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![]() Charlie Morgan wrote: I've heard countless stories that are prefaced with: So we sold our house and everything we owned to buy a boat and go cruising. That's the poorest plan I've ever heard. For those who are math impaired, let me simplify. NEVER sell an appreciating asset to purchase a depreciating asset. Excellent point! If the percentyage of people who go cruising is tiny, then the number who cruise for the remainder of their lives is miniscule. Keep the house and rent it out. Hire a management company to manage it. If you do it right, you may even have an additional income stream while cruising. The best part is that when you are done cruising, whether in 1 week or 10 years, you aren't homeless, even though real estate prices may have quadrupled in your absence. A lot of people who get the cruising bug seem to think they need a $200K+ boat to be comfortable, when they only have $300K or less in net worth to begin with. There was a story in the Wall Street Journal recently about the average net worth of people in various countries, and it pointed out that a lot of people in the USA actually have negative net worth--their debts exceed the value of their assets. Many others have no significant net assets outside the equity in their house, and it is likely that their house will not produce positive cash flow on the rental marketplace with their current mortgage payment. Let's face it. If you are going to buy a fairly new large cruising boat and finance it, the payments are just like house payments--AND it is a depreciating asset. Most people cannot afford two house payments. On the other hand there are countless stories of people like Fatty and Carol Goodlander who bought a fixer-upper cheap, and then proceeded to fix it up and sail it around the world. "Insurance?! We only paid $6K for the boat!! Why would we pay $1600 a year to insure it?" And believe me there are plenty of fixer-uppers out there to choose from--not all worth fixing up of course. I don't know what the best answer is. Some people we know bought a used 38' boat and moved aboard it while they worked to pay it off. It essentially was their house payment. When it was paid off, they went cruising for several years. In our case, we bought a boat we could pay cash for and are putting our sweat into making it "seaworthy" (crosses himself and mumbles). Of course in the process we have learned tons of things we'd have never known without the sweat part. Don W. |