There was a small "whoo-hoo" moment with Weaverbird yesterday. At 1400, I brought her round to the hard part of the beach at Ravenglass so that a HIAB could drop the mast in. Only a ten minute job, but one that's hard to do safely and quickly without a crane. I poured polyurethane at the heel, but only put in some temporary wedges at the partners while I make a final decision on wedges vs polyurethane. Could go either way.
Off again on the next HW - at 0200, with fresh onshore breeze and pouring rain to make it more interesting. To make it more interesting still, I've bought a Bison 62lb thrust electric outboard, hoping that I can live with it rather more comfortably than with a petrol outboard. I'd intended to get the mast put in last Friday, but the brand-new Suzuki 2.5 that came with the boat wouldn't start. Maybe only needs a new plug, but if it needs a new plug after only 3 hours of running, I don't find that too impressive. However, the electric outboard may not be much better. It only just managed to get me off the beach after some bumping and grinding, in the fresh breeze and with the flood tide making things awkward. At least it demonstrated that the Hunter Duette is strongly built.
So, off the beach at 0200, at new moon and with a cloudy night, and I couldn't spot my mooring buoy, of course. Had to anchor and wait for dawn twilight and a bit of ebb against the fresh breeze to make it safe enough to go close to the railway embankment, where my mooring lies, with a woefully underpowered boat. All very nerve-wracking. Declared today a day of rest.