But make no mistake, the transition from life in a modest
brick and mortar house in a nice neighborhood in Savannah, Georgia, to a small
and ever moving ‘mobile’ home is a continuous work in progress. There are lots
of changes to deal with; some obvious, and some not so obvious. Not only do the
physical realities of such a move have to be addressed, but the emotional and
mental muscles will be flexed and exercised as well. And once in a while,
bruises happen.
The physical aspects of our transition are clearly apparent.
Our house in Savannah measured just under 2,000 square feet, and was a
considerable downsize from our four bedroom, two and a half bath home with two
car garage where we lived in Atlanta. There isn’t the same amount of space. Not
even close. We’ve calculated the useable living space aboard Jo Beth – which
includes storage spaces in drawers, cabinets, (called ‘lockers’ on a boat),
refrigeration and freezer spaces, etc., to be approximately 250 square feet. In
the cabin, the actual space where we can stand is probably less than 40 square
feet.
Everything aboard Jo Beth has a home, and there is a home
for everything. Clutter can quickly get out of hand, and if we’re sailing can
actually become a hazard. It takes lots of energy from both of us to keep the
clutter under control. Surprisingly, the worst ‘clutter’ offender is paper.
Since we’re both still working and aren’t (yet) able to
cruise and stay in warmer weather year-round, we need to maintain an inventory
of warm and cool weather clothes. We rent a climate controlled storage unit in
town and ‘swap’ our clothes with the seasons. The storage locker also serves as
an ‘office’ where we store our important records and papers, and holds an
inventory of boat equipment, which we either don’t need aboard at the moment or
will be selling at upcoming nautical garage sales.
These matters are obvious when it comes to drastically downsizing and living in a small space. However, yacht living is unique. There’s much you don’t ever think about until you’re confronted with having to do something or solve a problem not considered. We’ve been aboard Jo Beth for almost one full year. Here is what has stood out for us:
These matters are obvious when it comes to drastically downsizing and living in a small space. However, yacht living is unique. There’s much you don’t ever think about until you’re confronted with having to do something or solve a problem not considered. We’ve been aboard Jo Beth for almost one full year. Here is what has stood out for us:
You’re going to Bump Your Head
A lot. And your knees, elbows, and ankles. Those of you that
know Lisa and I know how short we are – and for those of which we’ve not yet
had the pleasure of knowing, we’re short: I’m 5’4” tall, and Lisa is 5’ 2 ¾”
tall. Jo Beth’s head room is just over 6’. It’s not the ceiling (called ‘the
overhead’, on a boat) height that’s the problem but things like the latches on
the windows (called ‘ports’ or ‘portlights’) and the rounded corners of lockers
that get us.
You’re going to Knock Things Over
Jo Beth measures 10’ 6” at her widest part, or her ‘beam.’ In
the cabin interior, much of that ten and a half feet is reduced by seats,
(settees), lockers, and shelves. It’s easy for an elbow to catch a cup of
water, a bottle of wine, or whatever…and send it splashing to the cabin sole.
(The ‘cabin sole’ is the ‘floor’ in a house.) And in this same vein, things
will fall out of lockers when you open them, no matter how carefully and
securely they were stowed.
Grocery Shopping is Different
This is mostly because you can only buy groceries for a few
days at a time, at least if you want to have meals prepared from fresh and not
canned or otherwise preserved ingredients. Our total refrigerator/freezer space
is approximately four cubic feet. It’s one box, partitioned by a two piece
divider into a freezer side and refrigerator side. Lisa typically assigns items
their place inside of the reefer or freezer; she has a knack for seeing things
spatially. Sometimes though, despite the best organizational efforts, the
nature of the beast wins out. You will still have to empty the reefer to get
the butter.
Food Storage is Different
Well, it is in some ways. Our fresh fruit resides in a
hammock hung in the galley over the sink; onions, garlic bulbs, shallots, etc.
reside in another hammock strung in the locker behind the trash can. Canned
foods, boxed soups, etc. live under the starboard side settee in the main cabin
– also called the ‘saloon’ and pronounced ‘salon.’ Crackers are stowed in
plastic boxes in the same area. Snack items, like peanuts, pretzels, etc. are
stowed in one of the overhead lockers in the galley. Most spices and condiments
do well enough, with the exception of salt. There’s not a whole lot that can be
done to keep salt from clumping. If you live on a boat which floats in salt
water, you’re going to have clumpy salt in your salt grinders or shakers.
Meal Planning and Preparation is Different
Jo Beth is fitted with a three-burner propane stove and
oven. Actually, the back burner on the stove is useless because of its
proximity to the wooden cabinetry, so we never use it. The stove is on gimbals,
so it can swing level when the boat is sailing and heeled; that is to say,
pushed over to one side by the force of the wind on the sails. When we want to
prepare something in the oven, we have to preheat the oven approximately 200°
warmer than is needed, because when the oven door is opened, the temperature
drops by approximately that amount. Of course, this makes the cabin much warmer
– not so bad in winter, and not so good in the summer! Thus, we tend to prepare
‘cold’ meals in the summer. We have four dinner plates, four small bread
plates, six bowls, and six forks, knives, and spoons. Our four stainless steel cook
pots nest within one another, and the lid doubles as a skillet. Planning is
critical, as the lockers where utensils are stowed requires the cook to reach across the stove; even getting into the
reefer or freezer requires one to reach or lean over one corner of the stove.
And, when the stove is in use, 90% of the usable counter space disappears with
the cover.
You Become Aware of Resource Consumption
Even though we’re on the dock more often than not these
days, all of our water and fuel for cooking is kept aboard the boat. Our
electricity is provided from batteries, though we can plug into shore side
electrical when we’re in our marina slip. When we’re away from the dock, all we
have is what we carry until we can replenish. We’ve become much more aware of
how much water we use to wash dishes, how much we use to cook, and even how
much we use brushing our teeth. We have to stay alert as to how much
electricity we’re using from the batteries, and so on. We have a wind powered
generator which can help reduce the load on our batteries when we’re sailing or
at anchor, and we can also use the engine to charge them. Still, electricity,
water, fuel, etc. are commodities – even at the dock.
Doing Laundry is Different
Or, it might be like it was in your college dorm or first
apartment. Gone are the days of separating clothes by dark colors and light
colors; of heavy loads or delicate loads. Most marinas have shared laundry
facilities and the facilities in our marina are provided as a part of the fees
we pay. We get in and get out as a courtesy to other sailors waiting to use the
machines. And, your clothes have to be dried until they are dry. Damp clothes brought back to the
boat will remain damp. In the worst case, they can become a moldy, smelly,
mess.
You’re going to Lose Things
It’s a boat, and a small one at that, right? Where can you
possibly lose anything? Trust me, it will happen with regularity, and to all
manner of items: earrings, glasses, medicines, and so on. On one short, but rough
ocean passage, I could not find a pair of glasses I knew I had put in a locker
in the saloon before leaving. When I did find them, after nearly a half hour of
scouring the cabin, they were on the other side of the boat and ten feet away
from where they had started. You’re going to lose things to Neptune as well.
Earlier this year, my cell phone went into the drink when I was removing a
towel (hung up to dry!) from one of the railings.
You Become Hyper-Aware of Sounds
People new to boats, especially those spending the night
aboard a small boat for the first time, often find the amount of noise surprising,
if not unsettling. The ocean is alive and as water is denser than air, it
carries sound waves much more efficiently. Almost everyone notices the constant
but low ‘rice-crispies-crackling’ sound made by shrimp, crabs, and other small
shellfish. The wind in the rigging often makes whistling sounds, and in stormy
weather, that whistle can become a roar. Then, there are noises the boat makes
– the tinkling of glasses jostling together when the boat rocks in the wind;
things in lockers rattling; the groaning of docklines rubbing in the chocks
when the wind shifts the boat; even the rush of water passing the hull in a
ripping tidal current. A loose soup can rolling in the bilge can make you
crazy. Then, there are the mechanical sounds; a bilge pump cycling on and off;
the fresh water pump in the galley cycling to maintain pressure in the plumbing
lines; the clicking of the propane fuel system solenoid engaging or disengaging.
Every time the air conditioning system starts, I listen for the overboard
discharge of cooling water from the pump, and make sure the condensation sump
pump runs once in a while. Each sound means something and you become keenly
aware of what it is and why it’s happening.
The VHF Radio can Provide Weather and Tide Information 24/7 |
Weather and Tide are at the Core of Every Decision
Regardless of what we’re planning for a given day, be it
leaving the dock for a day-long sail or a weekend trip, maintaining the
exterior wood on the boat, or simply moving gear or groceries onto the boat, the
weather and tides are given consideration. In the marina, we walk most
everywhere we go and fortunately, our docks are not the hundreds of yards long
docks we’ve encountered in many places. Still, carrying freshly washed and
dried laundry from the laundry room in a downpour is best avoided. At low tide
the dock ramps can take a steep angle of 15° or so, and in spring tide cycles,
during the full and new moons, the angle can be as much as 25°. That’s not the
time to be hoofing gear or groceries about. Summertime thunderstorms, with
their tropical storm force winds and lightning, are always a concern. You want
to avoid storms, trust me on that. We never leave the dock in bad weather. But,
if we’re underway and are set upon by a squall, we always try to be prepared.
Those are a few of our observations. Both Lisa and I are reasonably experienced sailors. Lisa has sailed
as crew on tall ships during deep ocean passages, most recently on the 130’
Brigantine CORWITH CRAMER out of
Bermuda. My experience has been gleaned in inshore coastal and near coastal
ocean waters; I singled handed my first tiny sailboat, (she was 19’), all
around the coasts of Georgia and Florida, and together with Lisa, we sailed her
throughout the Florida Keys. We’ve both sailed as crew on a variety of
different small sailing yachts. Until June of 2015, neither of us had lived
aboard together full time. However, we have spent days and weeks aboard many
boats, independent of one another and as a couple.
Why are we here? Why are we doing this? To be honest, I’m
not sure how to answer either of those questions. What I can tell you is that
when we see Jo Beth, we feel the same sense of pride that many of my childhood
friends feel when they gaze of their perfectly landscaped lawns, or their dream
car, or take that long awaited trip to a mystical destination. And, we want
adventure in our lives. That’s why I began skydiving when I was 16. It’s why
I’ve hiked long distances alone, and single handed my small and fragile sailboat
through the coastal waters of these Southern United States. I think I’ve
mentioned before that my mother once said to me, ‘you always want to be where
you’re not.’ Lisa and I can move our home and almost all of our stuff anywhere
in the world, on any ocean in the world. It is a simpler way of living, of
learning more about who we are and where we want to go in life. Not everyone
could do this, or would want to. We understand that. If nothing else, we find
it to be incredibly appealing.
We and Jo Beth will continue to be a work in progress. Evolving
and adapting to one another will never end. But even after a year, you’d
suppose we should be ‘used’ to this, at least a little, for lack of a better
phrase. Or so you would think. For a month now, I’ve been looking for a box of
bronze wood screws.