Why Robert Redford's 'All is Lost' is hard to watch....

Hello All!

So Dave and I finally sat down to watch Robert Redford's 'All is Lost,' a film about a man on a CAL 39 in the Indian Ocean who faces any cruiser's nightmare, a collision with a sea container.  It is a fantastic story idea.  We haven't seen a good sailing film in a while, so we were really looking forward to this one...yet in the first five minutes we were already frustrated by the film, which clearly did not involve any cruiser advise before or during the making of this film.  While the film is utterly frustrating, it is a great lesson on what NOT to do in situations of crisis.

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NOTE: SPOILER ALERT! Don't read on if you want the element of surprise while watching the film (although, the title kind of gives it away already).

In the opening scene, we see Redford sleeping in the v-berth of his CAL 39 (a great boat!), when the nightmarish noise of splintering fiberglass shatters our ears and shatters the starboard side of Redford's hull.  A hole has been ripped above the water line.  The nav station with all of its electronics has been splintered.  Water gushes over the VHF, the SSB and the RL70 radar and plotter, which the single-handing Redford stupidly never turned on while he took his siesta down below (the container he hit was a good three feet out of the water and would have been picked up by his radar and set off a proximity alarm).  SO....lets give the movie the benefit of the doubt at this point and say we all make mistakes.  Sure, many a cruiser has made the deadly mistake of not taking advantage of their electronics.

Now he has a hole in his hull and he is attached to a sea container full of sneakers.  His yacht is under full sail, continually banging against the corner of the large metal box, and water is gushing into his cabin while he bobs up and down in the middle of the Indian Ocean.  Most cruisers, in this situation, would suffer from a major adrenaline rush and kick it into high gear to get out of the current situation.  Redford takes his pretty time looking at the container in his hull, checking out the surroundings, and then WALKING SLOWLY up on deck to take down his sails.  As a viewer, you want to yell at the screen.  Water is gushing into this man's boat and he is out for a walk in the park.

Redford eventually ties a sea anchor to the opposite end of the container to pull the container away from his hull, which unexplainably easily separates without pulling the yacht with it.  Great! Redford has pulled his yacht free!  With his sails down and calm sees, his hull damage is above the water line even with a good 2ft. of water already in his cabin.

But wait!  He left his sea anchor tied to the container!  He must go back and get it!!  Redford gets his jib back out and goes on a port tack for a collision course with the container.  His breached hull is submerged again until his bow slams into the container again.  Why any boater would purposely run into the same thick metal container that has already crumpled his hull is beyond me, but he does it...(face palm here).  

He retrieves his sea anchor, brings it in and finally goes back to a starboard tack, bringing his hull breach above the water line again.  Finally, time for some brilliance.  

Ehhh...no.

Yes, he does take the time to slap up some fiberglass repair over his hull.  Granted, it is paper thin, and is so poorly done that he can push on the fresh resin and it flexes under his fingers, but he still repairs the hole.  Then, he airs out some of his electronics out on his deck.  He actually pulls out his VHF, takes it apart, pours fresh water on it to get the salt residue off of it, and then hooks it up to a battery that had just spent a couple of hours under two feet of water....and....it works momentarily! Never mind the fact that it is not hooked up to an antenna or that the battery was completely waterlogged.  Who needs details, right?!

After an exhausting day, Redford heads down below for some sleep.  He can't sleep in his berth because he has not touched the whaler.  Yes.  That's right!  All this time and he has not removed a single bit of water from out of his boat even though his salon cushions are sloshing about.  How do you get a good night's sleep in a boat full of water?  Forget removing the water! Simply string a hammock up and swing back and forth above it!

No cruiser would ever go to sleep with that amount of water in their boat.  Getting on the whaler would be one of the first things anyone would do!

After a good night's sleep, Redford wakes up and continues with his relaxed demeanor.  He even stays relaxed when he hears thunder off in the distance and sees a dark grey mass of clouds ahead of him.  He is so relaxed, in fact, that he even takes the time to shave rather than changing sails, reefing, battening down the hatches or stowing everything away.

Then, the weather hits (and viewer, if you haven't squeezed your couch pillow enough in frustration while watching this film, well, the stuffing is about to fly).

During the storm, the film really proves that no cruiser was involved in the making of this film.  For starters, Redford seems to have absolutely no concern for closing his hatch whenever he goes on deck.  Blue water is crashing over the boat, yet he leaves the damn thing wide open.  Then, he decides to change sail.  He lugs out a HUGE staysail that looks more like a 135% genoa than a storm jib and attempts to hank it on.  The gail-force winds and breaking waves ultimately lead to Redford being tossed from the decks and being dragged by his jack line and harness until he pulls himself back aboard.  No sailor would EVER go up on decks in that type of weather to INCREASE sail.

At this point, Redford has admitted defeat and heads below, leaving his vessel to the whims of the storm.  So, of course, he is rolled.  A realistic scenario, except that no water creeps into the cabin at all.  

The movie reaches utter ridiculousness at this point.  

While his boat is flipped, no water is gushing anywhere.  The main hatch with its slatted wooden hatch boards doesn't seem to leak a drop and the ports that are literally wide open and swinging at all angles (because the boat isn't actually under water at all) do not leak a drop.  

The CAL rolls again, knocking down the rigging and punching another hole in the deck.  Redford goes back on deck and cuts ONE shroud to set his rigging free (if only every boat that was dismasted managed to just need one shroud removed when it is normally a tangled disaster).

After taking more of a beating, Redford decides to bail.  He deploys his life raft and climbs aboard, still tethered to his yacht.  He passes out in the raft and wakes to flat calm sees.  The CAL is riding very low because it has about five feet of water in it.  He heads down below, gathers some survival gear, including a sextant, and tosses his goods into the raft.  Then he stands around surveying the situation and decides he can go down below again and patch up a cut on his face.

It is flat calm, there is five feet of water in his boat which is drifting powerless in the middle of the indian ocean.  GET THE WATER OUT OF YOUR BOAT!  Staying on the vessel for as long as possible is the best thing you can do!  It is much safer than handing your life over to the seas in an inflated life raft.  You keep your supplies ready to go and the raft deployed so you are ready to bail at any point, but any Coast Guard will tell you that you should stay with your vessel until absolutely necessary to abandon ship.  He does need to abandon ship when the bow of his yacht mysteriously combusts and the CAL 39 finally heads to the depths.

Now Redford is adrift in a life raft.  He has a sextant, a map, some canned food, and a compromised water can that has filled with salt water.  Fortunately, he determines that he is drifting towards a shipping channel.

But, of course, we need to have another storm first.  The raft is tossed into another brutal storm.  It is flipped and begins filling with water through all of the zippers but it is a life raft, so it is still in tact.  This situation doesn't cut it for Redford, so he unzips the raft entry and swims out to attempt to flip it in more gail-force winds and huge seas.  He easily manages to flip it and never gets separated from the raft.

Through the storm, he drifts helplessly, sitting in the sun all day as he slowly gets closer and closer to the shipping channel.  When he does finally reach the shipping channel, he is missed by two ships, one of which goes right past him and his flares in the dead of night.  With no hope left as he drifts past the channel, he writes his final note and sets it adrift in a jar.  Reaching desperation, he sees a light off in the distance that same night.  Rather than using is last flare, he sets a fire in his old water can (made of plastic).  After igniting the paper, the fire gets going quickly, eventually melting the plastic and immediately setting the raft ablaze.

Redford is forced to abandon the raft or be engulfed in flame.  He jumps into the water and watches as the blaze grows and all that he has left is destroyed.  Redford has reached his breaking point.  He has been in the water for all of ten seconds when he decides it is time to give up and go under.  Forget the fact that you have just set a fire that can be seen by a ship from miles away. It's time to give up!

No. NO. NO!

As he sinks to the depths, he sees a hull headed straight for his blazing raft and a light searching the clear water.  He swims back for the surface and is lifted to the surface by a hand...

Annnnd...scene! Thats a wrap!

For a movie that got a 94% on Rotten Tomatoes from viewers and movie critics, we were wholly unsatisfied.  With so many blaring boating problems,  it really is a shame that they sank a CAL 39 for the making of this film.

That's all folks!  Our first movie review!

Until next time,

Erin and Dave

 

 

A Snowy Sea Trial...

Hello All!

Happy holiday season!  We hope everyone has been working around the snowy weather to get in a few more boating days before winter really sets in.  We recently had the survey and sea trial of our Kadey Krogen Whaleback and we did not avoid winter!  It was snowing!  Luckily it was just a pretty snow and there were no gusts so the Bay was glassy and visibility was just a little fuzzy.  Check out the photos!

Until next time!

Erin and Dave

PS. Don't forget to check in with us for any discounts on marine supplies for your loved ones and friends over the holidays.  We can get great deals with our Port Supply account!

Winter Storage

Hello all! 

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It is getting to be that time of year again....winter.  For those of you not heading south for the colder months, it is nearing the time for winter storage and the debate continues on the best methods for winter yacht treatments.  Do you haul out or stay in the water?  Canvas cover, shrink wrap or no cover at all?  What is most effective?

These are all matters of personal preference, of course, but let's add some economics to the discussion.  First, let us consider that Annapolis, and many surrounding coastal areas in the mid-Atlantic region usually do not get a heavy freeze with inches of ice overtop our waterways like New England.  Even when the bay's creeks do freeze over, they are usually thin amounts that leave rings of open water around objects (boats, docks, pilings, buoys, etc).   

So is it cost effective to haul out every year if you are not getting iced in?

 The short answer: no.  Taking into account haul-out fees, the fees you pay for your slip that you have a 12-month contract for, detailing, bottom paint, winterization of systems, and possibly shrink-wrap, it ends up being most cost effective for you to haul out every other year.  For a 43ft. boat, hauling out every year costs about $3,555 while a two-year plan would cost an annual $2,322 and a three-year haul plan would cost about $2,380. 

Next question: to shrink wrap, canvas cover or leave bare?  It is great to get your boat out of the sun and elements but this is actually a tricky process.  Too often, Dave and I show boats in the winter that have been shrink wrapped too tightly without enough ventilation.  This creates a major moisture problem.  It is kind of like leaving an empty water bottle out in the sun.  It may be mostly dry, but little bits of moisture are there and trying to evaporate, but the bottle can't breath so moisture condenses all over the top of the bottle.  A boat works the same way.  Shrink wrap can be like a greenhouse, causing a significant temperature difference between the boat and the outside environment.  This can lead to condensation.  When the boat and shrink wrap are not properly ventilated, this moisture gets trapped in the boat and cause significant damage (de-lamination of woodwork, cloudy wood finishes, mold and mildew on upholstery, and that oh-so unpleasant wet smell that is so tough to get rid of).  If you are shrink wrapping your yacht, on the hard or in the water, make sure you ask for plenty of vents!  

A canvas cover can breath much better but its one downfall is the cost.  Shrink wrap is much cheaper in the short term because custom canvas covers can put a five-digit dent in your bank account.  The argument that can be made for canvas covers is that when properly maintained and fit for a longer life, the cost of a canvas cover can be less than paying for shrink wrap application and removal each season.  If you are really tight on a budget and don't pay much mind to appearances in the yard, you can even rig up some overized tarps (about $60 from your local Home Depot).

Are you leaving your boat bare?  That's ok, too!  Because it is winter, your sun exposure will not be nearly as harsh as the summer months so covering really isn't that crucial.  Just be sure and take off your very sun-sensitive items like sunbrella canvas and sails.

What do you do when you leave your boat in the water?  Winterize your systems!  Because we are not a super-cold region and do not often dip down into truly freezing temperatures, you can cut some costs by cutting your antifreeze solutions.  Rather than use 100% solution, add in some water to your mix so your antifreeze goes further. 

Our personal opinion:  We do not like shrink wrap.  So often it isn't done well and does more harm than good.  On top of that, it is not environmentally friendly!  While boat yards say they recycle, trash dumpster after trash dumpster fills with the old plastic wads in the spring.  We do not live in Florida with the harsh sun or up north with the huge amounts of snow.  It just isn't necessary.  We haul out every other year and throw on an extra coat of bottom paint while we are out.  We also hire a diver for about one hour at $100/hr. each non-haulout year to check on the bottom and prop.  Hauling out every year just leaves you with added costs because your marina has you pay through the winter months for your slip as well as land storage and as long as you stay up to date on your bottom paint, zincs, and maintenance, there really is no need for hauling out every year.

Food for thought!  Until next time!

Dave and Erin