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"Flying Pig" wrote:
Comments, please... How is life aboard Flying Pig different from my life ashore? 1: Flying Pig is a boat. Aside from times in the boatyard, where it's up on stilts on shore, it's in constant motion. This takes some getting used to, but most accommodate it very well. If you know you get seasick and have a remedy that works for you, be sure to bring it. We (that is Bob and I) have ginger aboard which works for some folks, but I will not supply prescription medication to guests (or anyone). Bob's preferred remedy is to have the seasick person take the wheel and to eat saltines. I personally prefer to have hot tea and sleep through it 4: Accomodations, for a boat, are generous, but very small by home standards. The best place on the boat for sleeping in "normal" (not rough seas) weather is in what's called the VEE berth, so called because of its shape. It's a 7-foot equilateral triangle, and accomodates most "normal" sized couples handily, though, of necessity, the feet tend to be touching We always slept the other way - with our heads close together at the pointy end. Of course that means that the reading light is at our feet. On our boat, the hatch is over our heads and so if it is open and starts to rain, it rains on our faces and we close it. Also I like to stick my head up out of the hatch in the morning to see what is going on. Secondary accommodations, for times when it might be too rough for comfort (the front of the boat moves the most, in all motion-sensitive conditions) are in the saloon, what boat people call their family room/dining room/living room, in a pull-out double (48"x79" and tapering to less at the foot). This is the best place for sleeping in rough conditions, as it's nearly in the center of the boat, and has the least motion of any space aboard. Bob has a lee cloth for the single bunk in the main cabin so he can sleep there if it is rough and I'm at the helm. I personally lie down on the floor next to the mast (assuming a keel stepped mast). If it is just ordinary rolling, and he's at the helm, I just sleep crossways in the aft cabin. 5: Bathroom and shower space is combined. We have a separate shower on our boat, but a lot of times we use it for a closet. 9: Space aboard, while generous for most sailboats, is very much less than landside living spaces. "Excuse me" because you need to get by someone while going from "here" to "there" aboard is common. Nevertheless, our home was designed originally as a charter boat, and in its original configuration, could manage 11 people for sleeping (5 of those spaces have been converted to other uses, now) and meals. Still, spaces are sometimes close for those accustomed to multi-digit feet distances between them and other objects or people. Our boat could originally sleep 8 (or really 7.5), and we've taken out the double in the main cabin and made a single of it, and the single across from it is so short now that it would only fit a child, so we are down to 6.25 unless someone sleeps in the cockpit or on deck.. 10: Because of #s 1, 4 and 9, not only will it make your life easier, but, under way, safer, if everything not in active use is stored and secured. If you trip over it, or, worse, it flies off where ever it was put and hits you, it's a safety hazard to have stuff lying out in the open. That means we'll be "neat nazis" about stuff left out when it's not being used. Absolutely. Someone who has a trawler complained because the boat hit a wake and the computer fell off the table and I said (without any compassion), you must not have had it secured. We always secure all the hatches when underway too. 11: We have neither TV nor broadband internet connectivity aboard, though we frequently will have an excellent connection to the internet. Therefore, there's none of the shoreside mind-numbers available. We do have TV aboard with a follow-me antenna. The good thing about this is that we didn't have a satellite dish at home, and after we got it on the boat, Bob decided to install a dish on the house for when we weren't on the boat. Up to that point, we were just getting our signal off-air with a big antenna on the roof. This is good because now that everything has gone digital, we are too far away from the D.C. TV stations to get a signal. The only way we could get TV at the house now is either cable or sat dish So, that's about it for the major differences from shore to our home. What Might I Not Like About Life Aboard Flying Pig? 1: Everything's more expensive than it is at home. 2: Food, in general: Not a problem for visitors on our boat. We aren't a charter. They eat what we give them or get their own. Soft drinks, OJ, beer and other commercial beverages, when available, are cold, We don't carry soft drinks or beer or OJ we drink mostly water or lemonade/Gatorade We drink water, sunshine tea and cranberry juice. we don't have ice for drinks. 3: Because fresh water is at such a premium both in amount we can carry, availability/difficulty of transport and/or cost, we normally bathe in the sea. We carry so much water (400 gallons) that with the two of us it is hard to use enough to keep it fresh, so we don't generally conserve that much. We CAN, but generally don't. 8: Most of the time, whether you have and bring a cell phone, you'll not be able to pick up the phone and call someone I used to be able to use my bag phone all over the Chesapeake. Now that the phone companies have gone digital, there are large spaces where I don't get any signal. Progress!!! 9: We have a very small hand washer, capable of several T-shirts, to give you an idea of size, but, at that, rarely use it due to water storage and availability considerations. We just use washers in marinas when required. 10: Related to #9, and just generally, as it's our preference, as we're predominantly in very warm (not uncomfortably so) climates, we tend to wear very little clothing, I was told when we first chartered a boat in the Virgin Islands, that I should not sit around in a wet bathing suit as I would have skin problems. I found that is true. Also since I've had two melanomas and Bob has had one second stage, we do NOT sit around - even under the bimini - in bathing suits. I wear long trousers and a shirt with at least some sleeves in the boat, plus I have automatic darkening glasses. Bob wears sunglasses - he does wear Bermuda type shorts. We both wear hats when outside and sunscreen. Bob insists that we wear shoes at all times when on deck for safety reasons. Proper shoes really are more non-skid than feet. (I have tested this myself.) If I didn't know that shoes were more slip resistant, I wouldn't wear them. Bob does have more tender feet than I do and he can't stand to walk on the non-skid on the deck, plus he's broken toes in the past so he wears shoes in places that I go barefoot, but I do as he wishes in to wearing shoes on deck. Also we wear SOSpender type life jackets at all times when underway and insist that all guests do the same. 12: If you're not an active cruiser, marine toilets ("heads") can be both a mystery and a nuisance. Not only is the seat smaller (altogether round, too), We have a larger seat for our head. We also flush with fresh water using the shower head. You might also mention that male guests might do better with getting urine in the toilet if they sit on the toilet seat rather than try to hold on to keep their balance while trying to aim. 13: Our time ashore is nearly all afoot and looky-loo. That is, we don't do tours, rent cars, pay for museums, and the like. There's lots to see and do without cash expenditures, so we don't, in light of our budget. If your idea of cruising is marinas, tours, maybe hotels, dinners out/pub-bar entertainment and the like, we're happy to join you as your guests ![]() we don't need it. One of the things you may miss is walking, so time ashore can be used for hiking and exercise. Or 6: Go rowing, if you like. We have a PortaBote, in addition to our inflatable, which has dinghy oars as well as actual sculling sweeps (10' oars I used to use in my rowing shell on Lake Lanier) which go in the modification I did to that boat. |
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