On the other hand, land cruising in a nice recreational vehicle would be new
for me and something I am considering for the future.  I spent most of my
working life vacation time on sailboats and I enjoyed every minute but sadly
I neglected some of nature's beauty on dry land so I m planning more for
that than for a late in life sailing adventure. I think that may suit all 3
of us here, Rosalie, me and the dog that is, better than life on a boat.

 

  _____  

From: CnC-List [mailto:cnc-list-boun...@cnc-list.com] On Behalf Of Dave
Godwin
Sent: February 12, 2014 10:15 AM
To: cnc-list@cnc-list.com
Subject: Re: Stus-List when to go cruising

 

I'd like to tag onto what Bob has pointed out below because to a large
degree I am in the same place.

 

Like Bob, I actually enjoy spending the time and money on the refit of our
boat. As I and others have said it makes little sense financially but there
are rewards for me.

 

I've always dreamed of cruising. That got started reading about Robin Graham
and "Dove" sailing alone (somewhat.) around the world in the 60's. Of course
I was 17 so any adventure was something I wanted to do, never mind the
logistics. Of course it didn't help that my mother thought is a great idea
and encouraged me to do something like that in life. I chalk that up to a
teenage boy driving his mother bat-sh*t crazy.

 

Anyway, fast forward forty-some years and the desire is still there but it
is much, much different. I've been fortunate enough to have traveled and
lived all over the world. I've spent weeks crossing the Pacific and the
Atlantic (ships, not sailboats.). I've raced sailboats, inshore and offshore
every free moment I've had since I was 25. I've sailed boats to and from the
Caribbean and up down the East Coast. Sailed down the Baja Peninsula, in the
Med, Japan and Australia. Even the Great Lakes! Like many others on this
list, I have vacationed on sailboats in the BVI's and done a short cruise
over to the Bahamas.

 

I guess that I've done enough of that type of cruising to know that for me,
the fun is in the planning, preparation and the "small-bore" traveling. My
wife and I are in our early sixties, retired and financially secure enough
to do any type of cruising that may interest us. But I no longer have any
desire to sail across oceans. I don't even really care to spend any time in
the Caribbean. I have found that sitting at anchor for days on end, reading
a book and relaxing is a bad fit for me. And I am well aware of the fact
that much of the time is taken up fixing things so it ain't all cool drinks
and soft breezes...

 

So my plan is, like Bob, finish the refit of our boat, fuel her up and head
South. Minimal setup and gear. If that step works out then I'll take the
next jump over to the Bahamas. If I'm having fun doing that then maybe I'll
stay there for a while. If not, back I'll come and figure something else
out. And I will be as happy as can be. All just part of the voyage. I think
that I've come to understand that I'm caught up in the small things about a
trip rather than the larger endeavor. I no longer think of a cruise as
having to accomplish item A in X amount of time. But who knows, I may find
that I recover that young desire to sail the world. Gonna need a bigger
boat! 

 

So, back to the OP, my feeling is go whenever you can and want to. The
voyage will fit your desires and circumstances.

 

Okay, enough rambling. Disclaimer: just my $0.02.

 

Cheers,

Dave Godwin
1982 C&C 37 - Ronin
Reedville - Chesapeake Bay

new: Ronin <http://roninrebuild.blogspot.com/> 's Overdue Refit

 

On Feb 11, 2014, at 5:09 PM, Robert Boyer <dainyr...@icloud.com> wrote:





This subject is very close to me but in a different way and I probably have
a different perspective because of my age.  I am now 66 and in good physical
condition.  Last year, I began a 30-year retrofit of my Landfall 38 for
cruising to the Bahamas in the fall of 2016--I'll be 69 years old at the
time I leave.  I can't predict what my health situation will be like in 2016
or anytime for that matter and I can't worry about it.  I have taken off for
6 months 20 years ago and cruised to the Bahamas and back (from Annapolis).
So, I have done the short term cruising that some here have talked about--I
do strongly recommend this for anyone at any stage in their life.

 

As far as pouring a lot of money into your boat and never getting the chance
to go anywhere (like someone brought up here), for me, "messing about in
boats" is as enjoyable as cruising somewhere--its all part of the journey,
viewed from a wider perspective.  If I die from a heart attack just a few
months before we are supposed to leave for the Bahamas, I still had lots of
fun retrofitting my boat and would find peace with that.  Whether by cancer,
a car accident, or whatever, we can all die at any time.  We have to do what
we love to do and hope that we can live long enough to do much more of it.
Others may not find the pleasure that I do by simply messing around my boat
and I can understand their need to cruise somewhere to get this pleasure.
We are all different.

 

>From the 6-month cruise I did a long time ago, I can assure you that it is
not all palm trees and hammocks and beaches.  A lot of cruising is doing
simply tasks (like doing laundry) in exotic locations.  Even though the
Bahamas are beautiful, I never found a place that I considered "paradise"
and wanted to stay the rest of my life.  There are all kinds of compromises
to places like there are for boats.  For this reason, I think the wider
journey (retrofitting your boat, traveling up and down the ICW, etc. are all
as valuable as any cruising destination could be.

 

Most of my life I have owned a business.  When I took off for 6 months, I
thought I would just resume when I returned but the business was in shambles
and I had to rebuild it.  So, leaving in the middle of your life and
returning has its consequences.  As Wally says, we are all "revenue
generators" here at home.  The time to take off cruising permanently, in my
opinion, is when you are young (in your 20's) or when you retire in your
60's.  

 

I don't know if what I have added to this discussion is of value or not--I
am just one person with my own opinions.

 

 

Bob Boyer
S/V Rainy Days (1983 C&C Landfall 38 - Hull #230)
email: dainyr...@icloud.com

blog: dainyrays.blogspot.com <http://dainyrays.blogspot.com/> 

"There is nothing--absolutely nothing--half so much worth doing as simply
messing about in boats." --Kenneth Grahame

 

_______________________________________________
This List is provided by the C&C Photo Album
http://www.cncphotoalbum.com
CnC-List@cnc-list.com

 

_______________________________________________
This List is provided by the C&C Photo Album
http://www.cncphotoalbum.com
CnC-List@cnc-list.com

Reply via email to