I did it!!!
Stick with me on this one Doug....I sold our house, cars, had a garage sale, placed valuables in storage, took a two year child and wife, who's only interest was the "alternate lifestyle" and bought a Coronado 35 Sloop in Florida (1984). I was 30, into my career (Environmental Scientist) and my co-workers thought I was absolutely insane to do this. Ever since I started sailing as a kid in Chicago and was the Commodore of my sailing club in college, the burning desire to cruise and liveaboard hounded me. I just had to do this! I gathered a library together (Dolphin Book Club back then) of reference books including everything Katy Burke and Bruce Bingham wrote about living aboard in my library, walked docks whenever on the coast to look at all types of sailboats to get ideas, was a very early member of BoatUS, and was very methodical in my planning and execution. We are all confronted with the fear of leaving behind what we feel secure with and its addressing that fear that is the battle. I was not going blue water, but simply desiring to explore the US coast by boat. I weighed everything out, did my research (ICW cruising), let safety be my mantra, and wondered if my two year old son would ever remember the experience. We worked on "Rozinante" at St. Augustine (Comanchee Cove Marina) for several months acclimating, learning, repairing, refreshing all systems as this was not a brand new boat before we headed out. That was the toughest challenge of all; being a mechanic, electrician, plumber, etc, etc, but we prevailed and headed out for almost three years. It was a fantastic exploration, frought with storms, hurricanes, groundings and all the stuff that builds character thats keeps you grounded to the real world, BUT, the sense of independence, the sunsets, the people, the sights and most of all the pride in the accomplishment, made it all worthwhile. And you know what? We all bounced back quite well, better for the experience, enriched and ready to go again so many decades later. I really could not believe how easy one could get back into the landlife again, getting employed rather quickly, selling the boat without much of a loss and getting back into the groove rather easily. Whats there to fear anyways? We came upon many senior folks, retired and living their dream of cruising, but they collectively felt that they wished they had done it earlier in their lives. Keep that in mind...............The only thing I would do differently today is rent my home rather then sell it. Market changes over the years and the cost of home buying would require that I keep my house if I deceided to take off for several years of cruising, which by the way is in the planning stages. Consider the demise of marinas these days, tougher ordinances on anchoring, general attitudes toward boaters in general along the ICW (Florida)and you see tremendous changes since I cruised the ICW in the 80's. It can only get worse, so you have to wonder if the time is right before conditions degrade more for the cruiser/liveaboard if the ICW is your target crusing ground. To my fellow sailors who are reading this, I speak from experience when I say that casting off and letting yourself run free on the water for extended times is worth every moment and you can look back as I do and recall that moment of decision and how worth it it truely was. What about my son? Well, he just bought a 30 foot sailboat to liveaboard. Isn't that fabulous....BobCatalina 30 Breezin IILake Lanier, GA