Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#8
![]()
posted to rec.boats.cruising
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Larry wrote:
Vic Smith wrote in : Yep, and if the cruise ship crew would let you lend a hand in fixing things in exotic places, you'd have it all. If I went on a cruise, would I HAVE to fix their electronics and electrical problems....like I do cruising on sailboats?...(c; If you watch the stories from anyone, not just Rosalie, notice how most of the stories involve the marina, boat maintenance, navigation, etc. with casual mention of restaurants/sightseeing/etc., which is the reality of cruising on a boat....that docks. If you are just sailing around in the ocean, there's not much to write about. No matter where you're going, the "view" from the boat is either a ditch full of bouys in the middle of a non-descript swamp, a river with mountains and cows on both sides and the occasional town, or the ocean The first year we went down the ICW, we went 'outside' only when strictly necessary (like to go around the Julia Tuttle bridge). After that, we did more and more outside up and down the coast. After the first time down, we always did Miami to Fort Pierce or v.v. outside. The St. Mary's River to Charleston, and Charleston to Cape Fear. (We always go into Charleston because our son lives near there, and ditto Miami where one of our daughters lives) which never varies the view until something just awful happens in a storm. After you seen a few hundred hours of these places, I get awfully bored of them. It makes me sleepy. I've never tried living like a hermit-on-the-hook, trapsing back and forth to land begging for a little dockspace to leave a dink, which most marinas don't want, so you can do a little sightseeing. That's gotta be just awful boring after day 3. There's only so many times I could replace toilet parts to keep me occupied. The first year we went down the ICW, and a lot of the time in the Bahamas we did the anchoring out thing. It is perfectly possible to cruise for a LOT less money than we spend. But we pick what we want to spend our money on. We can, but usually don't eat on board the boat very often. We'd rather eat out. But we are careful. That's why we planned to be in Crisfield on Thursday and not Friday or the holiday (even before I knew there were going to be the hard crab races and the carnival) - because it was cheaper. And when we order in a restaurant, we often eat an appetizer as the main entree because it is cheaper and the main entree often has too much food for us to eat. I always wonder about someone whos boat is packed with books. Books are an escape from your natural surroundings, traveling to far off exotic places where terrible things usually happen, if the author wants to stay in business. It's ESCAPE. Is the guy with all the books trying to escape the sheer boredom of being a hermit on a boat so much? I've sailed with guys like that. They open their book and might as well be walking across Mars, having escaped the boat we were sailing. This kept me from buying my own boat. I like the occasional sail, followed by long periods away from boats, entirely, that recharges the thrill of fighting the sea. I'd hate it if I actually had to own one, with all the expense and work. I'd hate it much worse if I were forced to live on one, which is a LOT of really hard work, just hauling life up and down the docks. I love to sail to X and back. But, when I get back and have cleaned up the mess, I'm ready to abandon boating for a year, the thrill being gone, the boredom having set in. Why people spend half a year going to live in a ditch in Florida is even a greater mystery. There's nothing in Florida to see from a boat unless you love Real Estate! Larry That's why we don't do the ICW to Florida anymore. There's a lot to see from the boat (crazy people pulling their children in a tube in dense fog), but there's really not many places to actually sail. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|