Sell a Boat. just sold my GB @85 .And still looking for another smaller hey ho its a illness that has no cure.
There's only one complete cure... God Forbid!! LOL
Sell a Boat. just sold my GB @85 .And still looking for another smaller hey ho its a illness that has no cure.
I see myself following that path as well. I am wanting to do the maintenance, but know that the time will come when I no longer want to do it. Then it will be time to sell and re consider next move. It will depend on where the priority leads. It does seem that many are on a revolving plan. Once the boat is made your own and nothing left to improve upon, we look for the next makeover. Gives purpose.Once I got the varnish up to date on the GB42, I enjoyed the light work involved in refreshing it, especially during the 25 years the boat was kept under cover. Every little piece of that exterior teak was Epifaned to perfection, and I enjoyed the admiring comments everywhere we went. But then, guess what, I suddenly realized how old I was getting and that varnish work was suddenly boring (as was all the other extensive work). I had the boat sold and outa here in three weeks, and a week later bought this fiberglass beauty. Within a month it was hanging under the same cover the trawler had occupied when it was a wet slip. Whiplash maybe? I guess I became a "different folk" with a "different stroke" overnight.
Sorry but I think you are foolish. Have not seen the boat, maybe it needs a lot of work and is not seaworthy. But planning 3 years on the hard with no pleasure time IMO is asking for disappointment.I may be foolish, but I was 64 in February 2021 and bought a 1973 Grand Banks 36 last November. This is my retirement boat. I have higher than average mechanical skills and have worked on boats for years. My retirement plan is to spend the next 3 years with the boat on the hard, repairing, replacing, modifying all systems to reduce future work and to modify the boat so that routine maintenance will be that much easier to accomplish. I have been a blue collar guy my whole life and can't afford a boat without doing the work myself. I sometimes think that I am deluding myself, but I know I have to try. I am sorry for those who approach that point where they aren't able to keep their boat. I bought my boat from a very nice couple who almost cried when I sailed her away. The boat had suffered a bit in recent years for the very reasons we are discussing. I have no opinion to offer, only best wishes for a happy resolution to your situation. Best of luck.
Time is money. If you can afford to, pay a professional to do some of the more major maintenance work. It's still puzzles me that many boat owners will take on any and all tasks related to their boat, but don't hesitate to pay someone to change the oil in their car.
We rented an RV last weekend, just as an experiment to see if it's something we'd ever want to do in our old(er) age, when I can no longer easily do that jump from the finger to the swim step. Granted, we had to "learn" the RV literally overnight. From trying to back that thing into a tight campsite to the final disgusting pump out (waste dump), it was far more of an ordeal than our boat. Let's just say the experiment taught us we're not RV people.
I might speculate that if you went into boating totally unprepared you'd feel the same. Is backing into a campsite more difficult than backing into a slip? Many places have drive through campsites. You had to learn overnight. You found a bad pump out. We'd never even camped and we took a Sprinter RV on our last trip to NC and SC. Now we were thoroughly briefed on it's use and quirks and parks and chose carefully and we had no issues. I wouldn't entirely reject it if I was you as we'd long done that and our experience changed our minds. I'd still choose boating any day, but if the time ever comes we can't handle it, we may well consider RV.
I have a couple potential answers. First though I want to mention that my last boat was purchased while I was still working. So, week end use mostly. Two hour drive to the boat, spend time cleaning off the dust and bird poop. Do some maintenance maybe. Do some waxing. Clean up our messes and go home. I really wanted to be in a place where I could do what others did.....Pay someone to clean the boat before I got there. So, I'm there now. Of course I hose off the dust but major cleaning outside done regularly by a crew. They also wax on occasion. My wife and I clean on the inside.
Ok, why or why not pay someone to change your oil? Well it is so cheap with your car. Some places you don't even have to get out of your car. On a boat, everything costs way more. As for why we feel the need to do our own work I believe it is because we need to know we can, if we have to. When on the hook you need to be self sufficient. Also, doing becomes understanding and familiarity. It becomes a safety factor to truly understand how your systems work.
6)having owned boats my entire life...the challenge of a new puzzle/project is what keeps my brain on alert to think and to solve.
So at 70 I can still bounce up and down the stairs, crawl the engine room with a good pair of knee pads and twist into places thought not possible. I can find ways to work smarter not bull my way through. I still ask more questions than most. I figure the boat will tell me when it’s time to go. But I just love being on the water with all the wildlife, the boat people, the adventurous that come and go and the stories that are told. Better to sit here and drool into my lap, with my depends on and a can of insure at my side as the tide rises and falls than to be wheeled around a nursing home watching the grass grow and other people dropping off around me. When the time comes push me out to sea, fire up the boat and send me to that warm beach in never never land.
Just my thoughts nothing spectacular just how I see my time on the water...thanks for all the good reads.
OK, so I started googling around and....My tip...coconut oil....I've been putting coconut oil on my daily peanut butter and jam (or honey or banana) sandwiches ever since.
OK, so I started googling around and....
"Coconut oil, butter and MCT (medium-chain triglycerides) are the only oils that convert quickly to ketones "
So...have you tried butter?
The following foods are the richest sources of medium-chain triglycerides, including lauric acid, and listed along with their percentage composition of MCTs
* coconut oil: 55%
* palm kernel oil: 54%
* whole milk: 9%
* butter: 8%
Caution: If you are taking any herbal supplements or ‘oils’ tell your doctors, especially before any surgery.
Caution: If you are taking any herbal supplements or ‘oils’ tell your doctors, especially before any surgery.
I am almost 65 and 6'5. I just spent the last week doing "boat yoga' repairing a bilge pump located in a deep bilge under the prop shaft and stuffing box. I had total knee replacement on both knees over the winter. This is "pleasure" boating right?
A younger smaller guy would be happy to do that for you for a fee.