Friday, 5 June 2026

Small Gouges, Big Consequences: Repairing Champagne’s GRP Hull Before We Get Carried Away

 


Small Gouges, Big Consequences: Repairing Champagne’s GRP Hull Before We Get Carried Away

There are moments in boat ownership when enthusiasm needs to be firmly grabbed by the collar and told to sit down quietly.

Champagne, our Thames A-Rater, is back on the river, looking elegant, dramatic and faintly capable of emptying a bank account if left unsupervised. She has already been water-tested and even had a brief return to racing, which is rather exciting. But before we get too carried away with sails, varnish, filming, racing and pretending we know exactly what we are doing, there is a small but important job that cannot be ignored.

Champagne has a couple of small gouges in her hull.

They are not enormous. They are not the sort of damage that makes everyone in the boat park gather round with concerned faces and mugs of tea. But they are there, and on a GRP hull, small damage is still damage.

Before we do too much sailing, they need to be repaired properly.

Why Small Gouges Matter

It is tempting to look at a small gouge and think, “That will be fine for now.”

This is one of those dangerous phrases, rather like:

“That screw is probably tight enough.”

“The weather should hold.”

“I’ll just do a quick coat of varnish.”

With GRP — Glass Reinforced Plastic — the outer surface protects the structure underneath. If the gelcoat is damaged and the laminate underneath is exposed, water can begin to get where it should not. On an older racing boat, especially one we want to restore properly, that is not something to ignore.

A Thames A-Rater may look delicate and glamorous, but underneath the long lines, tall rig and elegant history, she is still a working racing boat. She has to cope with launching, recovery, moorings, river banks, trailers, crew movement, water pressure, knocks, bumps and the occasional moment when the helm and physics disagree.

So the plan is simple: repair the gouges before they become bigger problems.

This Is Not Just Cosmetic

The first temptation with a hull gouge is to think of appearance. Of course, I want Champagne to look good. She deserves to look good. A boat called Champagne should not look as if she has been dragged through a hedge backwards, even if restoration sometimes feels rather like that.

But the real reason for repairing these gouges is protection.

A proper repair should:

  • seal the damaged area;
  • restore the surface profile;
  • protect the underlying glass fibre;
  • prevent water getting into the laminate;
  • provide a sound base for gelcoat or paint;
  • avoid a repair that cracks out again after the first few sails.

That last point is important. A quick smear of filler may look acceptable for about ten minutes. Then vibration, flexing, water and use can expose the fact that the repair was more cosmetic than structural.

The aim is not just to hide the gouge. The aim is to repair it.

Step One: Clean the Area Properly

The first job is cleaning.

This sounds dull, which is why it is important. Many workshop disasters begin because someone wanted to get to the exciting bit too quickly.

The damaged area needs to be washed thoroughly with soap and water to remove dirt, river grime and anything else that has collected on the hull. After that, it should be wiped with a suitable wax-and-grease remover or marine solvent.

This matters because epoxy and gelcoat do not bond well to dirt, polish, wax, grease or old contaminants. If the surface is not clean, the repair may only be attached in a theoretical sense, which is rarely enough when boats and water are involved.

This is the restoration equivalent of exam technique: the boring preparation often decides whether the final answer works.

Step Two: Bevel the Gouge

The next step is to prepare the shape of the damage.

A gouge with sharp vertical edges is not ideal for repair. The filler needs a good surface to grip, so the edges should be bevelled out using something like 80-grit abrasive paper or a small rotary tool.

The idea is to create a shallow, sloped edge rather than a hard-sided hole. A commonly suggested approach is a generous taper, sometimes described as around a 12:1 bevel for structural repairs. For a small surface gouge, the exact geometry may be less dramatic, but the principle is the same: do not just fill a narrow crack and hope.

A bevel gives the repair more bonding area.

It also helps avoid the classic problem where the filler feathers out too thinly at the edge and then cracks, chips or lifts later.

This is the point where patience starts to matter. It is very easy to think, “Surely that is enough sanding.” Usually, it is not.

Step Three: Mix the Epoxy to the Right Consistency

For the actual filling, the plan is to use a marine-grade epoxy system thickened with a suitable filler.

A resin on its own is too runny for this job. It needs to be thickened so that it can be pressed into the gouge and stay there without sagging. High-density filler or colloidal silica can be used depending on the exact repair and product system.

The texture often described is “peanut butter” or “mayonnaise”.

This is wonderfully unscientific language for something that is actually quite important. Too runny, and it slumps, drains or leaves gaps. Too thick, and it becomes difficult to press fully into the damage.

The mixture needs to be thick enough to hold its shape, but workable enough to spread and compact into the gouge.

As someone who spends a lot of time teaching science, I rather like this stage. It is chemistry, materials science and practical judgement all in one small pot. The ratios matter. The mixing matters. The working time matters. The temperature matters. And, as always, the instruction sheet is not just decorative paper.

Step Four: Fill the Gouge Slightly Proud

Once mixed, the thickened epoxy can be applied with a plastic spreader or putty knife.

The key is to press the mixture firmly into the damaged area. The aim is not to gently decorate the top of the gouge, but to fill it properly.

The repair should be left slightly proud — raised a little above the surrounding hull surface. This allows for sanding back later. If the filler is applied exactly level, any shrinkage, settling, sanding or small error may leave a shallow dip.

And a shallow dip will catch the light beautifully every time you look at it, just to remind you that you rushed.

A proud repair gives room for adjustment.

Step Five: Let It Cure

This is the most difficult part of many repairs.

Leave it alone.

Epoxy needs time to cure properly according to the manufacturer’s instructions. That may be around 24 hours, depending on the system, temperature and conditions. Cold, damp weather can slow curing. Warm conditions can shorten working time.

This is where boat restoration and British weather form a partnership designed to test character.

The repair may look ready before it is ready. It may feel tempting to sand too soon. But if the material has not cured properly, sanding can tear, clog, smear or weaken the finish.

So the glamorous restoration activity for this stage is waiting.

Possibly with tea.

Step Six: Sand It Flush

Once cured, the repair can be sanded down.

This is where the sanding block earns its keep. Sanding by hand without a block can create uneven surfaces, finger marks and soft hollows. A block helps level the repair to the surrounding hull rather than simply smoothing the bump.

The first stage can be done with something like 80-grit paper to bring the raised repair down carefully. Then finer grades, such as 150 to 220 grit, can be used to refine the surface.

The aim is a smooth transition between the repair and the original hull.

This is where touch can be more revealing than sight. A surface may look acceptable but still feel uneven under the fingers. Running a hand gently across the repair can reveal ridges, hollows and edges that the eye misses.

On a racing boat, fair surfaces matter. Champagne does not need unnecessary lumps, bumps or rough patches slowing her down — she will have enough trouble with me learning how to sail her properly.

Step Seven: Finish With Gelcoat or Paint

The epoxy repair needs a proper finish.

If the hull is gelcoated, a matching marine gelcoat can be applied over the cured and sanded repair to restore protection and appearance. If the boat is painted, then the repair needs to be finished in a way that is compatible with the existing paint system.

The finish is not just about making the patch disappear. It protects the repair from water and ultraviolet light and helps restore the hull surface.

Once the gelcoat has cured, it can be wet-sanded through finer grades — for example 400 grit and then 600 grit — before polishing with rubbing compound and wax to bring back the gloss.

This is the point where the repair starts to look less like a workshop job and more like part of the boat again.

Matching the Finish: The Awkward Bit

In theory, matching gelcoat is straightforward.

In practice, boats age.

White is not always white. Cream is not always cream. A hull that has spent decades in sunlight, water and weather may have faded, yellowed or changed tone. A brand-new repair can sometimes look cleaner than the surrounding area, which is both satisfying and annoying.

For Champagne, the aim is not concours perfection at this stage. The priority is a sound, watertight, strong repair. Appearance matters, but protection matters first.

That is probably going to be a repeated theme in this restoration:

Safety first.
Sailing performance second.
Beauty third.

Although, being Champagne, she will probably insist on beauty being at least joint second.

Practical Lessons From a Small Repair

This job is small, but it reflects the larger restoration project.

A classic racing boat is not restored in one heroic burst. It is restored through a long sequence of sensible decisions:

  • fix the hull damage;
  • check the rudder cassette;
  • replace unreliable lashings with proper fittings;
  • assess the rigging;
  • protect the woodwork;
  • sort the cover;
  • inspect the sails;
  • photograph and record the condition;
  • decide what is urgent, what can wait and what is merely cosmetic.

The gouges are part of that bigger process.

They are a reminder that restoration is not just about dramatic before-and-after photographs. It is often about tiny jobs done properly before they become large jobs done expensively.

A Personal Reflection: The Boat Park Teaches Patience

One of the things I am learning about boat ownership is that boats are very good teachers.

They teach patience, because rushing usually creates more work.

They teach humility, because even a small job can reveal how much you still have to learn.

They teach planning, because the right repair depends on weather, materials, tools, curing times and the availability of a flat bit of space that is not currently covered in ropes, sanding dust or someone else’s trolley.

They also teach restraint.

The exciting part of owning Champagne is imagining her sailing properly again, tall rig pulling, long hull moving through the Thames, the whole boat looking elegant and slightly ridiculous in the best possible A-Rater way.

But before that comes sanding, cleaning, filling, curing, sanding again and finishing.

The river can wait for a proper repair.

Why This Matters for the Champagne Story

Champagne is not just another boat in the boat park. She is becoming a project, a story, a film series and hopefully a returning racing boat.

That means the small jobs deserve to be recorded too.

A video of a gouge being cleaned and filled may not have quite the drama of a race start, but it is part of the same story. Every repair helps bring her back. Every careful job reduces the chance of trouble later. Every photographed stage becomes part of her restoration record.

And for anyone following the project, it shows the real side of classic boat ownership.

Not just champagne moments.

Also sandpaper moments.

Conclusion: Repair First, Sail Later

The gouges in Champagne’s hull are not the largest problem we will face. They are not the most glamorous job. They will not make the most spectacular photograph.

But they matter.

A GRP hull depends on its protective surface. Damage should be cleaned, bevelled, filled, sanded and properly finished before water and use make the problem worse.

So before Champagne does too much sailing, these small gouges will be repaired properly with marine-grade materials and a patient approach.

It is not the most exciting part of bringing an A-Rater back to racing condition.

But it is exactly the sort of job that makes the exciting parts possible.

Before Champagne can sparkle on the Thames, she needs a little careful mending underneath.

Thursday, 4 June 2026

Music for Boats: Creating the Soundtrack for Champagne

 


Music for Boats: Creating the Soundtrack for Champagne

Before People See the Boat Properly, They May Hear Her Story First

Before Champagne is fully restored, before she is back racing properly on the River Thames, and before most people have even worked out what a Thames A-Rater actually is, she already needs one important thing.

A sound.

That may seem a strange priority when there are more obvious jobs waiting: varnish to inspect, rigging to understand, sails to assess, fittings to check, covers to sort out, and a boat park full of practical problems. But video changes the order in which people experience a story.

In real life, people see the boat first.

In a film, they often hear the story first.

The first few seconds of music can tell the audience whether this is a serious restoration film, a comic adventure, a piece of sailing history, a racing documentary, or a slightly alarming story about a man who bought a classic racing boat and is now discovering what that actually means.

In the case of Champagne, it is probably all of those things at once.

Why Stock Music Often Feels Wrong

Stock music is useful. It saves time, it is affordable, and sometimes it does the job perfectly well. The problem is that it often sounds as though it belongs to somebody else’s story.

A cheerful ukulele track can make a boat restoration feel like an advert for garden furniture. A dramatic cinematic track can make sanding varnish look as if we are preparing to invade a small country. A corporate inspirational track can turn a classic Thames racing boat into a sales conference.

Champagne needs something more specific.

She is not a modern speedboat. She is not a plastic training dinghy. She is not a yacht crossing an ocean. She is a Thames A-Rater: elegant, slightly eccentric, tall-rigged, historic, delicate-looking, and yet designed to race hard on a stretch of river where the wind can be as unpredictable as a cat in a workshop.

The music has to understand that.

It needs elegance, but not pomposity.
Drama, but not melodrama.
Humour, but not silliness.
History, but not a museum label.
Movement, but not a generic action-film drum loop.

That is why I would rather compose something myself.

Starting With the Character of the Boat

Before touching a keyboard, organ, synthesiser or computer, the first question is not, “What chords shall I use?”

The first question is, “Who is Champagne?”

For the video series, Champagne is not just an object. She is almost a character. She has travelled back to the Thames. She carries the look and spirit of the A-Rater class. She needs work, care and money. She may be beautiful, awkward, expensive, fast, fragile, and occasionally infuriating.

That gives the music a starting point.

Her main theme should probably feel:

  • graceful rather than heavy
  • flowing rather than rigid
  • bright, but with a little nostalgia
  • capable of becoming more dramatic during racing footage
  • gentle enough for restoration scenes
  • distinctive enough to return across several videos

A good theme does not need to be complicated. In fact, for video, a simple theme is often more useful because it can be rearranged. A short musical phrase can appear on organ, strings, piano, synthesiser, or even as a quiet background motif under spoken narration.

The aim is not to write a symphony. The aim is to create a musical identity.

Using the Wersi, Synths and Organ Sounds

One advantage of having a studio full of instruments is that the soundtrack does not have to come from one sound source.

The Wersi digital organ is particularly interesting because it can produce a wide range of tones: classic organ sounds, orchestral textures, warm pads, brass-like flourishes, and more modern electronic colours. It can sound grand, nostalgic, playful or cinematic depending on how it is used.

For Champagne, I can imagine several musical layers.

A gentle organ or soft keyboard sound could suggest heritage and elegance. A flowing synth pad could suggest the river. A slightly brighter lead sound could carry the main theme. Low, subtle tones could add weight during restoration problems or racing tension.

The danger, of course, is getting carried away.

A Thames A-Rater does not need to sound like a science fiction battleship. Unless, of course, the varnish bill arrives.

The trick is restraint. The music should support the film, not elbow the boat out of the way and announce, “Look at me, I have twelve synthesiser tracks and a dramatic cymbal swell.”

Creating a River-Based Theme

The River Thames has its own rhythm. It is not the open sea. It is narrower, more intimate, more enclosed. The wind shifts around trees. The water moves steadily. Boats tack frequently. The banks, moorings, birds, safety boats and club launches all become part of the atmosphere.

A river-based theme should probably move in a way that feels like water rather than machinery.

That might mean:

A repeating piano or keyboard pattern that gently ripples underneath the melody.

A slow, rising phrase that suggests the mast and sail lifting into view.

A waltz-like or lilting rhythm to suggest the boat moving over water.

A quieter version for dawn, restoration and reflection.

A faster version for racing, mark rounding and close manoeuvres.

The same theme could be used in several forms. A full version might open the main Champagne video. A stripped-down version might play under old photographs or historical explanations. A more urgent version might appear when Champagne is finally back on the start line with other A-Raters.

This is where composing original music becomes powerful. One theme can follow the whole story.

Matching Music to Restoration Sections

Restoration footage needs a very different musical treatment from racing footage.

When filming varnishing, sanding, inspecting fittings, sorting sails or discovering another small job that has quietly become a large job, the music should not be too grand. If the soundtrack becomes too heroic while I am holding a sanding block, the result may be unintentionally comic.

Restoration music needs patience.

It can use steady rhythms, warm textures and small repeating motifs. It should suggest care, attention and progress. It can also allow room for humour, because classic boat restoration is rarely a straight march to glory. More often, it is a series of discoveries beginning with the phrase, “That probably just needs a quick look.”

A restoration cue might begin simply: a soft keyboard pulse, a gentle organ chord, perhaps a few notes of the Champagne theme appearing slowly.

Then, when a problem is found — water under varnish, a wobbly rudder cassette, a tired fitting, or a cover with more holes than cover — the music can shift slightly. Not into horror-film territory, but enough to say, “Ah. This may take longer than expected.”

Matching Music to Racing Sections

Racing needs energy, but not generic speed.

A-Rater racing is visually dramatic because of the height of the rig, the narrow hulls, the crew movement, and the way the boats seem to carry far more sail than any sensible person would attach to something so slender.

The music for racing should build tension without becoming ridiculous. A faster pulse, stronger bass movement, rhythmic percussion, or repeated synth pattern could all work well. The main Champagne theme could be transformed into something more urgent.

For example:

The restoration version of the theme might be slow and reflective.

The racing version could use the same notes but with a stronger rhythm and brighter instrumentation.

That gives continuity. The viewer hears the same musical identity but feels a different emotional state.

This is important because the series will not just be about a boat sitting in a boat park. Eventually, it should be about Champagne returning to the river, joining the fleet, and racing again.

The soundtrack needs to be ready for that moment.

Matching Music to Historical Sections

The historical sections need another tone again.

When explaining what a Thames A-Rater is, why the class matters, how the boats developed, and why they still fascinate people, the music should give a sense of heritage without turning into a costume drama.

This is where organ sounds can be useful. Not necessarily full church organ thunder — though that is always tempting — but gentle, sustained organ colours can suggest age, tradition and continuity.

A few more classical harmonies may help. A slower tempo may give space for old photographs, archive material, drawings, class history, and explanations of the River Thames sailing culture.

The aim is to make the history feel alive.

Not “Here is a dusty old thing from the past.”

More “Here is a living tradition that still gets wet, still breaks things, still races hard, and still attracts people who should perhaps know better.”

Using Natural Sounds as Music

One of the most interesting parts of a boat film is that the boat already makes music.

Water against the hull.
Halyards tapping the mast.
Rigging humming in the wind.
Birds along the river.
Footsteps on the pontoon.
Sails filling.
Blocks clicking.
A distant safety boat.
The soft slap of water under the bow.

These sounds are not background noise. Used carefully, they can become part of the soundtrack.

A film does not always need music playing constantly. Sometimes the best opening is natural sound: water, wind, and the quiet metallic sound of rigging. Then the music enters slowly, almost as if it has grown out of the river.

For Champagne, I would like to record these sounds properly rather than relying only on camera microphones. Short audio recordings around the boat park, on the water, beside the moorings and during rigging could provide a library of real Champagne sounds.

These can then be layered into the soundtrack.

A halyard tap could become a rhythmic element.
Water sounds could sit under a quiet keyboard texture.
Birdsong could introduce a calm morning sequence.
Wind in the rigging could lead into a dramatic racing section.

This makes the music belong to the place.

How Music Changes the Emotional Tone of a Film

The same footage can mean completely different things depending on the music.

A shot of Champagne sitting under a temporary cover could feel hopeful, sad, comic or dramatic.

With gentle music, it becomes a quiet beginning.
With ominous music, it becomes a warning.
With jaunty music, it becomes a comic restoration disaster.
With no music at all, it becomes factual and observational.

That is why soundtrack decisions matter.

Music tells the viewer how to feel before they have had time to decide for themselves. Used badly, it manipulates. Used well, it guides.

For the Champagne series, I want the music to support the truth of the project. There will be excitement, but also uncertainty. There will be beauty, but also practical work. There will be history, but also invoices. There will be racing dreams, but also sandpaper.

The soundtrack needs to make room for all of that.

Building a Musical Toolkit for the Whole Series

Rather than composing a completely new piece for every video, it makes sense to build a musical toolkit.

This could include:

A main Champagne theme.

A gentle restoration version.

A faster racing version.

A short historical cue.

A comic “something has gone wrong” cue.

A calm river atmosphere bed.

A closing version for reflective endings.

This approach would make the series feel coherent. Viewers may not consciously notice that the same theme is returning, but they will begin to associate the sound with the boat.

That is how branding works in film. It is not just logos, colours and titles. It is also sound.

Champagne needs visual branding, but she also needs musical branding.

Practical Workflow: From Idea to Finished Track

The practical process will probably look something like this.

First, I will sketch simple melodic ideas on the Wersi or keyboard, looking for a phrase that feels like Champagne rather than a generic sailing video.

Then I will record several versions: slow, medium and more energetic.

Next, I will experiment with instrumentation. Organ, piano, strings, synth pads and subtle percussion can each change the feel completely.

After that, I will place the music against rough video edits. This is the real test. A piece of music may sound lovely on its own but completely wrong when placed under footage of a mast being raised, a varnish brush being opened, or a boat trying to behave itself at a mark.

Then comes trimming, looping and adjusting. Film music has to serve the edit. Sometimes the best musical decision is to remove a section entirely and let the natural sound take over.

Finally, the music has to be mixed so that speech remains clear. A beautiful soundtrack is no use if it fights the narration. The viewer must be able to hear the story.

Personal Reflection: Combining Old Skills in a New Project

One of the enjoyable things about the Champagne project is that it brings together so many parts of what Philip M Russell Ltd already does.

There is video production.
There is photography.
There is storytelling.
There is workshop problem-solving.
There is sailing.
There is education.
There is history.
And now there is music.

The same studio used for teaching science online can also become a music production space. The same attention to detail needed for filming experiments applies to recording sound. The same storytelling skills used in educational videos can help explain why a classic racing boat matters.

That is what makes the project exciting.

Champagne is not just a boat restoration. She is a film project, a teaching project, a media project, a historical project, and quite possibly a financial warning.

But she deserves a soundtrack.

Conclusion: Giving Champagne a Voice Before She Sails

A boat like Champagne has already lived a story before I became involved. She has history, shape, character and presence. The task now is to help tell the next chapter properly.

Music will be a major part of that.

The right soundtrack can make restoration feel patient and purposeful. It can make racing feel exciting. It can make history feel alive. It can make quiet river scenes feel beautiful. It can even make the occasional disaster feel survivable.

Before Champagne is fully back on the water, before the sails are sorted, before the varnish is perfect, and before the start line drama begins, her story can start to take shape in sound.

Because sometimes, before people see the boat properly, they hear her first.

Wednesday, 3 June 2026

Building the Champagne A-Rater Social Media Presence

 


Building the Champagne A-Rater Social Media Presence

How do you give a classic racing boat a modern audience?

“Before Champagne even reaches the start line, she needs an audience.”



Buying a Thames A-Rater is one thing. Learning how to sail, restore, present and promote one is something else entirely.

Champagne is not just a boat. She is a project, a story, a challenge, a piece of Thames sailing heritage and, if I am honest, a rather large invitation to discover just how much I still have to learn. Long before she is fully restored, beautifully varnished and charging elegantly up the river, there is another job to do: building her social media presence.

In today’s world, even a historic racing boat benefits from being visible. If people are going to follow Champagne’s restoration, cheer on her progress and feel part of the adventure, they need somewhere to find her. That means creating a social media identity that is interesting, welcoming and consistent.

This is not just about promotion. It is about storytelling.


Why Champagne Needs a Social Media Presence

A boat like Champagne deserves more than a quiet existence under a cover in the boat park.

She has history, character and potential. She also has a future story waiting to unfold: restoration work, sailing trials, race preparation, inevitable setbacks, little victories and, hopefully, some glorious days back on the Thames. Social media gives that story a place to live in public.

There are several reasons for building an online presence for Champagne:

  • to document the restoration journey
  • to explain the Thames A-Rater to a wider audience
  • to connect with sailors, historians and supporters
  • to create interest before the boat is racing regularly
  • to build momentum for videos, blog posts and future projects
  • to make the project feel alive and shared rather than hidden away

There is something powerful about inviting people along at the beginning. If they see the first inspections, the rough edges, the varnish problems, the sail debates and the learning process, they become invested. By the time Champagne reaches the water in earnest, people are not just watching a boat — they are following a story they feel part of.


Choosing the Platforms: Where Should Champagne Live Online?

One of the first questions is simple: where should Champagne appear?

The obvious answer is “everywhere”, but that can quickly turn into chaos if there is no plan. Each platform has a slightly different role.

Facebook

Facebook is useful for building a community and keeping a running public record of updates. It works well for:

  • progress photos
  • short restoration updates
  • shared blog links
  • event announcements
  • historical posts
  • conversations with sailing enthusiasts

Facebook is often where people are willing to comment, share their memories and tag others who may be interested. For a project like Champagne, that matters.

Instagram

Instagram is the visual shop window. It is ideal for:

  • attractive photos of the boat
  • close-ups of fittings, sails, woodwork and details
  • short reels
  • behind-the-scenes workshop moments
  • branded graphics and quote posts

If Facebook is the club noticeboard, Instagram is the glossy display window.

YouTube

YouTube is where the deeper storytelling happens. This is the perfect home for:

  • restoration videos
  • “What is a Thames A-Rater?” explainers
  • race day films
  • behind-the-scenes boatyard work
  • short documentaries about the class and the river

Video brings the project to life in a way still images cannot. A boat has movement, sound and personality, and YouTube is where that really shows.

Blog

The blog gives room for detail. This is where the longer thoughts belong:

  • restoration decisions
  • historical background
  • racing ambitions
  • technical learning
  • reflections on the emotional side of the project

A blog allows depth and personality. It also helps with search visibility and gives everything a permanent home.

Patreon

Patreon is perhaps for later rather than immediately, but it is worth considering. If the project develops a strong following, Patreon could support:

  • exclusive restoration videos
  • early access to content
  • detailed project diaries
  • downloadable plans or behind-the-scenes notes
  • special supporter updates

That said, it only works if people feel a strong connection first. Social media has to build the relationship before Patreon can ask for support.


What Makes a Good First Post?

The first post matters because it sets the tone.

It does not need to be perfect. In fact, over-polished first posts can feel slightly lifeless. What it does need to do is invite people in.

A good first post for Champagne should do three things:

  1. Introduce the boat
  2. Explain why she matters
  3. Give people a reason to follow

For example, a strong first post might say that Champagne is a Thames A-Rater with a new future ahead of her, that the project will include restoration, sailing, videos and plenty of learning along the way, and that followers are invited to come along for the ride.

It should not read like a press release. It should sound human.

People do not follow accounts because the punctuation is perfect. They follow because there is a story, a personality and a sense that something interesting is about to happen.


Explaining the Thames A-Rater to Non-Sailors

One challenge is that outside the sailing world, very few people know what a Thames A-Rater is.

Even within sailing, they are not exactly mainstream. So one of the most important parts of Champagne’s social media identity is education.

If the account assumes everyone already understands the class, it risks becoming too narrow. Better to explain clearly and simply.

A useful approach is to create a short introductory post or video:

What is a Thames A-Rater?

  • A historic and elegant racing dinghy developed for the River Thames
  • Long, narrow and graceful, with a distinctive look
  • Built for performance in river conditions
  • Part of a fascinating tradition in Thames sailing history
  • A class with a mixture of beauty, technical interest and racing challenge

That explanation should avoid disappearing into jargon too quickly. There is plenty of time later for discussions about rig tuning, sail shape and restoration detail. First, people need to understand why the boat is special.

Short explainer videos could be especially useful here. A 30–60 second video with photographs, river shots and a simple voiceover could do far more than a block of text.


Telling the Story Before the Boat Races

This is perhaps the most important social media lesson of all.

People do not need to wait until the exciting part starts. The preparation is part of the exciting part.

It is tempting to think: “We should wait until Champagne looks better.” But in social media terms, the early, messy, uncertain phase is often the most engaging. That is when the story feels real.

Possible content before regular racing even begins includes:

  • arrival of the boat
  • first inspection
  • restoration to-do lists
  • old fittings and their mysteries
  • sail condition debates
  • varnish plans
  • cover problems
  • learning about the class
  • the search for the right branding
  • archive or historical posts about Thames A-Raters
  • short reflections on what the project means

These posts invite people into the process. They help followers feel that they are watching a proper journey rather than just being shown the end result.

Emotion matters here. If followers see not just the boat but the hopes, concerns, mistakes and progress around it, they become far more likely to care.


Short Videos, Restoration Updates and Historical Posts

A healthy social media presence usually needs a mixture of content rather than one repeated format.

For Champagne, there are three especially strong content types.

1. Short videos

These are excellent for grabbing attention. Ideas include:

  • a quick walk-round of the boat
  • a “problem of the week” clip
  • a restoration before-and-after
  • a one-minute history of the A-Rater class
  • footage of river scenes and club life
  • short humorous commentary about learning and mishaps

Short videos perform well because they are easy to consume and easy to share.

2. Restoration updates

These create continuity. Even small updates matter:

  • sanding complete on one section
  • varnish chosen
  • rigging issue identified
  • rudder fitting inspected
  • sail measurements considered
  • temporary cover replaced or adjusted

Not every post has to be dramatic. Regularity often matters more than drama.

3. Historical posts

These give Champagne depth and context. For example:

  • the history of Thames A-Raters
  • famous races or trophies
  • old photos of the class
  • how river racing differs from open water sailing
  • notable boats, sailors and clubs

Historical content helps the project appeal beyond the immediate restoration. It also gives followers a reason to value the boat as heritage, not just as a possession.


Building Emotional Investment

Social media works best when people feel something.

For Champagne, the emotion is not just excitement about racing. It is the sense of restoring and reviving something beautiful and important.

People can become emotionally invested in several ways:

  • by seeing progress over time
  • by sharing the frustrations and setbacks
  • by understanding the heritage
  • by recognising the ambition behind the project
  • by enjoying the humour and personality in the storytelling

A boat account that only posts polished photographs may look nice, but it often lacks emotional pull. A boat account that shares uncertainty, hope, small improvements and real enthusiasm is much more compelling.

For example, a post saying:

“Today’s progress: not glamorous. We inspected the cover, found more holes than confidence, and added ‘proper cover’ to the growing list.”

That has character. It is informative, but it also sounds human. People remember that.


Serious Heritage… but With a Sense of Humour

This balance is important.

Thames A-Raters deserve respect. They are part of a long and rather wonderful sailing tradition. But that does not mean the content should be solemn and overly formal.

A little humour helps enormously, particularly when it reflects the real experience of restoration and sailing.

There is plenty of room for posts that gently poke fun at the process:

  • discovering that “quick jobs” are never quick
  • the gap between restoration plans and restoration reality
  • the endless optimism required when dealing with old boats
  • the tendency of projects to grow arms and legs
  • the difference between “looks fine from a distance” and “needs attention up close”

Humour makes heritage accessible. It also makes the people behind the project feel real.

The key is not to make the class feel trivial. Rather, it is to show affection, enthusiasm and honesty. Serious sailing heritage and a smile are not opposites. In fact, they often work beautifully together.


Creating a Visual Identity

Social media presence is not only about words. It also needs a recognisable look.

Champagne should ideally have a simple but coherent visual identity across all platforms. That might include:

  • a consistent profile image
  • a logo or wordmark
  • a small set of colours
  • recurring type styles
  • similar thumbnail or post design
  • a recognisable tone in captions

This does not have to become corporate. In fact, it should not. But consistency helps people recognise the project instantly.

Possible visual themes might include:

  • navy blue, cream and gold
  • classic maritime typography
  • elegant but slightly informal graphics
  • a blend of heritage style and modern clarity

A good identity makes even ordinary updates feel part of a larger story.


Practical Lessons From Building the Presence

Any social media project teaches lessons quickly. I suspect Champagne’s will be no different.

Some practical lessons already seem obvious:

Start before you feel fully ready

If you wait until everything is perfect, nothing gets posted.

Tell the story simply

Not everyone knows sailing terminology. Clear explanations win.

Use a content mix

Photos, reels, blog links, explanations and humour all have a place.

Show progress, not just perfection

People enjoy seeing how things develop.

Keep the tone human

Followers respond to personality more than polish.

Think long-term

This is not a one-week campaign. It is the beginning of an ongoing story.


Personal Reflection: Why This Matters to Me

What interests me about building Champagne’s social media presence is that it combines several things I enjoy: sailing, storytelling, photography, video, design and teaching.

In some ways, explaining Champagne online is rather like teaching. You start with the assumption that many people know very little about the subject. You then try to make it clear, interesting and enjoyable without losing the depth of the topic.

That challenge appeals to me.

I also like the idea that a social media presence can help keep old traditions alive. A Thames A-Rater is not just a boat of the past. Through video, photos and regular posts, she can become part of a living story that reaches far beyond the club gates.

And if the account also includes the occasional restoration blunder, varnish frustration or mildly panicked question about sails, so much the better. That is part of the reality, and reality is usually more interesting than polish.


Conclusion: Building the Audience Before the Start Line

Before Champagne can race properly, she needs something else in place: attention, interest and a community.

That community will not appear by accident. It has to be built through thoughtful posting, clear storytelling and a genuine sense of invitation. The aim is not simply to collect followers. It is to create a group of people who care what happens next.

That means introducing the Thames A-Rater to non-sailors, sharing restoration progress, posting short videos, using history well and keeping the tone warm and human. It also means remembering that the story begins long before the first competitive start.

Champagne does not need to be fully finished before she becomes worth following.

In fact, the opposite is true.

The earlier people join the story, the more they will care about where it leads.

Tuesday, 2 June 2026

Varnish, Sandpaper and Patience: Protecting Champagne’s Woodwork

 


Varnish, Sandpaper and Patience: Protecting Champagne’s Woodwork

Hook:
Varnishing a boat is simple: sand, clean, varnish, wait, repeat… and try not to get impatient.

There are some jobs on an old racing boat that look small until you start thinking about them properly.

A little patch of exposed wood.
A bit of tired varnish.
A place where water might have crept underneath the finish.
A wooden edge that has gone dull rather than glossy.

At first glance, it is tempting to say, “I’ll just give that a quick tidy up.”

Unfortunately, boats hear phrases like that and laugh quietly to themselves.

With Champagne, our Thames A-Rater restoration project, one of the next jobs is protecting the exposed woodwork. I have not actually started the varnishing yet, but the preparation has begun. I have bought a good quality marine varnish — Epifanes, recommended by several experienced sailors at Upper Thames Sailing Club — along with 600 grit paper and a wide curved sanding block that can be adjusted to follow the shape of the hull.

That may sound like a small shopping list, but in boat terms it represents something much bigger: accepting that this is not a five-minute job.

It is a job involving varnish, sandpaper and, most importantly, patience.


Why Bare Wood Cannot Be Ignored

Wooden parts on a classic racing boat are not just decorative. They are part of the character, structure and history of the boat.

On a boat like Champagne, the varnished woodwork is part of what makes her look like an A-Rater rather than just another racing dinghy. The gleaming brightwork, the curve of the trim, the mast, spars and wooden details all add to the feeling that this is not simply a boat — it is a piece of river history.

But wood and water have a complicated relationship.

Wood can survive beautifully on boats for decades, but only if it is protected. Once the varnish breaks down, cracks, lifts, or gets damaged, water can start to creep underneath. That is when problems begin.

A small exposed patch can become:

  • stained wood
  • lifted varnish
  • blackened grain
  • soft patches
  • rot
  • expensive repair work
  • a much larger job than it needed to be

The trouble is that varnish can look fine from a distance while still failing at the edges. Water does not need a grand entrance. It only needs a tiny gap and a bit of time.

And boats, of course, live in the ideal environment for making tiny problems bigger.


The Suspicious Signs: Has Water Got Underneath?

One of the things I need to investigate on Champagne is whether some water has managed to get underneath the varnish in places.

This is where the job becomes more than just making the boat look pretty.

When varnish is doing its job, it forms a clear protective skin over the wood. When water gets underneath, that skin can begin to lift. The surface may look slightly cloudy, dull, uneven, darkened, or flaky. Sometimes it is obvious. Sometimes it is only visible when the light catches it at the right angle.

This is why I need to go round the boat carefully, not just enthusiastically.

There is a big difference between saying:

“That bit looks a little rough.”

and asking:

“Why does that bit look rough, and has water got underneath?”

The first approach leads to a quick cosmetic patch.
The second approach leads to a proper repair.

And with an old racing boat, the second approach is usually the safer one.


The Tools: Varnish, Paper and a Sensible Sanding Block

I have now bought the first set of materials for the job.

The varnish is Epifanes, which was strongly recommended by sailors at the club. That matters. In theory, I could have stood in a shop reading labels and pretending to be an expert. In practice, when several boat owners who have actually maintained boats on the river say, “Use this,” it is worth listening.

I also have 600 grit paper, which is fine enough for smoothing between coats and preparing existing varnished surfaces without attacking the wood like a man trying to remove paint from a garden gate.

The third useful item is a wide curved sanding block, which can be adjusted to match the shape of the hull or curved woodwork. That should help avoid the classic amateur mistake of sanding unevenly, creating flat spots, or concentrating pressure in one place.

The aim is not to punish the boat into submission.
The aim is to prepare the surface gently, evenly and thoroughly.

That distinction matters.


Sanding: The Part Everyone Wants to Rush

Sanding is one of those jobs that looks easy until you do it properly.

The temptation is to rub at the surface until it looks vaguely smoother, then reach for the varnish because that is the exciting bit. But varnish is unforgiving. It does not hide poor preparation; it preserves it beautifully under a glossy layer so you can admire your mistake for months.

The sanding stage needs to do several things:

  1. Remove loose or failing varnish.
  2. Feather the edges where old varnish meets exposed wood.
  3. Smooth the surface without damaging the shape.
  4. Create a key so the next coat can bond properly.
  5. Reveal whether the problem is only on the surface or whether there is deeper damage.

This is also where I will need to be honest.

If a patch of varnish has lifted because water has crept underneath, simply sanding the top and adding a new coat may not be enough. The loose or damaged varnish has to be dealt with properly, otherwise the new varnish is just sitting on top of an old problem.

That is the boat maintenance equivalent of putting a new roof tile over a leak and hoping the rain has not noticed.


Cleaning: The Quiet Step That Matters

After sanding comes cleaning.

This sounds obvious, but it is one of the stages that can make or ruin the job. Dust, grease, moisture and old debris all interfere with varnish. A surface can look ready but still be covered with fine sanding dust.

The wood needs to be clean, dry and free from contamination before varnish is applied.

That means taking time to remove dust properly, checking corners and edges, and not varnishing just because the brush is already in your hand and you are feeling optimistic.

Boats punish optimism.
They prefer preparation.


Choosing the Right Weather Window

One of the difficulties with varnishing is that the boat does not live in a controlled laboratory.

If this were one of our science practicals, I would control the temperature, humidity, timing and conditions. Unfortunately, Champagne is in the real world, where the weather has opinions.

Varnishing needs a sensible weather window. Too damp, too cold, too hot, too dusty, too windy, too likely to rain — all of these can turn a promising job into a sticky disappointment.

The varnish needs time to flow, level and cure. It also needs to be protected while it dries. That is not always easy when the boat is outdoors, the British weather is being British, and every passing insect suddenly decides that wet varnish is the ideal place to spend its final moments.

This is one of the reasons the job has not started yet. Buying the varnish is easy. Finding the right time to use it properly is the real challenge.


The Difference Between Tidying Up and Doing the Job Properly

There is a phrase that should probably be banned from boat restoration:

“I’ll just tidy that up quickly.”

Sometimes a quick tidy is exactly what is needed. But more often, especially with varnish, the “quick tidy” becomes a temporary disguise.

A quick tidy might make the boat look better for a few weeks.
A proper job protects the wood for much longer.

The difference is in the preparation:

  • checking where varnish has failed
  • sanding back properly
  • dealing with any water damage
  • cleaning thoroughly
  • applying suitable coats
  • allowing enough drying time
  • sanding between coats if needed
  • building up protection gradually

This is not glamorous work. It does not have the instant excitement of launching the boat, hoisting the sail, or taking a dramatic photograph on the river.

But without this kind of work, the glamorous bits become much more expensive later.


Why Rushing Varnish Usually Leads to Regret

Varnishing is one of the great tests of patience.

The instructions always seem simple enough. The practical reality is rather different.

You apply a coat.
Then you wait.
Then you inspect it.
Then you may need to sand.
Then you clean again.
Then you apply another coat.
Then you wait again.

At some point, a dangerous voice appears in your head and says:

“That is probably good enough.”

This is the voice that must be ignored.

Rushing varnish can lead to runs, dust, poor adhesion, trapped moisture, uneven finish and the sort of result that looks fine until the next time the sun shines across it at an unkind angle.

The problem with a bad varnish job is not just that it looks poor. It can also fail sooner, meaning the whole job has to be done again.

There are many jobs in life where rushing saves time.

Varnishing a boat is not one of them.


Personal Reflection: Learning to Slow Down

One of the unexpected lessons of owning Champagne is that the boat sets the pace.

I may want everything done quickly. I may want her looking smart, protected, ready to sail and ready to photograph. I may want to move on to the more exciting jobs: rigging, sails, racing, filming and telling the story of her return to the water.

But the boat has other ideas.

She is an old racing boat. She has had a life before us. She has patches, marks, repairs, history and probably a few surprises hidden under innocent-looking fittings. She is not a flat-pack project with numbered parts and a cheerful instruction booklet.

Working on her properly means slowing down enough to look.

That is not always easy. I am naturally inclined to start solving problems, making things, filming things, writing things and moving on to the next job. But varnishing does not reward that approach. Varnishing rewards the person who waits, checks, prepares, applies carefully and then resists the temptation to poke it.

There is probably a life lesson in there somewhere, although I would prefer it if the lesson did not involve quite so much sanding.


Practical Plan for Champagne’s Woodwork

Before I start, the sensible approach is to make a small plan rather than attack the boat with sandpaper in a sudden burst of enthusiasm.

The practical steps are likely to be:

1. Inspect the woodwork carefully

Look for bare patches, lifted varnish, dark staining, cracks, scratches, cloudy areas and places where water might have crept underneath.

2. Photograph the problem areas

This helps create a record of what needed attention and makes it easier to compare before and after.

3. Decide what needs light preparation and what needs deeper work

Not every area will need the same treatment. Some may only need gentle sanding and fresh coats. Other areas may need varnish removing more thoroughly.

4. Sand carefully

Use the 600 grit paper and curved sanding block where appropriate, taking care not to damage the shape or remove more material than necessary.

5. Clean thoroughly

Remove dust, check the surface, and make sure the wood is dry before varnishing.

6. Apply varnish properly

Thin coats, and the use of thinners, careful brushwork and patience are likely to produce a better finish than trying to achieve perfection in one dramatic coat.

7. Wait

This is the hard bit.

8. Repeat as needed

A good varnish finish is built up. It is not slapped on in a hurry.


The Wider Restoration Lesson

Varnishing Champagne is not just about woodwork. It is part of the wider restoration mindset.

Before a classic racing boat can be sailed hard, filmed beautifully and admired properly, it needs all the quiet jobs done well.

That includes checking fittings, looking at the rigging, sorting covers, protecting wood, examining sails, making repairs and asking experienced people for advice. Some jobs are exciting. Some are messy. Some are repetitive. Some involve standing in a boat park holding a sanding block and wondering how a “small patch” became an afternoon.

But this is how old boats survive.

They survive because somebody cares enough to notice the little things before they become big things.


Conclusion: Patience Is Part of the Restoration

The varnishing has not started yet, but the thinking has.

The materials are ready. The varnish has been chosen. The sanding paper and curved block are waiting. The next step is to find the right weather, inspect the woodwork properly and begin the slow process of protecting Champagne for the seasons ahead.

It would be lovely if boat restoration were a sequence of dramatic moments: the purchase, the launch, the race, the trophy, the sunset photograph.

In reality, it is also sandpaper, dust, drying time, weather forecasts and trying not to rush.

And perhaps that is the point.

A boat like Champagne deserves more than a quick tidy up. She deserves the careful, patient work that keeps her strong, beautiful and ready for the river.

So the job begins before the brush touches the wood.

It begins with looking properly, preparing properly, and accepting that varnish, like sailing, rewards patience.

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