Introduction
This blog starts as one person’s attempts to get afloat and go Sailing on a Shoestring but like most voyages it will rely on the support and encouragement of friends. I’m sure I’m not alone in this endeavour, but from where I sit this evening it feels a bit like that – so please give me a bit of your time, your expertise, your knowledge and experience I surely need it.The story will be told honestly, I’ll record mistakes as well as successes, and try to include all comments. I won’t link or recommend any product, service, process or procedure that I wouldn’t recommend to my best friend and if anyone sends me an idea or an approach to solving a particular issue I’ll be pleased to post it up and acknowledge the contribution.
The ultimate aim is to provide an on-line resource for everyone on the same voyage - so I'll be adding helpful stuff from wherever I can find it. One issue already encountered is the relative isolation in which we boat builders and restorers live. Finding local suppliers of specialist books, tools and equipment can be difficult, time-consuming and expensive. To make life easier you might like to visit my Seaward's Boatshed pages where you can order all the essential gear you need. There is a USA and a UK(Europe) page to keep delivery costs down. They aren't identical because some items available in one region may not be available in the other. In all cases however, I have listed the items I used and found reliable OR I took advice as to the closest possible local match.
Hopefully, this won’t
always be a singlehanded trip so please make contact and contribute. It
would be good to think that my lone scribbling, could eventually become
the informal newsletter/magazine/ information source of a larger
anarchic group of similarly eccentric builders, designers, sailors, and
fellow travelers. Welcome aboard shipmate!
So, I’ll keep this brief and hope you’ll stay long enough to sign
up for the voyage to a place a long way from here.
A bit about me
As a child, I was raised in the coal mining district of
Yorkshire England at a time when ponies (pit-ponies) worked alongside human
miners underground. Like the humans they were entitled to an annual vacation
and so once each year they were brought to the surface for a two week stint in
the sun. We kids tried to ride them but, like any other miner in the sunlight
they became crazy!
My own trip starts after forty years in the harness of
mainstream life, commuting, working, raising kids and paying mortgages. Sailing
happened whenever possible but always with a strong engine to get me home by Sunday
evening ready for a return to the office on Monday morning. Last year, I was ‘cash
rich, time poor’, next year I’ll have all the time I need but I’ll be
considerably poorer in financial terms. I
am approaching this with an enthusiasm bordering on the insanity of a
‘pit-pony’ in the sunlight.
I am a slow learner and quite forgetful. In the 1960 and
1970s I was a part of alternative culture but now, after being sucked into the
vortex of mainstream society and having stayed there so long, the luxury of choice
and the options of what to take and what to leave from the ‘old life’ feel very
new to me.
This blog is about choosing, purchasing, restoring,
renovating, navigating maintaining and voyaging a cruising boat. Sailing is
going to be writ large but there is also a hidden agenda. I want
to explore an idea that that the exchange of time for money may not be a simple
‘like for like' equation. Maybe time is more precious and useful than money.
Maybe you already got there years ahead of me but I’m sure there are plenty of
us who through choice, circumstance or personal philosophy are in similar
situations or at similar turning points in our lives – we need to know:
Can we get on the water, cruise,
voyage in comfort, and maintain our vessels on a shoestring?
Could this idea actually be more
attractive than our current situation?
Might we discover that time is
actually more important than money?
Could the knowledge and skill
acquired have wider applications?
So, my trip, and yours (if you want to join it) is a
philosophical exploration as well as a practical quest
Seaward
Henry Thoreau calculated how rich he was by how much free time he had without having to work. The less needs he had, the richer he became, because he didn’t have to work to obtain them.
ReplyDeletehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_David_Thoreau
Bill.
http://bills-log.blogspot.com
Spot on Bill,
ReplyDeleteHe along with a larger group of non-violent anarchic souls are the guy's to be listened to. Love your blog by the way
Like yours too!
ReplyDeleteBill.
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