So, Monday morning dawned bright and clear at Vankerkoven,
but there was no sign of Sandrine Vankerkoven, nor of her brother Vincent, so
nobody who spoke any English to help us understand the Eastern-European French
that was being spouted by the Chef du Port, Osman.
However, it appeared we were to be side-slipped onto the
dock area after lunch. Osman wasn’t
interested in the fact that we have a small keel running the whole length of
the boat, but he did take account of the keel cooling pipes and marked up the
side of Riccall for two trolleys – one just behind the keel cooling pipes and
the other 12m forward, just aft of the front bulkhead. So that was OK and we came out with a bit of
rocking from side to side, but apart from that, OK. They then put some supports under us that could be jacked up in a
crude way, but were unable to get enough lift to remove the trolleys (into
which our small keel had formed a deep groove in the wood).
The following day, Riccall was jetwashed up to the waterline
and late that evening at 11pm our surveyor Stefan Fritz arrived. So after a quick drink and some scratch
food, we said goodnight and went to bed worrying about the morning.
At first the survey seemed pretty good: decent thicknesses
on the sides, along the waterline and round the turn of the bilge, then after
lunch came the underside. Exclamations
of horror and regret
From under the boat followed one another with awful
regularity. It appeared that many of
the rivets had ‘pulled through’ and would need welding - 100 in all - and
although the general thickness was not too bad, there were several actual holes
in the plates! These holes would have
occurred where deep pitting on the inside coincided with deep pitting on the
outside. The safest answer was to
double plate the whole bottom!
(At this stage our surveyor said that an ultra high pressure
washer was essential in order to take the hull back to rust-free steel to give
a good base for the welding and an epoxy based paint job. Vincent was not
prepared to consider hiring in such a machine, even at our cost.)
Now we knew we were going to be in trouble, because the yard
would know that they had us in a cleft stick and could charge pretty much what
they liked to do the job. However! Riccall
had been dragged out after an 80m barge which had to go back into the
water within a few days and we were in the way. So the yard decided that they would have to make us waterproof at
least, put us back in the water, re-launch the 80m commercial then pull us out
again for the remainder of the work.
So we let them do the minimum amount of work possible to
make us watertight then told them that we simply couldn’t afford to have the
whole job done at their quote of circa €25k: we would just leave it at
that. We had also in the meantime asked
two other yards in Belgium for quotes to do the job and also to use an ultra
high pressure jet wash on the hull. One
yard offered all this at about half Vanks’ quote so we planned to set off for
them as soon as we were re-floated.
We had taken the opportunity during the weekend when nothing
was happening in the yard to visit Namur by car as we had not had time to even
stop when we passed it by boat. It
seemed like a clean pleasant place with good quays and a decent range of shops
and it was nice to get away from the boatyard scene for a few hours.
On the other hand Charleroi, which Louise visited briefly
while Alex returned to Toul for the car, was a dreadful place: dirty, run-down,
graffiti everywhere, highly industrialised with filthy, noisy steelworks and
recycling plants now that the coat mines have all closed. Sightseeing tours include trips up some of
the slag heaps, as being the best thing on offer!
In the meantime Sandrine and brother Vincent had made out a
bill for what they had done so far. The
cost for the plating was not unreasonable (in their terms) but their original
quote had included a paint job which we had later said would not be
necessary. They tried to reduce the
overall price by just a paltry €250 for not having the paint applied,
and at that point Alex drew the line.
So very reluctantly Vincent gave us another €250 off the bill, which
still came to around €6,000. But even
at that, going to a different yard was going to be cost-effective.
Having milked our bank accounts at hole-in-the-wall
dispensers over two days, thus accumulating about half the bill in cash, we
then did an internet transfer of the remainder from our French bank account,
and Sandrine was satisfied that we could leave.
So, a two and a half day journey to Boom on the River Rupel
near Antwerp, our next destination.
Regular checks for water ingress satisfied us that we weren’t actually
going to sink and we arrived quite comfortably, passing through Brussels
(forgettable from the water) on the way.
We used the Ronquières Inclined Plane on this journey, which was quite
an experience, and we think because the Belgian commercial ships were on strike
and moored up in every little nook and cranny, we had no opposition and no wait
for the lift – it can take hours in a busy season.
Dave, the main man at Boom, who speaks perfect English, had
understood exactly what we were looking for and had given us a very competitive
quote. This dock is a tidal one, and we
had to ferry our way in against a pretty strong flow just before the top of the
tide. Once moored in position we
watched Lechaim, a 105m barge which was also coming into the dock, trying to
manoeuvre a small workboat into the dock.
This workboat had its ‘legs’ down too far to enable Lechaim to get it
over the sill of the dock. So Lechaim
took it back to its mooring out on the river then came back in itself. We spoke to Reyer, the captain, afterwards
and expressed our amazement at how he had handled his 105m barge as a tug for
the little workboat and he said that after a lifetime with boats it was just
all in a day’s work! But the tide was
still running pretty strongly and even though he had a 180 degree bow thruster
you would have thought he was just 20m like us and not a 105m leviathan.
The next day he and Corrie his wife invited us for what we
assumed would be aperos at about 6.30-7pm but it actually turned out to be
after-supper tea and cakes! But what
the hell, we were given a guided tour of one of these €4m commercial
vessels. The living quarters were
immaculate with three double bedrooms, fully fitted bathroom, en suite and a
large open plan dining/kitchen/living room.
The wheelhouse was just state of the art: the whole thing lifted about 5
metres on a hydraulic lift system and the top part of the wheel house could be
lowered if necessary to get under low bridges with a roof hatch for the captain
to stick his head out of pro-tem. Up at
the front was another set of living accommodation for the crew!
The main engine room had three engines in it – the power
house, 1700bhp with triple turbos, the generator, 15kva and the
hydraulics. In the forward compartment
were another three engines - 300 bhp for the bow thruster and two
generators as back up for the rear ones.
At least I think that’s how it was set up: I definitely did see 6
engines in all! They don’t bother with
a big bank of domestic batteries: they just run the gennies all the time until
they are hooked up to shore power. In
fact their Victron inverter was only rated at 1200kw.
Anyway, the reason they are in dry dock is for a survey
because Reyer, at 70 years old, has decided it is time to retire and he is
selling his barge. The guy who is
buying it is a 32 year old Frenchman and he is going to revamp the whole
interior of the living accommodation!!
The other day was Bank Holiday in Belgium so we had a quiet
day in the yard – quiet from the point of view of boatyard noise, but extremely
busy as Alex used the lovely weather to fit the new solar panels to the wheelhouse
roof.
Retrieving the car after each stage of the journey from
Vankerkovens was interesting, if a perfect nuisance, but we felt it was
important to have transport while in dry dock, and so it has turned out,
enabling us to drive hither and thither for spare parts, new ropes, everyday
shopping and the inevitable bank!
The new bottom is being installed as we write this, but not
without a certain degree of angst/excitement and unexpected happenings! More details to come in due course.
1 comment:
Dear Alex and Louise, I'm very sad to hear about all this missery.
The 6000 € Vankerkoven charged you sound way too much for what they did on Riccall.
If you have a bill, you should maybe get in touch with "Meuse et Sambre", as they are the owners of Vankerkoven, and ripoff rates like this will scare other potential client away, which they can't afford.
All the best at Boom,
Peter.
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