Camp Kieve.pdf

To be shared with all members of CIBC.
Camp Kieve was generous in sharing its deck this year for our Fall meeting.
Camp Wavus has been generous in sharing its internet access and a location for our web camera.

Jim Gagnon
Treasurer CIBC
Camp Kieve.pdf
Sent from my iPad

Posted in 2021 Season, Default Category | 1 Comment

Remote Ice

As icehounds we understand the heights to which we need to go in finding good ice. This guy puts us all to shame:

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/11/29/sports/hockey/29-nhl-lake-hockey-elias-pettersson.html

Posted in 2021 Season, Default Category | 1 Comment

Readying A Swap Meet Find

Started with the NEIYA fall swap meet that I chose to not attend and Bill B. did attend. Bill noticed a bit of a wood structure issue in the stem blocking area of the DN after Jack had made his purchase.

I believe that Bill mentioned the issue at the Chicky meeting at Camp Kieve. Then with an email from Bill to Jack Denker and I reminded me of the issue that a fellow Husky sailor had with his first DN. Biddeford about 1:45 from Northeastern, so a relatively short drive for Jack who is also a frost-biter on the soft-water.

Jack arrived at about noon on Sunday 11/8. We talked a bit about stuff like Northeastern, and how the sailing team is doing. Very interesting for me to hear that the sailing team was still going strong. When I started at Northeastern in 1992 there was only a sailing club with the use of the facilities that MIT had on the Charles River. Myself and some fellow students started racing, and traveling to races, so I suppose we may have started the Northeastern sailing team. From talking with Jack I have found that the team is very popular and an alum who had a son on the team made a substantial donation that has allowed the team to survive quite well. They even have a frat-type house I believe.

So we did not waste too much time and got to work on the DN. I started poking with an ice pick and found that indeed the stem area had some issues. I routed about 5/16 of an inch of the port side panel a foot back from the nose, leaving the top and bottom deck in tact for reference. We cut out about a 4 inch by inch and a half of the punky port side panel, exposing the bushing tube. We found that the stem blocking did not extend as far back as the steering chock bushing tube. The tube was still in place and attached to the top and bottom of the stem, so I cut a 3/4 inch piece of plywood to fit the cutout area, and a 1/4 inch piece to fit the area of the side panel that I had routed 5/16 from. We then mixed some epoxy, I gave Jack several ounces and while he wet out the routed area and the plywood pieces I thickened the remainder with West 404 High-Density filler to as thick as I could mix. I surrounded the bushing post with the mixture and then bedded the plywood pieces in it. Using wax paper and a good flat piece of 2/4 clamped that and also clamped a few inch piece of the top deck that had also delaminated. There was also a bit of plywood separation from the side panel that we sanded and epoxied also.

Jack’s uncle came and picked up the boat the next week, and he said that he indeed was epoxy skilled so would be able to sand and then coat with epoxy the repaired nose. So you can all look forward to seeing Jack on the ice this winter, and his steering chock will stay attached. 

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Maine Lakes Tutorial

Here’s a fascinating list of Maine’s biggest lakes, along with the geologic history and recreational opportunities. Suffice it to say that iceboating is not one of the winter sports listed.

https://www.lakelubbers.com/maine-largest-lakes-in-maine-acres-L30-C1/

Looks like less than freezing temps have decided to hang around a bit longer. Perhaps they feel nervous migrating south the way they usually do at this time of year. Can’t say I blame them…

Posted in 2021 Season, Default Category | 1 Comment

Ice in Quebec!

Denis Guertin reports that behind the Covid Curtain two of our favorite early season lakes will be sailable any day now.

The larger of the two, Abenakis, above,is a bit of a mess, but just down the road and a bit higher is Lac Joli:

Denis says:

“What a better way to wish you Happy Thanksgiving than sending you pictures of frozen lakes.
Abenakis seems not safe. Cannot access it from the shore, and visible hazards from the shore.
Joli seems quite solid. I walked on it, and hit the surface with a hammer (drill battery was too low!!) , and it was very solid.
Unfortunately, there are very mild temps coming up, but I am confident that Joli will survive very well. At least, it will wet out the snow and resurface the ice. Maybe sailing late next week??

It seems that YOU may be the first ones to be sad about the closed border !! But make no mistakes: I am very sad also !!”

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