Mile High to High Seas

milehigh_m&d lunenberg 2003  

While browsing through an old hard drive, I came across this article I wrote back in 2003. For those of you who have been sailing awhile, it will probably bring back a few memories. For those of you looking forward to sailing off into the sunset someday, perhaps it will give you some inspiration. I hope you enjoy it.

A Change in Lifestyle…Mile High to High Seas

Most folks have dreamed at one time or another about “sailing off into the sunset”. For many, it’s just that: a dream of a new life, wandering carefree around the world. But it doesn’t have to be just a dream. For us, it’s reality and life is good aboard the Nine of Cups, a 45 foot sailboat. With more than three years and 13,000 miles under our keel, we’ve sailed across the Gulf of Mexico, up the East Coast of the United States as far as New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, Canada and back down the coast through the Caribbean islands to South America.

There’s no doubt our family and friends considered us both candidates for psychological counseling when we announced our intentions. They pressed the issue even further as we proceeded to sell our company. Then we sold most of our worldly possessions, including the Mercedes, the antique furniture and the house and all the tchotchkes. With minimal sailing experience, but a thirst for travel, discovering new places and experiencing new cultures, we bought a 1986 sailboat in Kemah, Texas. After finishing our professional commitments and tidying up personal business, we moved aboard in April 2000. We were off on our life’s dream…a real adventure.

Drastic changes? You bet. Consider this: a 4,000 square foot house became less than 800 square feet of living space that rocked from side to side and had engine access from the kitchen … I mean the galley! No moveable furniture…everything is built in. No more unlimited use of water… no long, hot showers or letting the water run as you brush your teeth. Every drop of water needs to be conserved since the tanks would need to be refilled…somewhere. Watch that power consumption! “Shut off the lights; check the voltage monitor before you listen to the radio.” (What’s a voltage monitor?) Every bit of power needs to be generated by either running the engine (very loud and noisy and wastes diesel) or through solar panels and wind generators. Either way, there is never enough to waste. Adding to the list of apparent deprivations, we have no TV, no telephone, no electrical appliances. My one modern galley convenience is a tiny microwave oven which can only be used when we're in a marina or when we're motoring…in other words, infrequently.

Even learning the lingo was a challenge. A whole new vocabulary had to be mastered just to describe your home. The kitchen isn’t a kitchen, it's a galley. The bathrooms aren’t bathrooms, they're heads. Closets are lockers and bedrooms are cabins. Ropes are lines or halyards or painters. There's fore and aft, bow and stern, port and starboard and no permanent address.

Perhaps the most drastic change of all for me was no shopping…or worse, nothing to buy. Not only were there no places to shop, other than for groceries, but my usual “clothes horse mentality” quickly met with cold reality. We had no big “his and hers” closets any more, just two small hanging lockers that we shared. From three large closets all my own and daily work attire consisting of silk blouses, designer suits and shoes that matched, I regressed to shorts, tank tops and Teva’s. The rule on the boat soon became, if you buy something new, something old has got to go…there’s no more room. Besides how many tee shirts can you use? As for those other sweet amenities I deemed necessary? No sense in getting my nails done, they’d be trashed in one day working on the boat. Makeup? Hardly ever, considering I’m usually slathered with sunscreen and salt spray. Perfume? Not unless you consider bug spray to fall into the fine fragrance category… Eau de Deet?

As if the physical changes weren’t enough, the psychological changes seemed even greater. We were used to working long, hard hours…as many as 80-90 hours some weeks. At least one of us was always on the road. Phones were always ringing, someone was always “on hold”, emails and messages mounted up and the meetings were endless. We juggled all this while running a household and raising a family. Now…the kids were gone, the boat, though requiring a steady amount of maintenance and TLC, does not necessitate even a 40-hour work week. Without a telephone, the only ringing in our ears is from fog horns and sea gull cries. No emails, no internet and blessedly, no meetings. It took a while to figure it out, but there was so much to do that wasn’t “work”, so much to see and experience, but we had to work at not working. With a concerted effort, we had to learn to play and quite frankly, it wasn’t easy.

Time ceased to be an issue. There were no weekends to acknowledge. In the beginning, we'd rise early, rush to get our boat chores done and then hurry to enjoy the offerings of the current port. After all, we had places to be, things to see and a schedule to keep. For nearly a year, we pushed to get from one port to another, always reluctant to stay longer than our defined schedule allowed. Then we spent a summer in Maritime Canada and the rushing ceased. The area was just too beautiful to resist and too delightful to allow rushing. We made up excuses to stay just a few more days here and a day or two longer there and finally chided ourselves for needing excuses. Wasn’t this what we had yearned for when we set off to sail?

So what’s the attraction? This way of life is harder and lacks all those amenities we’d once considered necessities. If this is true, what comical sense of the macabre drew us to this sort of life? Though living on a boat is physically demanding, it is also the most carefree we have ever been. No mortgage, no car payments, no monthly telephone or electric bills…just our daily expenses as we choose. Life has become simple. We worry about weather, currents and tides instead of traffic, lawn mowing, bill paying and office politics. Welcome to our new life!

Dreaming of Retiring? Get a Countdown Clock!

countdown to retirement collage  

Dreaming of retiring? Or maybe taking a break for a couple of years? Want to go sailing off into the sunset … literally or figuratively? Does it seem too far away to even contemplate? You know what? It's never too early to start planning. You have to work at making your dreams come true, or they just remain dreams. Here's some tips on how to start.

1. Spend some time deciding what it is you really want to do.

Do you want to sail and live aboard a boat? Go RV'ing across the country? Travel? Start a little business? Put time aside to sit down, relax and really think about where you want to go and what you want to do. Whether you're 30 or 60, there's no time like the present to do this. You'll be 30 or 60 + one day older tomorrow. Get moving.

2. Put those dreams on paper.

Write it all down. For many reasons, when you take the time to make a plan and write it out, it becomes more concrete. It's more than just a dream. Make this a fun exercise for you and your partner. Get a special notebook … give it a name...your Dream Book, Retirement-R-Us book, We're Outa Here book, make it your own. Tweak your plan as things change. Write, rewrite and get it right. Set up a file folder (hard copy or on your computer) and keep relevant articles, links, and ideas close by

3. Assign a time frame to your plan.

countdown_Days to goStart with a biggie. “I'd like to retire in 2015 or 2020 or whenever and then I want to ...”

Then what? Sailing, travel, RV'ing, what? Actually assigning a time frame makes the dream more and more real. Now you know when. Wow!

4. Figure out how to get where you want to go.

After you decide the “what” and the “when”, figure out the “how”. Assuming your dream is not so out of the ballpark that it's unobtainable, start to determine how you'll achieve your goal. What about the finances? How much money do you need to retire or take a 2-year hiatus from work? Can you earn money while you're living your dream? What are the logistics of heading down the road you want to travel?

5. Research your plan.

This isn't work. This is the stuff your dreams are made of. What kind of boat? What kind of RV rig? Where will you go? What are the restrictions...financially, health-wise, family-wise? Maybe one of the passage maps from the blogsite?

6. Set milestones for yourself.

What needs to be done by what time in order to meet your goals? A savings plan? Getting the kids through university? Selling your home and downsizing? Make a list as part of the original plan and cross off the milestones as you meet and complete them.

7. Celebrate along the way.

Reach a milestone? Congratulate yourself! 1000 days left? Have a special dinner. 500 days to go? Half way to your savings goal? Decided what boat you're interested in buying or which RV rig makes sense? Make it a point to celebrate in some small, but significant way. The time goes by faster if you've got lots of big and little milestones to achieve and celebrate along the way.

8. Buy a countdown clock.

It might sound crazy, but we received a countdown clock as a gift from my sister when we made the decision to sail off into the sunset. It was nearly two years till we actually took off. We loved it as we watched the days, hours, minutes and seconds tick off. Everyday brought us just a little closer to making our dream a reality. We liked it so much, we recycled it and gave it to my parents when they were planning their trip of a lifetime to Hawaii.

 

cheers

 

Already retired? Out cruising or RV'ing or living your dream whatever it might be? How did you plan for it? What did you do in advance to make sure your dream became a reality?