Sounds like a plan!!! Let me know if you are getting hot on it.
It's still a year away, but will keep doing research & planning. Have more boat projects to do over the winter (too hot out to do anything now), things I didn't get to this past winter/spring including refinishing some interior woodwork, maybe painting the inside of the wheelhouse, pulling & inspecting/cleaning the fuel tank, fixing or replacing leaking fresh water tank, plus basic engine PM's, mostly minor stuff.
The NY canals closes mid october so it has to be before that.
Nancy also mentioned over on the Cruising forum (see another thread on the Albin Cruising forum about the BC Albineer rendezvous we went to & all the Albin 25's lined up on the Ladysmith Maritime Society Marina guest dock) that the canals close on October 16. That will affect our scheduling for sure. Drat! I was hoping to be able to see peak fall colors.
The Eire canal booklet has a A25 on the ”speed limits” page so we are endorsed by canal company.
Exceeding speed limits is something we sure don't have to worry about, ha ha! We did see an Albin 25 at the Mid Lakes marina along the Erie Canal at Macedon in 2015 & met the owner. Other than the two we saw on blocks in the back lot at the Sound Marine Diesel shop in Connecticut it was the only A25 we did see on that entire east coast trip including Rhode Island & Chesapeake Bay. Can you post a picture of that page or a link to it if it's online? Looking at the canals.ny.gov site (which doesn't show that picture on speed limit page), looks like marinas with fuel docks selling diesel are few & far between.
Previous owners had two 5 gallon jerry cans for extra fuel mounted on racks on an extended length bowsprit. I thought that was insane, so I removed the racks & shortened the bowsprit. But I still have the jerry cans, and if I can figure a way to transfer the fuel safely without spilling it would add another 120 NM range between fuel stops. Would probably stow them on the foredeck lashed to the bow rails. This photo by the way shows our boat exactly as it was when we first bought it. This was in the Wahweap marina on Lake Powell, the first chance we got to splash it on the way home from picking it up in Idaho. Unfortunately it had a problem with the arrangement of the raw water strainer which also had a cracked sight glass & didn't allow the raw water pump to prime properly, so we only got as far from the ramp as the marina & had to pull it & take it home, so we never did get to cruise on Lake Powell. Powell is hot in the summer & cold in the winter without a stick of shade anywhere.
Albin 2.jpg
Compare that to how our boat looks now five years later.
20190616_132547.jpg
Anyway, check out this cool video. This is one stretch we'd be going on. Methinks I need to invest in a GoPro camera?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yJfAAOeysCo
The canal.ny.gov mentions a ban against draining gray water into Lake Champlain. Apparently that means we'd have to close off our galley sink drain & use a pan & drain dishwater into the toilet & holding tank?
I need to find a shower solution. Putting two solar showers on the engine overnight?
I've given some thought to that idea too. One idea was to get a circular aluminum or galvanized steel drip pan of the type that are made to go under hot water heaters, which are available at Lowes, Home Depot, Ace, etc. Rig that with a drain hose or PVC tube & elbows to drain into the bilge through that rearmost floorboard, and rig a solar shower & shower curtain in the cockpit area, or as you say a small portable camp shower or even a garden tank sprayer. Another option we considered was using a hoola hoop as a circular shower curtain rod & rig on top of our davits over the swim platform. Ended up doing neither. Up in the PNW it's so cool one can get by without taking showers every day, & marinas with pay showers such as those at Sidney, Ladysmith, Montague Harbour, Port Browning and other places in the Gulf Islands as well as Friday Harbor, Roche Harbor, Deer Harbor, Fishermans Bay and others in the San Juans, Bellingham & Blaine on the mainland on the US side are plentiful & within an easy day's run from anywhere.
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