I've mentioned several times both in this blog and on Cruisers Forum that I'm getting rid of the original toe rail system.
I'm an avid reader of Hal Roth and a lot of his books I treat as tech books on how to build boats. Shortly after he took custody of his Spencer 35 he noticed small leaks in the hull cabinets. When he got into heavy seas the leaks got much worse. He discovered that the water was coming in through all the bolt holes holding down the toe rail. Imagine this ... you hand lay a hull, set and glass the deck in place before you pull it out of the mold to keep it all true and straight. Then, after you have it on the work shop floor you proceed to drill 100 holes down each side to fasten the toe rail. Are you kidding ????? 200 holes in a brand new boat? What kind of a morron does this. So ... just like Hal Roth I taper drilled all the holes and filled them with resin saturated with milled glass.
My project for March is to re-finish the hull / deck joint all the way around the boat. I started by running a 1" round over bit all the way around the boat. Remember the horse trading I did in January and got the scaffold? Well, this is what it's for. I glassed all 90 feet or so of edge with 5 layers of glass and cloth. That should take care of those pesky water leaks. I also glassed over the original fuel fill hole which was right at the deck edge .... really????

Starting on the starboard side. That's where I set up the scaffold when I bought it in January. I ground off the gelcoat on both the hull and deck. Then layed down 5 layers of glass. 1-1/2 mat, 6 oz cloth, 1-1/2 mat, 6 oz cloth, 2 oz mat on top of it all. I staggared the the ends so no joints are on top of the previous layer.
Violet climbs the ladder and likes helping me on all my projects

I had to get really creative with some of the scaffold to reach over the corner of my workshop area.

Starboard side finished and the Port side is half finished. Looks good if I do say so myself.

A few weeks earlier, and no, I didn't take any pictures, I moved the mast from back side of the boat and workshop to the front side so I could polish off 25 years of corrosion. More on that story later.
I took me 5 hours and lots ingenuity. One foot at a time I moved the mast 40 feet, then with a sissor lift I lifted the mast up and over the line of motorhomes in storage here at the yard. Then, with a Kabota mini-excavator I took the mast off the top of the sissor lift and moved it back down beside the boat.

See ... I told you that my new patio made a great place to cut fiberglass.
Finally, 90 feet of toe rail glassed and finished.
I'm leaving the scaffold at the stern for painting on the boat's name.
Chasing Summer