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  • by strathy


    I finally got around to winterizing my engine today. Here is how I winterize my Atomic 4 gasoline engine.

    NOTE: Not all Atomic 4 engines are the same. This is how mine looks and how I winterize it – yours might be different. Click on the pictures to see the labeling.

    1. Drain the engine by removing 2 drain plugs from the engine block, 1 plug from the exhaust manifold and 1 from the muffler. One engine block drain plug is located at the front of the engine beside where the starter attaches to the block. The other engine block drain plug is located behind the starter below the alternator. The drain plug on the exhaust manifold is located at the rear back of the manifold on the right hand side of the engine. The muffler drain plug is at the bottom of the muffler stack. Make sure the water flows freely from all of drain plugs. If not, fish around inside the holes with a wire to clear out any crud.


    2. Replace all the drain plugs once all the water has drained out of the engine.

    3. Close off your raw water intake and switch over to your ‘T’ intake which you will put in your bucket of antifreeze. If you do not have a ‘T’ fitting installed, I have read of some people who pour the antifreeze into the raw water strainer instead.

    4. Now remove the thermostat from the thermostat housing and tighten the housing back down without the thermostat installed.

    5. Pinch off the bypass hose where it comes up to the thermostat housing. This will force all the antifreeze into the engine block before filling the manifold and muffler.

    6. Run engine until you have antifreeze coming out the exhaust. Then shut the engine off again.

    7. Unpinch the bypass hose. Open up the thermostat housing again and reinstall the thermostat.

    8. Restart engine with a can of fogging spray in hand. Once the engine is running again, spray the fogging oil into the engine intake so that the engine stalls from the fogging spray.

    9. Remove all the spark plugs and spray fogging oil into the cylinders. You might want to clean off the area around the spark plugs before removing them to prevent chips of rust and paint from falling into the spark plug holes.

    10. Turn off the gas supply to the engine and then turn the engine over briefly with the plugs still removed to move the fogging spray into the cylinders. If you have the hand crank for the Atomic 4, you can also just crank the engine over by hand.

    11. Reinstall the plugs.

    12. Open up your raw water strainer and pour in some antifreeze.

    13. Leave your raw water thru hull closed until spring.

    14. Top up your gas tank and add gasoline stabilizer.

    15. Bobs your uncle, Betty’s your aunt – your done!

  • by strathy

    In the past I stressed about moving aboard with an eight month old baby. Will there be enough space? Will he learn to walk in such confined quarters? Am I somehow going to stunt his growth? But there was one thing that I did not consider: kids adapt. They don’t understand that living on a boat is a different life. To them – it is just the way life is. They don’t know anything different. My boy does all the things that kids on land do – eat, sleep, play, get into things, poop…

    I sometimes hear people talking about how they have to buy bigger house because their family is growing. After all, little Johnny must have his own bedroom. What? Since when do kids ‘have’ to have their own bedroom? Do you think that Suzie will somehow grow up maladjusted because she had to share a bedroom with Sally? Kids get their sense of value, their sense of space and even their sense of ‘what is enough’ from their parents. These are not values that they are born with – they learn them. If you are content with what you have and the amount of space you live in, then they will be also. For the most part kids are just happy being where mom and dad are – no matter where they are.

  • by strathy

    “Home is Where the Heart (and the boat) is” is the title of an article in Good Old Boat November/December edition.

    They are right.

    As I sat out in the cockpit this evening thinking about how good life was, I thought about how I had everything I needed and that I was happy to be exactly where I was. Down below my wife was working on getting Christmas cards ready to mail out; out in the cockpit with me was the boy, just glad that dad was home from work. Looking out through the plastic I could see the sun beginning to set, the water rippling and other boats rocking in the slight breeze. I had everything that anyone could desire in a ‘home’ to be happy. The only difference was that my ‘home’ was floating. This evening we had order in Thai food, we rented and watched a DVD movie, messed around on the internet, read a magazine and now I’m getting ready to hit the sack. All this on a boat – really, what is different from living on dirt? If you are thinking about living aboard a boat – just do it! In many ways your life will not change and always remember, “home is where your heart is.”

  • by strathy

    Wow – its hard to believe that it has been 3 months since my last update here. You know what they say – time flies when you’re having fun. We’ve been having some fun!

    Since my last post we’ve moved to our winter marina, gone to Manitoba to pick up our new camper trailer, toured the southwest of Ireland and celebrated the boys 2nd birthday (the terrible twos are here.)

    I will get some pics up in the next week or so of the above, but for now here is a taste of our Ireland trip…



  • by strathy


    I finally got around to installing jacklines on the boat. I had purchased the hardware a month ago and had got the actual lines made up last winter. All I had to do was drill some holes and bed the hardware – about 1 hour worth of work that I’ve put off for far too long. As you can see I mounted some real heavy ‘D’ rings to the side of the cabin right in front of the cockpit combing. Then ran the lines to my anchor cleats. With this set up I can reach around to clip on with out leaving the safety of the cockpit. Also they are easily removed when not needed. For now I will leave them on and with give the boy a try on them with a harness. That way I can work on deck and not worry about him going over. See my post Keeping the Boy on the Boat for more info on how we keep our 20 month old safe on board.

  • by strathy

    The clouds prepare for battle
    In the dark and brooding silence.
    Bruised and sullen stormclouds
    Have the light of day obscured.
    Looming low and ominous
    In twilight premature
    Thunderheads are rumbling
    In a distant overture…

    – Jacob’s Ladder

  • by strathy

    The problem with having an air conditioned boat is that when the weather is hot, you don’t want to do anything. Today, it is unbearably hot outside – over 40 deg C. with the humidex scale. I’ve not left the boat nor have I done anything but eat, sleep and read books. Oh yes, I watched a bit of television too. I feel bad – lazy really, but I blame it on the A/C unit. Who wants to be all hot and bothered when you can be cool as a cat and all relaxed? I suppose that some time soon, I ought to run off for a shower, if nothing else than for the sake of those living with me. But after that? I have no plans – maybe a bit of reading, some eating and then some more sleep. Ah, what a day!

  • by strathy


    We have some new neighbours here on our dock. They are noisy and aggressive but at lot of fun to watch. They are a family of barn swallows that have taken up residence under the bow of a powerboat across the dock from us. I guess this is what happens if you park your boat and walk away. I’ve haven’t seen anyone on this boat the whole summer so I guess it was the perfect place for Mr. and Mrs. Swallow to set up shop. Walking down the dock is now an interesting experience as Mrs. does not want anyone coming near her babies. So she dives and we duck – I think it is a bit of a game for her to see how close she can get. I tried to snap a proper picture but could not stop flinching when she came at me so this is the best I could get.

  • by strathy

    Is this the Simple Life or is this just simply life? A question I’ve been asking myself lately. The fact that we got rid of so much ‘stuff’ when we moved from the house to aboard the boat would seem to indicate that we have simplified our lives. But have we really? Somehow, I think we’ve managed to bring all the things that clutter up our minds and lives and packed them into a wee little boat.

    For instance, the internet connection has been horrible here for about a week now. I called twice before getting a message back that they are working on it. What does that mean? Simplified? I don’t think so.

    The fridge needs defrosting. If we had simplified our lives we would not have a fridge. But who can live without a fridge? Cold drinks and well kept food seems to be sort of essential to me. But does having a fridge that needs to be defrosted every month or so during the summer mean that our lives have been simplified? Not in my books.

    Light bulb burnt out in the v-berth, broken hinge on a cockpit locker, a bit of soft floor in the cockpit sole that needs repair … and on, and on, and on.

    Life is no simpler – the actual jobs have changed but the work is the same. Would I give up the boat and go back to the house? Not on your life – I love it here – life is so much simpler…

    (I know that does not make sense, but that is the way it really is here aboard H.M.S. Strathgowan.)




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