Friday, April 1, 2016

Blogging from A to Z: A is for Anchoring Out, "Anger-ing" Out

During the month of April last year, I participated in the A to Z Blogging Challenge - one alphabet-themed post per day (except Sundays).  I had such a good time with it that I'm doing it again this year.  I'm loosely organized on the theme of downsizing, minimalism, and small-home living that I've learned in 14 years of living on a small boat.  I'm starting with A is for Anchoring Out, Anger-ing Out, and ending with Z is for Zout and Zwarte Peper (Dutch for salt and black pepper). Click on the A to Z logo on the lower left sidebar for links to many other bloggers participating in the challenge. 


Instead of being on land looking out to the water, we're on the water, looking back to the town.


When I tell new people I meet that we're not really "from" anywhere; that we live on a sailboat and travel north or south with the seasons and our whims, the  general response seems to be admiration for our adventurousness and our freedom.  Publicly, we always describe our lifestyle with enthusiasm. And yet, privately we had been recently feeling less charitable; frustrated and restless, grumpy with each other and with what felt like the clutter and congestion of our everyday land-focused lives.

Dan finally put his finger on it -- we have been off having adventures the last year, spending the winter scuba diving in Aruba and the summer crewing on the Spanish tall ship El Galeon, as well as smaller road trips in rental cars to Annapolis and Key West, but our boat has not been out of the slip for that entire year, the longest period we've been stationary in the 16 years that we've owned this boat. The boat at the dock in the downtown marina has been a convenient launching pad and base of operations for our wanderings ... but because we were staying in one place anyway, living aboard afforded us nothing -- aside from the "cool factor" that enhances our image -- that a small condo wouldn't have served equally well.  Better, really, because compared to that hypothetical condo, the boat is quite a bit more cramped, and often damp.

In the normal course of life afloat, cramped-and-damp is a small price to pay for the benefits of being on a boat that actually takes you to new places.  So it was time to take those benefits we'd been earning, and last week, after two days of preparing and testing systems that had not been run in months (and despite all those preparations, still forgetting half the steps on our underway checklist!) we carefully backed out of the slip.  Our destination was a mooring on the north side of the bridge, a scant half-mile -- or a world -- away.

We made it easy on our out-of-practice selves, picking a calm day and timing our departure near slack tide; still, we were glad the mooring field was nearly empty of people to see us fumble our first attempt to pick up the mooring.  After the second try, though, we were securely tied, and before lunchtime found us lounging in the cockpit taking in our new surroundings.

We had all the comforts of home, we were in our home, but were away from car horns and clocks and tourists walking the docks. We had told our friends that we needed to do some things that couldn't be done in the slip, like checking the autopilot, and we did check it, but mostly, we just needed to shake the cobwebs from our sails and our minds. Our boat was our own private island, away from it all, and instead of a full to-do list, we were letting the day unfold however it would, without plan or schedule. The light shifted in ancient rhythms as the sun settled westward and the tidal currents reversed.  Eyes used to close-focus on computer screens now looked toward distant horizons; engine and human sounds were replaced with the squawking of gulls and the chuffing of dolphins circling our boat. That short exposure to the natural world was all it took.  I could just feel the shift, feel the easing of tensions, relaxing muscles I didn't know I'd been clenching. The stress and the grumpiness were gone, like hitting a "reset" button in our brains.  It was the tiniest of stay-cations, and simultaneously a dramatic reminder that the whole point, the reason we were living on a boat and making the compromises to comfort and convenience that we were, was to be in touch with nature and satisfy our wanderlust ... boats are made to move!

The sky is so big, out here!

Day slowly settles into night, on its own time.

21 comments:

  1. A great way to get away.

    Mason
    Ninja Minion

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    1. It is, indeed! And amazing that you don't have to get far away at all, to get the disconnected feeling. Thanx for reading.

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  2. I moved to Ecuador to escape the stressful life. It worked even though I live in a city. Lifestyle is everything and definitely determines one's mood. Keep looking for that wondrous place. Enjoy the challenge along the way.
    @ScarlettBraden from
    Frankly Scarlett

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    1. Intriguing thought -- it's not the city that makes it stressful, it's how you frame your life? I think I've learned so far, there's no one perfect wondrous place, there are many very good places. That, plus the attitudes you bring to it, is what matters. Thanx for the support!

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  3. Lovely!
    For now we work full time and weekends are always taken up with chores, but every once in a while we escape and it's such a good feeling to completely unwind. Watching sunset and dusk is my favorite time! - Lucy

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    1. Hi fellow boat-blogging-buddy! Agreed, the "edges of the day" are magic. And a wonderful opportunity to remember why you want to live on a boat.

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  4. Fabulous start to the challenge!! I'm starting to feel a bit of what you describe the longer our boat sits on the dock. It's meant to move! (Not that it can just now until I fix the engine.) I love your description of what it was like to get out of the slip and onto a mooring ball. Can't wait until tomorrow :-)

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    1. Hi Ellen! Yes, it doesn't take much distance to make a big big change. We're back at the dock now, because our Spanish tall ship is back and we'll be back to work (as you will see in my "B" post) but the clearheadedness from our time away remains.

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  5. Your life sounds amazing. Look at that water!

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    1. Thanx, it is. BTW I checked out your site. Your sketch of a character for B was chilling and masterful. I'll be following.

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  6. Aaaah....bliss. Great post and pics. I'm on board for the journey to Z - let's drift.

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    1. Thanx for reading! BTW your "B" piece reminds me of almost every ship I've been on (except our own). At sea if conditions are calm enough that you aren't just hanging on, skipper would always have something for you to do, oiling the teak or swabbing the deck, you never got to be "bored." ;)

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  7. Greetings Blog Challenge neighbor!
    Looking forward to seeing what you post all month.

    Tim
    --
    Tim Brannan, The Other Side Blog
    2015 A to Z of Adventure!
    http://theotherside.timsbrannan.com/

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    1. Hi Tim! One of the things that fascinates me about the Challenge is that I get to see blogs about sides of life that I never would have imagined before ... like yours. And having family members who are dedicated gamers, this might give me another insight into their interests.

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  8. What an idyllic life, I have a friend who is boat living on the coast of Scotland, for over a year now and loving it.

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    1. 90% idyllic, 9% frustrating, and 1%terrifying. And I wouldn't trade it for anything. Hope your friend finds the same. BTW, we also spend a lot of time reading when at anchor or at sea; I'm looking forward to perusing the book lists on your blog.

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  9. It sounds wonderful, but I'll enjoy it vicariously through your blog - pretty sure I'd be sick and grumpy a good part of the time if I tried it myself! :) Safe passages to you.

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    1. Thanx, and of course if this life was for everyone, I wouldn't have anything to write about. Plus, it would be crowded. Glad to have you along for the vicarious journey.

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  10. Wow! There seem to be a lot of sailing/boating themes this year! I love it :) I only sail in small lake boats, but I do love doing it. Happy A to Z!

    @TarkabarkaHolgy from
    The Multicolored Diary
    MopDog

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    1. We started on a lake canoe, then a river canoe, then a small lake boat also. And now I almost wish I hadn't found your excellent literate blog, because I just got lost in your links for about an hour. Nice job!

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  11. I totally get the feeling of wanting to be back "out there". Being in a slip, let alone a boat yard, is so very different than being at anchor. During the 8 years we cruised full time aboard our 35 catamaran Irie, we kept slip time to a minimum (not only for the expense), to equalize our batteries and fix some issues, and worked hard while hauled out, so we could go back in the water after a week of chores... It is nice to be back at anchor (or a mooring)! :-)

    Liesbet @ Roaming About – A Life Less Ordinary

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