- Joined
- Oct 1, 2007
- Messages
- 7,332
- Location
- Texas
- Vessel Name
- Floatsome & Jetsome
- Vessel Make
- Meridian 411
I had this idea for awhile but Charles motivated me with the post in the other section with my name in the title.* It makes it easy for me because I am just going to cut and paste and edit from that thread.*** This was written 6 years*ago so realize some time references are no longer relevant.* Thanks to Charles for posting that.
So, tell us your boating history and how you got to the present point in your boating life.* I am still relatively young(I keep telling myslef that) so my history is relatively short but I did evolve from sailing....just a little quicker than most.
ANyway, what's your story?....here's mine.
"My name is John Baker.* I got into
sailing when I was about 21(36 now).* Some friends got me into the racing
scene so the curve was steep.* Did that for a while but learned that a more
relaxing pace was more suitable to me.* I chartered sailboats with friends
for a while before buying my first....aptly a First 285 Beneteau.* I enjoyed
it thoroughly for about 3 years but I accepted a promotion in my career (in
the flyin' business you almost always take a pay cut to move up...pretty
crazy) and figured I would sell it and go without a boat for the duration of
my probationary year.......yeah right!!!!!* That lasted about six weeks as I
had rationalized my way into owning a beautiful little Alberg designed Cape
Dory 25.* What a looker!* But as lookers of most species go, she required a
lot of maintenance (read brightwork) and didn't provide too much comfort.*
After my girlfriend and I survived some pretty good weather on the bay, she
said, "....we are gonna come back one more time to this boat and that is to
put a "For Sale" sign on it!"* I really couldn't disagree with her.* So Sold
her and bought a Catalina 270.* What a great boat.* Roomy as hell...huge
cockpit...decent lines...could practically hose the interior down...no
exterior wood (hardly any interior wood either)...and not a bad sailer.* I
honestly do not know how they packed it all into 27ft without looking like a
Buccaneer.* A buddy of mine(Doug) saw a little look in my eye and thought that that
was the time to pounce.* He slid me Beebe's Voyaging Under Power under the
table right in front of all my sailing friends.* I liked the premise of the
book and thought I would give it a try.* I got into trawlering about*8 years
ago.* I attended the Clear Lake Tfest and surmised I am probably one of the younger trawler crawlers out
there.* I did go through the sailboat evolution(above) and still enjoy
sailing but I just like a boat that can offer all weather comfort all year
long (around here anyway).* I began living aboard as a temporary/transient
condition and will probably live aboard longer than planned.* The girlfriend
went away, so I figured I would live aboard and lighten up all of my credit
obligations.* I have done that.* But just as soon as you think you are
getting ahead, a few idiots have to ruin it for the rest of us.* I are an
airline pilot at one of the major airlines (a very junior one) and will be
embarking on my last trip (12/02) before being furloughed. (Will be bumped back to turboprops at our commuter).* So living
aboard will be a little more necessary now to keep the expenses down.* I love
boats and am one of those guys that consumes everything he can get his hands
on that has to do with boats.* I like the operational discussions (will chime
in on the docking thread shortly) and have a tendency to lurk on the finer
technicalities* I like
the challenge of boat handling.* I do use my boat very often.* I did*250
hours last year and am on par for that again this year in a day/weekender
application.* My stronger point of maintenance would probably be the diesel
and weakest would be electrical...I will plead ignorance on wiring and such.
**** I admire the saltier romantic names for all of the previous boats owned
by you saltier fellows.* Maybe someday I will look back on the Beneteaus and
Catalinas and even Cape Dorys with the same romance and saltiness that y'all
look back to in your early days of boating."
That was written 6 years ago and not too much has changed.* The girlfriend is back and the Prairie 29 has been sold(it was a financial decision).* We live on land now but still talk about selling the house and moving back aboard.* After the Prairie was sold, we were gonna go boatless(sound familiar) for awhile to get our finances in order* Well, I was poking around the internet and came across a guy fire selling the Mainship we currently own.* He had his new bigger one on order and arriving in 3 weeks.* He was trying to successfully do an "in and out" with the dealer to keep taxes down and also didn't want to own 2 boats thru the winter in the NE. I tried to walk away on many occassions and he kept dropping the price and sweetening the deal.* ANyway, blah blah blah.* We have* a Mainship Pilot 30 that is a really neat boat.* Just not enough room to do what we enjoy doing and that is spending time overnight on a boat.* So at some point in the near future, we will be selling the Mainship and getting a bigger and most likely slower boat.* We like the roominess of a sundeck but still love the one level of a sedan.* So your guess is as good as mine as to what we will get.*There you have it!
Trawler on,
John
So, tell us your boating history and how you got to the present point in your boating life.* I am still relatively young(I keep telling myslef that) so my history is relatively short but I did evolve from sailing....just a little quicker than most.
ANyway, what's your story?....here's mine.
"My name is John Baker.* I got into
sailing when I was about 21(36 now).* Some friends got me into the racing
scene so the curve was steep.* Did that for a while but learned that a more
relaxing pace was more suitable to me.* I chartered sailboats with friends
for a while before buying my first....aptly a First 285 Beneteau.* I enjoyed
it thoroughly for about 3 years but I accepted a promotion in my career (in
the flyin' business you almost always take a pay cut to move up...pretty
crazy) and figured I would sell it and go without a boat for the duration of
my probationary year.......yeah right!!!!!* That lasted about six weeks as I
had rationalized my way into owning a beautiful little Alberg designed Cape
Dory 25.* What a looker!* But as lookers of most species go, she required a
lot of maintenance (read brightwork) and didn't provide too much comfort.*
After my girlfriend and I survived some pretty good weather on the bay, she
said, "....we are gonna come back one more time to this boat and that is to
put a "For Sale" sign on it!"* I really couldn't disagree with her.* So Sold
her and bought a Catalina 270.* What a great boat.* Roomy as hell...huge
cockpit...decent lines...could practically hose the interior down...no
exterior wood (hardly any interior wood either)...and not a bad sailer.* I
honestly do not know how they packed it all into 27ft without looking like a
Buccaneer.* A buddy of mine(Doug) saw a little look in my eye and thought that that
was the time to pounce.* He slid me Beebe's Voyaging Under Power under the
table right in front of all my sailing friends.* I liked the premise of the
book and thought I would give it a try.* I got into trawlering about*8 years
ago.* I attended the Clear Lake Tfest and surmised I am probably one of the younger trawler crawlers out
there.* I did go through the sailboat evolution(above) and still enjoy
sailing but I just like a boat that can offer all weather comfort all year
long (around here anyway).* I began living aboard as a temporary/transient
condition and will probably live aboard longer than planned.* The girlfriend
went away, so I figured I would live aboard and lighten up all of my credit
obligations.* I have done that.* But just as soon as you think you are
getting ahead, a few idiots have to ruin it for the rest of us.* I are an
airline pilot at one of the major airlines (a very junior one) and will be
embarking on my last trip (12/02) before being furloughed. (Will be bumped back to turboprops at our commuter).* So living
aboard will be a little more necessary now to keep the expenses down.* I love
boats and am one of those guys that consumes everything he can get his hands
on that has to do with boats.* I like the operational discussions (will chime
in on the docking thread shortly) and have a tendency to lurk on the finer
technicalities* I like
the challenge of boat handling.* I do use my boat very often.* I did*250
hours last year and am on par for that again this year in a day/weekender
application.* My stronger point of maintenance would probably be the diesel
and weakest would be electrical...I will plead ignorance on wiring and such.
**** I admire the saltier romantic names for all of the previous boats owned
by you saltier fellows.* Maybe someday I will look back on the Beneteaus and
Catalinas and even Cape Dorys with the same romance and saltiness that y'all
look back to in your early days of boating."
That was written 6 years ago and not too much has changed.* The girlfriend is back and the Prairie 29 has been sold(it was a financial decision).* We live on land now but still talk about selling the house and moving back aboard.* After the Prairie was sold, we were gonna go boatless(sound familiar) for awhile to get our finances in order* Well, I was poking around the internet and came across a guy fire selling the Mainship we currently own.* He had his new bigger one on order and arriving in 3 weeks.* He was trying to successfully do an "in and out" with the dealer to keep taxes down and also didn't want to own 2 boats thru the winter in the NE. I tried to walk away on many occassions and he kept dropping the price and sweetening the deal.* ANyway, blah blah blah.* We have* a Mainship Pilot 30 that is a really neat boat.* Just not enough room to do what we enjoy doing and that is spending time overnight on a boat.* So at some point in the near future, we will be selling the Mainship and getting a bigger and most likely slower boat.* We like the roominess of a sundeck but still love the one level of a sedan.* So your guess is as good as mine as to what we will get.*There you have it!
Trawler on,
John