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Civilized liveaboard?
Hello,
I'm interested in living aboard a boat, cheaply, while retaining a few of the mod cons. In my reckless youth I spent a year living aboard a very sketchy 1974 (IIRC) Hunter 25, generally in extreme poverty. Living on a boat was nice; living on a ramshackle, falling-apart, waterborne-tent of a boat which I couldn't afford to maintain less so. (I've read the 'Liveaboard Simulator' frequently posted here, and it certainly brought back memories, though god knows at the time I was in no position to blow $100 at West Marine on a moment's notice.) I'd like to get another boat, one on which I can maintain a few basic amenities. I'm interested in feedback as to whether this is at all practical and what it might cost. I see a number of 27-33-foot boats from twenty or thirty years ago, in decent shape, for very reasonable prices. However, there are a few things which I'd really appreciate as a full-time liveaboard which they lack: 1. A shower. I don't have a trust fund, and I'll need to be able to hold down a job to pay dockage; most workplaces tend to frown on employees who bathe only weekly. Of course showers are probably available at a marina, but being able to shower privately in one's own boat makes a huge difference. 2. Air-conditioning, only while hooked up to shore power. (It seems to matter much less under way or even at anchor.) Call me spoiled, but I don't want to spend my free time exclusively in weeks of 100+-degree heat and still air -- I've been there, done that, and paid my dues. I don't need much else in terms of amenities -- I'd be happy if I could run lights and a VHF off the 12V, and a laptop at the marina, and I don't mind pumping my own water in the galley. Few to none of the boats in the size range I'm looking for seem to have these features, so I'm mostly wondering if anyone here has added them to a production boat, what it cost, and how difficult it was. As I'll be living aboard alone, with essentially no guests, I'd happily sacrifice a salon berth or quarter berth toward these ends. Also, while I'd like a boat I can confidently take on a week's cruise (in the Great Lakes) if I'm so inclined, realistically I'll probably be dock-bound aside from day-sails, so serious cruising gear is not a big factor. Thanks in advance for any anecdotes or advice. --Eli |
Civilized liveaboard?
Get an old houseboat. Square design allows lots of space and they're
pretty cheap. You should be able to find lots with all the amenities you want in your price range. Tow it to your destination if it dosn't have an engine. |
Civilized liveaboard?
On Jun 6, 6:46 am, Bruce wrote:
On Wed, 06 Jun 2007 08:25:44 -0000, wrote: Hello, I'm interested in living aboard a boat, cheaply, while retaining a few of the mod cons. In my reckless youth I spent a year living aboard a very sketchy 1974 (IIRC) Hunter 25, generally in extreme poverty. Living on a boat was nice; living on a ramshackle, falling-apart, waterborne-tent of a boat which I couldn't afford to maintain less so. (I've read the 'Liveaboard Simulator' frequently posted here, and it certainly brought back memories, though god knows at the time I was in no position to blow $100 at West Marine on a moment's notice.) I'd like to get another boat, one on which I can maintain a few basic amenities. I'm interested in feedback as to whether this is at all practical and what it might cost. I see a number of 27-33-foot boats from twenty or thirty years ago, in decent shape, for very reasonable prices. However, there are a few things which I'd really appreciate as a full-time liveaboard which they lack: 1. A shower. I don't have a trust fund, and I'll need to be able to hold down a job to pay dockage; most workplaces tend to frown on employees who bathe only weekly. Of course showers are probably available at a marina, but being able to shower privately in one's own boat makes a huge difference. Due space you will probably not find too many 27-33 foot boats with a shower. 2. Air-conditioning, only while hooked up to shore power. (It seems to matter much less under way or even at anchor.) Call me spoiled, but I don't want to spend my free time exclusively in weeks of 100+-degree heat and still air -- I've been there, done that, and paid my dues. This is an easy one. Buy a window air con. Sit it on the deck and make some sort of duct to blow cold air down the hatch. At least a third of the cruising boats in the marina I keep my boat in are set up that way-- inlcuding my own boat. I don't need much else in terms of amenities -- I'd be happy if I could run lights and a VHF off the 12V, and a laptop at the marina, and I don't mind pumping my own water in the galley No reason not to have pressure water. the pumps are cheap enough. Few to none of the boats in the size range I'm looking for seem to have these features, so I'm mostly wondering if anyone here has added them to a production boat, what it cost, and how difficult it was. As I'll be living aboard alone, with essentially no guests, I'd happily sacrifice a salon berth or quarter berth toward these ends. Also, while I'd like a boat I can confidently take on a week's cruise (in the Great Lakes) if I'm so inclined, realistically I'll probably be dock-bound aside from day-sails, so serious cruising gear is not a big factor. Sure, you can do anything. If the head is big enough build a shower curtain rail and let the water drain into th bilge is one way. The curtain keeps the toilet paper dry and usually the bilge is full of skuz so the wash water won't make any difference in the smell. Thanks in advance for any anecdotes or advice. --Eli Bruce in Bangkok (brucepaigeatgmaildotcom) -- Posted via a free Usenet account fromhttp://www.teranews.com- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Living in a pool of gray water is not civilized IMO. If you put in a shower put in a shower sump pump. A bilge should be bone dry. Joe |
Civilized liveaboard?
Joe wrote:
On Jun 6, 6:46 am, Bruce wrote: On Wed, 06 Jun 2007 08:25:44 -0000, wrote: Hello, I'm interested in living aboard a boat, cheaply, while retaining a few of the mod cons. In my reckless youth I spent a year living aboard a very sketchy 1974 (IIRC) Hunter 25, generally in extreme poverty. Living on a boat was nice; living on a ramshackle, falling-apart, waterborne-tent of a boat which I couldn't afford to maintain less so. (I've read the 'Liveaboard Simulator' frequently posted here, and it certainly brought back memories, though god knows at the time I was in no position to blow $100 at West Marine on a moment's notice.) I'd like to get another boat, one on which I can maintain a few basic amenities. I'm interested in feedback as to whether this is at all practical and what it might cost. I see a number of 27-33-foot boats from twenty or thirty years ago, in decent shape, for very reasonable prices. However, there are a few things which I'd really appreciate as a full-time liveaboard which they lack: 1. A shower. I don't have a trust fund, and I'll need to be able to hold down a job to pay dockage; most workplaces tend to frown on employees who bathe only weekly. Of course showers are probably available at a marina, but being able to shower privately in one's own boat makes a huge difference. Due space you will probably not find too many 27-33 foot boats with a shower. 2. Air-conditioning, only while hooked up to shore power. (It seems to matter much less under way or even at anchor.) Call me spoiled, but I don't want to spend my free time exclusively in weeks of 100+-degree heat and still air -- I've been there, done that, and paid my dues. This is an easy one. Buy a window air con. Sit it on the deck and make some sort of duct to blow cold air down the hatch. At least a third of the cruising boats in the marina I keep my boat in are set up that way-- inlcuding my own boat. I don't need much else in terms of amenities -- I'd be happy if I could run lights and a VHF off the 12V, and a laptop at the marina, and I don't mind pumping my own water in the galley No reason not to have pressure water. the pumps are cheap enough. Few to none of the boats in the size range I'm looking for seem to have these features, so I'm mostly wondering if anyone here has added them to a production boat, what it cost, and how difficult it was. As I'll be living aboard alone, with essentially no guests, I'd happily sacrifice a salon berth or quarter berth toward these ends. Also, while I'd like a boat I can confidently take on a week's cruise (in the Great Lakes) if I'm so inclined, realistically I'll probably be dock-bound aside from day-sails, so serious cruising gear is not a big factor. Sure, you can do anything. If the head is big enough build a shower curtain rail and let the water drain into th bilge is one way. The curtain keeps the toilet paper dry and usually the bilge is full of skuz so the wash water won't make any difference in the smell. Thanks in advance for any anecdotes or advice. --Eli Bruce in Bangkok (brucepaigeatgmaildotcom) -- Posted via a free Usenet account fromhttp://www.teranews.com- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Living in a pool of gray water is not civilized IMO. If you put in a shower put in a shower sump pump. A bilge should be bone dry. Why buy a boat with none of those things and go through all sorts of contortions to put them in? I bought a 1979 Hunter 33' that had all of those things except the A/C for $6500. It even had a shower with dedicated sump. Everything working, well except the motor, but with a few thousand more that was remedied. Stephen |
Civilized liveaboard?
On Jun 6, 9:48 am, Stephen Trapani wrote:
Joe wrote: On Jun 6, 6:46 am, Bruce wrote: On Wed, 06 Jun 2007 08:25:44 -0000, wrote: Hello, I'm interested in living aboard a boat, cheaply, while retaining a few of the mod cons. In my reckless youth I spent a year living aboard a very sketchy 1974 (IIRC) Hunter 25, generally in extreme poverty. Living on a boat was nice; living on a ramshackle, falling-apart, waterborne-tent of a boat which I couldn't afford to maintain less so. (I've read the 'Liveaboard Simulator' frequently posted here, and it certainly brought back memories, though god knows at the time I was in no position to blow $100 at West Marine on a moment's notice.) I'd like to get another boat, one on which I can maintain a few basic amenities. I'm interested in feedback as to whether this is at all practical and what it might cost. I see a number of 27-33-foot boats from twenty or thirty years ago, in decent shape, for very reasonable prices. However, there are a few things which I'd really appreciate as a full-time liveaboard which they lack: 1. A shower. I don't have a trust fund, and I'll need to be able to hold down a job to pay dockage; most workplaces tend to frown on employees who bathe only weekly. Of course showers are probably available at a marina, but being able to shower privately in one's own boat makes a huge difference. Due space you will probably not find too many 27-33 foot boats with a shower. 2. Air-conditioning, only while hooked up to shore power. (It seems to matter much less under way or even at anchor.) Call me spoiled, but I don't want to spend my free time exclusively in weeks of 100+-degree heat and still air -- I've been there, done that, and paid my dues. This is an easy one. Buy a window air con. Sit it on the deck and make some sort of duct to blow cold air down the hatch. At least a third of the cruising boats in the marina I keep my boat in are set up that way-- inlcuding my own boat. I don't need much else in terms of amenities -- I'd be happy if I could run lights and a VHF off the 12V, and a laptop at the marina, and I don't mind pumping my own water in the galley No reason not to have pressure water. the pumps are cheap enough. Few to none of the boats in the size range I'm looking for seem to have these features, so I'm mostly wondering if anyone here has added them to a production boat, what it cost, and how difficult it was. As I'll be living aboard alone, with essentially no guests, I'd happily sacrifice a salon berth or quarter berth toward these ends. Also, while I'd like a boat I can confidently take on a week's cruise (in the Great Lakes) if I'm so inclined, realistically I'll probably be dock-bound aside from day-sails, so serious cruising gear is not a big factor. Sure, you can do anything. If the head is big enough build a shower curtain rail and let the water drain into th bilge is one way. The curtain keeps the toilet paper dry and usually the bilge is full of skuz so the wash water won't make any difference in the smell. Thanks in advance for any anecdotes or advice. --Eli Bruce in Bangkok (brucepaigeatgmaildotcom) -- Posted via a free Usenet account fromhttp://www.teranews.com-Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Living in a pool of gray water is not civilized IMO. If you put in a shower put in a shower sump pump. A bilge should be bone dry. Why buy a boat with none of those things and go through all sorts of contortions to put them in? I bought a 1979 Hunter 33' that had all of those things except the A/C for $6500. It even had a shower with dedicated sump. Everything working, well except the motor, but with a few thousand more that was remedied. Stephen- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I agree. You need to go 32 ft or larger to get a decent liveaboard, unless your into a camping type of lifestyle. Joe |
Civilized liveaboard?
"Joe" wrote in message
oups.com... On Jun 6, 9:48 am, Stephen Trapani wrote: Joe wrote: On Jun 6, 6:46 am, Bruce wrote: On Wed, 06 Jun 2007 08:25:44 -0000, wrote: Hello, I'm interested in living aboard a boat, cheaply, while retaining a few of the mod cons. In my reckless youth I spent a year living aboard a very sketchy 1974 (IIRC) Hunter 25, generally in extreme poverty. Living on a boat was nice; living on a ramshackle, falling-apart, waterborne-tent of a boat which I couldn't afford to maintain less so. (I've read the 'Liveaboard Simulator' frequently posted here, and it certainly brought back memories, though god knows at the time I was in no position to blow $100 at West Marine on a moment's notice.) I'd like to get another boat, one on which I can maintain a few basic amenities. I'm interested in feedback as to whether this is at all practical and what it might cost. I see a number of 27-33-foot boats from twenty or thirty years ago, in decent shape, for very reasonable prices. However, there are a few things which I'd really appreciate as a full-time liveaboard which they lack: 1. A shower. I don't have a trust fund, and I'll need to be able to hold down a job to pay dockage; most workplaces tend to frown on employees who bathe only weekly. Of course showers are probably available at a marina, but being able to shower privately in one's own boat makes a huge difference. Due space you will probably not find too many 27-33 foot boats with a shower. 2. Air-conditioning, only while hooked up to shore power. (It seems to matter much less under way or even at anchor.) Call me spoiled, but I don't want to spend my free time exclusively in weeks of 100+-degree heat and still air -- I've been there, done that, and paid my dues. This is an easy one. Buy a window air con. Sit it on the deck and make some sort of duct to blow cold air down the hatch. At least a third of the cruising boats in the marina I keep my boat in are set up that way-- inlcuding my own boat. I don't need much else in terms of amenities -- I'd be happy if I could run lights and a VHF off the 12V, and a laptop at the marina, and I don't mind pumping my own water in the galley No reason not to have pressure water. the pumps are cheap enough. Few to none of the boats in the size range I'm looking for seem to have these features, so I'm mostly wondering if anyone here has added them to a production boat, what it cost, and how difficult it was. As I'll be living aboard alone, with essentially no guests, I'd happily sacrifice a salon berth or quarter berth toward these ends. Also, while I'd like a boat I can confidently take on a week's cruise (in the Great Lakes) if I'm so inclined, realistically I'll probably be dock-bound aside from day-sails, so serious cruising gear is not a big factor. Sure, you can do anything. If the head is big enough build a shower curtain rail and let the water drain into th bilge is one way. The curtain keeps the toilet paper dry and usually the bilge is full of skuz so the wash water won't make any difference in the smell. Thanks in advance for any anecdotes or advice. --Eli Bruce in Bangkok (brucepaigeatgmaildotcom) -- Posted via a free Usenet account fromhttp://www.teranews.com-Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Living in a pool of gray water is not civilized IMO. If you put in a shower put in a shower sump pump. A bilge should be bone dry. Why buy a boat with none of those things and go through all sorts of contortions to put them in? I bought a 1979 Hunter 33' that had all of those things except the A/C for $6500. It even had a shower with dedicated sump. Everything working, well except the motor, but with a few thousand more that was remedied. Stephen- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I agree. You need to go 32 ft or larger to get a decent liveaboard, unless your into a camping type of lifestyle. Joe I agree as well.. .probably need a bit bigger. I have a Sabre 30, which is fairly roomy. It's got a shower/sump, but it's still feels like camping if I'm on it at the dock for more than a week. -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com |
Civilized liveaboard?
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Civilized liveaboard?
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Civilized liveaboard?
Bruce wrote in
: The curtain keeps the toilet paper dry Ha! That's a hoot!....(c; Toilet paper at sea gets wet just because it's toilet paper...(c; Larry -- If electricity comes from electrons, does morality come from morons? |
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