Woodwork
 - Structural & Fine Joinery
 


FiberGlass- Repairs & Custom Fabrication



Metalwork - Stainless Steel & Bronze Machining,  Fabrication,
Welding



Engine Service & Repair
Diesel & Gas



Mechanical 
Design Engineering
Installation
Repair



Marine Systems
Electrical
Electronic Sanitation
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Installation/ Repairs/ Service


Who We Are


Boat Happenings

SPRING At Yacht Restoration Ltd


The medley of spring at a Caribbean boat repair shop

Spring kicks the shipwright's work level into overdrive.  

Our maintenance season is too short to waste any time. We must effectively and fully schedule and use every resource available to us.

Each hour of the  woodworker's, mechanic's, electrician's, and metal fabricator's time is critical to a successful and timely launch. All bays, nooks, grounds and areas of the shop are a precious, continually used commodity.

The juxtaposition of the work is constantly changing.  Today a boat’s hull might be being repaired directly over a shaft replacement; beside a carpenter building custom interiors; to the left of an engine overhaul and to the right of an electronics refit.

Tomorrow, on the same spot, seams will be caulked; thru hulls replaced; cabin sides refinished  a boat builder will be planning oak for the frames of a major rebuild - in the midst of it all.

The different sights, smells, sounds and energy of the jobs blend into an ever-changing sensory smorgasbord.  

I enjoy the tangy scent of sawn cedar, the musky odor of mahogany and the cutting bite of wet varnish mixed with the resounding twang of the mallet giving shape to a metal  plate and the high pitched, ascending buzz of an electric plane punctuated by an exhilarating rush of claustrophobic fear at the site of a shipwright jammed and twisted and working upside down in the confines of a tiny locker.

 I enjoy the spring medley. 


We worked non-stop preparing boats for the BVI Spring Regatta -  THE REGATTA WAS CERTAINLY A SUCESS
Yacht Restoration worked non-stop repairing and restoring boats for the BVI Spring Regatta

Located in the British Virgin Islands, on the Island of Tortola - Nanny Cay Marina

18deg 24' 00.69" N   64deg 38' 03.77" W
BVI Spring Regatta boats & yachts at rest

Exuma- restored stainless steel stanchions
 

Even the Saeftinghe came to watch the fun.
 

Saeftinghe legend

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Saeftinghe Legend is an Old Dutch folk tale that explains the sunken city of Saeftinghe in eastern Zeeuws-Vlaanderen near Nieuw-Namen, The Netherlands, that existed until it was entirely flooded by sea waters in 1584. The legends says the city grew to be the most prosperous city on the fertile lands of the Scheldts but the inhabitants grew vain and proud. The farmers dressed in silk, their horses wearing silver and even the thresholds of homes were made from gold. The wealth attracted poor immigrants but the people of Saeftinghe showed no mercy and chased the migrants away with sticks and dogs. Greed corrupted the hearts of men and turned them blind for imminent threats.

On a foggy day, a fisherman caught a mermaid on the waters of the Western Scheldt. From the nets, the mermaid warned him Saeftinghe needed to change its ways or suffer the inevitable dire consequences. When the mermaid's husband surfaced and asked for his wife to be set free, the fisherman refused and yelled at him. The merman cursed the fisherman and his city, screaming "The lands of Saeftinghe will fall, only its towers will continue to stand tall!"

The people of Saeftinghe, occupied with greed, forgot to take care of their dikes. One day, when a maid went to get water from a well, she noticed cod and other fish swimming in it. The sea was nearing, the water turning salt. With the All Saints' flood (1570), a huge tidal wave washed over the lands of Saeftinghe, destroying the towns of Sint-Laureins, Namen and Casuwele, killing all inhabitants.

Saeftinghe withered and soon only its towers testified of its prosperous past until the city finally sank into the muddy swamps.

On foggy days, the tower bells call for help from what was once a wealthy place but is now a doomed world covered in mud, captured by the sea.












Preparations for the BVI Spring Regatta began long ago.  Captain Conrad Brown helped build Peg Leg back in the early 80's.  The following is a snapshot of Peg Leg under construction and the crew that built her.  The photos were taken by Captain Conrad Brown.



Building Story:  Captain Brown sent this story with the pictures.
In Puerto Rico builders always put something in "wrong, backwards, or otherwise off" just to give the devil his due. It is supposed to protect the house and it's occupants.
 
I put one of the balcony balusters upside down, it was quite obvious when you looked at it, and bought a bottle of Dom Perriogn as a prize that sat on the back bar with the challenge, find the "Devils Due, Win this Bottle."
 
No one did; for over a year the bottle sat there, many an argument ensued fueled by "greenies" trying to deduce "the Devils Due." One spring break my 18 year old son was visiting (he knew nothing about the challenge) and sitting at the bar with his beer, opined "his Dad must have missed something because one of the balusters was upside down!"
 
Over howls of protest,  they gave him the bottle. He swore he knew nothing of it, there was just something wrong...... Written by Conrad Brown

MORE BVI SPRING REGATTA PICTURES!





















More Regatta Pictures may be found on the Nanny Cay Marina Website:   http://www.nannycay.com/gallery/
We built, repaired, restored, serviced and perspired non-stop to get the boats ready for the fun of the BVI SPRING REGATTA 2009.

 

Ph:   284 494 0403
Fax: 284 494 0803
e-mail: restorer@candwbvi.net



Located at Nanny Cay Marina on the Island of Tortola, the British Virgin Islands