet. Soon came another carp who stole it away and then a third joined in. Remarked one of the fisherman, “That’s the first time I’ve ever seen carp-to-carp walleting.” 2!6% Juniors R Womens R Mens R Shoes R Purses R Jewelry R Furniture R Home Decor SSH 5 ONE COUPON PER PERSON. ANY PURCHASE OF 00 $ OR MORE 25 NOT VALID WITH ANY SALES OR REWARD CARDS (MUST PRESENT COUPON). 409 E. NASA Rd. 1 (by Mamacitas Restaurant) Webster R 281.724.1552 Tuesday-Friday, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. R Saturday 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Page 2 2551 South Shore Blvd. Suite B League City, TX 77573 (281) 334-0515 • Fax (281) 334-0288 MARINA MARINA STAFF Donna Rogers Marina Manager [email protected] Taylor Ihlefeld Harbormaster [email protected] Keith Emmons Newsletter Editor [email protected] Virginia Zelenka Accounting Coordinator [email protected] Tyler Hatthorn Richard Bustamante Fuel Pier Attendants Chase Cobble Maintenance Manager [email protected] Amber Moore Leasing Agent [email protected] OFFICE HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Sat. 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Sun. Noon-4:30 p.m. FUEL PIER HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Sat. & Sun. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. 3!6% $ 00 OFF A monthly publication of South Shore Harbour Marina. Like us on The Lighthouse is a publication of South Shore Harbour Marina. Reproduction in whole or in part is prohibited without permission. Published by A Division of Waterfront Publishing Inc. 228-B Marina Bay Dr. Kemah, Texas 77565 South Shore Harbour Marina and Waterfront Publishing Inc. are not responsible for claims of manufacturers or their representatives on any items published. For advertising information, contact Mike DuBois at (281) 334-2202. South Shore Harbour Marina Newsletter April 2013 Odor free sewage system is possible From the internet It really is possible to have a completely odor-free system — honest! You have read or heard, over and over again, the key to odor control is the hose, that hose permeates with sewage and causes the system to stink. That’s folklore. The key to odor control is in the installation of the entire system. What very few people in the marine industry have learned is the very nature of sewage itself and how it breaks down, what creates odor and what prevents odor from forming. Once we understood proven sewage management principles and how to apply them to onboard systems, we were able to install systems that are completely odor-free and correct the ones that weren’t. Once you understand it — and it’s so simple — you can do the same thing. There are two ways to deal with holding tank odor: Try to reduce it, mask it and contain it after it’s formed, by using chemicals and filters — which has never proven very successful, or prevent odor from forming in the first place by applying the same principles that are used to balance and maintain sewage treatment ponds. Sewage treatment ponds only stink when they’ve been unbalanced biologically by an overload of chemicals. Here’s how it works. Sewage contains both aerobic (need oxygen to survive and thrive) and anaerobic bacteria (thrive in an airless environment); neither can function in the other’s environment. Why is that important? Because only the anaerobic bacteria in sewage produce foul-smelling gasses. Aerobic bacteria break sewage down, as does anaerobic bacteria — but aerobic bacteria do not generate odor. So as long as there is a sufficient supply of air to the tank, and an aerobic bacteria treatment is added to aid what naturally occurs in sewage, the aerobic bacteria thrive and overpower the anaerobic bacteria, and the system remains odor free. A bio-active (live aerobic bacteria) holding tank treatment such as Raritan’s “K.O.” works with the aerobic bacteria in sewage, eliminating odor, completely emulsifying solids and paper, and preventing sludge from forming. Enzymes do little if anything — a brief respite from odor immediately after adding them, then odor begins to build again. Chemical products only mask odor with another odor, and they kill not only odor-causing anaerobic bacteria, but beneficial aerobic bacteria as well. Not good, because the aerobic bacteria are needed in the system to break down and emulsify solids and paper. Chemicals only break them up and dissolve them into little tiny particles More Odor free, page 4 N E P O NORW ARD OOK SHIPY SEAB Docking by Control LLC, offers professional sales and mobile installations of bow and stern thruster systems. Our team of factory authorized and trained installation professionals will come to you anywhere in the United States for the installation process. All of our bow and stern thruster systems are independent units. The only power pulled from your vessel is one 5-amp wire that runs from your vessel’s AC panel used to charge your thruster system. We use only top quality equipment and hardware in each and every thruster installation. u 20 years of installation experience u Our technicians are factory trained u We personally guarantee the quality of each installation u Great customer service and support available 7 days a week u We use the most advanced technology in thruster system u Insured for your protection u Quality products and installations at a competitive price DOCKING BY CONTROL 321.890-4511 Seabrook Shipyard 1900 Shipyard Dr. bowthrusterinstallation.com April 2013 South Shore Harbour Marina Newsletter Page 3 Odor free continued from page 3 that settle to the bottom of the tank, along with chemical residue, to become sludge that turns to concrete. Plus, chemicals, unlike bio-active products, are also unwelcome in landside sewage treatment facilities, and are especially unappreciated by those living and working near them. The bacteria in sewage produce a variety of sulfur monoxides and dioxides (which are the malodorous gasses), methane — which has no odor but is flammable — and carbon dioxide, which also has no odor but creates the environment in which the aerobic bacteria cannot live, but the anaerobic bacteria thrive. Carbon dioxide does not rise or fall; it is ambient, like the atmosphere. Without a sufficient flow of fresh air through the tank to allow it to dissipate, it simply lies like a blanket on top of any pool of sewage (whether inside hose or a holding tank) and builds, suffocating the aerobic bacteria and creating the perfect environment for the anaerobic bacteria to take over. The system literally turns septic and the result . . a stinking boat, or at least foul gasses out the vent line every time the head is flushed. To prevent this, let’s start with the head: The discharge hose, no matter whether it goes overboard, to a Type I or II MSD, or to a holding tank, should be installed, if at all possible, with no sags or low places where sewage can stand. When a marine head is not flushed sufficiently to clear the hose of sewage and rinse the hose behind the sewage, that sewage sits in low spots in the hose or bits of it cling to the walls of the hose — getting no air, allowing the anaerobic bacteria to thrive and produce their stinking gasses. If sewage stands in a low spot which gets no air in hose which is susceptible to a high rate of water absorption, it will permeate the hose. This is what has given rise to the myth that the wrong hose causes odor. Therefore, as I’ve already said, flush your head thoroughly enough to clear the entire hose of sewage and rinse behind it. And when you leave your boat to go home, flush the head thoroughly one last time, this time with fresh water. Until holding tanks came along, the hose was the source of most odors, but incomplete flushing was the real cause. In the holding tank, the key to odor control is the vent line, it must allow a free exchange of fresh air for the carbon dioxide generated by the sewage. Therefore, those bladder tanks which have no vent are all but guaranteed to stink. There’s no source of air into them at all. Boat builders, boat owners and boat yard personnel who install holding tanks have always viewed the vent line only as a source of enough air to allow the tank to be pumped out without collapsing and as an exhaust for methane (Many even believe methane, which in fact is odorless, to be the source of odor.) Now Offering Fuel Tanks Cleaned & Replaced Some take the attitude that tanks are going to stink so the thing to do is run vent line as far from people areas —cockpits, sun decks, etc. — as possible, or make the line as small as possible, or install a filter in it. All of the above actually create the very problem you want to solve. Think of the holding tank as a stuffy room which needs to be aired. You know that even if there isn’t a hint of a breeze outside, just opening a window will allow the fresh air outside to exchange with stuffy air in the room. Open another window for cross-ventilation, and the air exchanges even faster. Just opening a skylight accomplishes nothing unless there’s also a mechanical means (an attic fan) of pulling the air up and out, and that won’t work unless another window is open to create airflow. But the only window into a holding tank is at the end of a hallway — the vent line. If that hallway is too narrow and goes around corners, takes a long, curved path, or rises more than 45˚ above horizontal, no ambient air can find its way to the tank to dissipate and exchange itself with the gasses in it. Vent the tank with as short, as straight, and as horizontal a line as is possible, with no sags, no arches, and no bends. The minimum I.D of the More Odor free, page 5 Gary Brumenschenkel Yacht Service Serving the Clear Lake Area since 1985. Certified in AC Systems, engines, outdrives, transmission, generator and electrical. (281) 559-3300 Page 4 Chuck Ruhl 25 years experience For All Your Canvas Needs 281-538-4717 703A Clear Lake Rd., Clear Lake Shores, TX 77565 South Shore Harbour Marina Newsletter April 2013 Odor free continued from page 4 hose (which is the standard size in use today, but for no reason other than being standard in fresh water and fuel tanks) is 5/8"; we recommend that it be at least 1”. Ideally, it should be no more than 3’ long. If, for instance on a sailboat, the line must go up to the deck, install a second vent line in order to create cross ventilation, or install some mechanical means of forcing air through the tank. We prefer to put holding tanks in the bow of sailboats, under the v-berth, because the hull just behind the point of the bow is the only place on the hull except the transom that will never be under water even when the boat is at maximum heel. It’s the perfect place to install vent-line through-hulls, because the though-hull is always into the wind, forcing air into the vent line, when the boat is underway or on an anchor or mooring. The vent through- hull should not be the same type as a fuel vent through-hull (a cap with a slit in it), but should be a straight open type through-hull. On sailboats especially it’s advisable to vent off the top of the tank and not the side, because heeling can cause the contents of a half-full or more tank to run into the vent line. Because a filter blocks the flow of air into the tank, install a vent line filter only as a last resort; the filter does trap the gasses which try to escape through the vent line, but a filter will not stop gasses from forming, and therefore from going back up the inlet hose into the boat or up the outlet hose . . . and eventually permeating even the best hose. Check the vent line regularly for blockages, little insects love to build nests in them. And remember — the vent line is not an overflow! So try never to overfill the tank, bits of sewage can clog the vent line. Enough air can pass through it to allow the tank to be pumped and gasses to escape, but that doesn’t mean the line is completely clear of any blockage. Finally, the system, including the tank, should be at least nominally rinsed, through the head or back down the deck fill — with fresh or salt water — after each pump-out, and occasionally with fresh water. If your marina doesn’t have a dock water hose for this purpose, please ask them to install one. It should be separate from the potable water hose, and the two hoses should never be interchanged. We promise, if you install and maintain your system according to what I’ve said here, you will have no odor! In fact, you can be standing next to the vent line through-hull when the head is flushed and you won’t even notice it! By the way, if you have a “standard” holding tank vent, the best treatment chemical to use is OdorLos, as it’s the only one that generates its own oxygen. This will keep the aerobic bacteria happy and working, but it will need to be replenished more often. Telltales is a Yachting Texas Style magazine, and has been since its inception over 31 years ago. Telltales is about Texas people, by Texas people, and for people interested in yachting along the Gulf Coast. Call today to start your subscription 334-2202 $ ONE YEAR 21.50 $ TWO YEARS 34.50 (281) April 2013 South Shore Harbour Marina Newsletter Page 5 F South Shore Harbour Marina 2551 SOUTH SHORE BLVD. SUITE B LEAGUE CITY, TEXAS 77573 MARINA I feel like a fugitive from the law of averages. —William H. Mauldin my m o T ton’s Tip “THE GULF COAST PREMIER POWER YACHT SPECIALIST” Lauderdale Yacht Sales OUR Pier 14 — South Shore Harbour Marina ONLY BUSINESS IS TO SELL YOUR BOAT 80+ Yachts Available • $15 Million in Inventory 38 Beneteau Idylle 11.5 ’83 29 Cruisers Yachts Express ’05 41 Silverton 352 MY ’99 43 Hughes Catamaran ’95 STOP IN TO SEE OUR LATEST SPRING DEALS GIVE US THE OPPORTUNITY TO SELL YOUR BOAT 281-535-0900 www.lauderdaleyachtsales.com • [email protected]