Showing posts with label #lifeatsea. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #lifeatsea. Show all posts

Friday, 14 December 2018

A season On Draken

So in my continuous search for sustainable work in the field of life I love, I took a contract working on the Draken Harald Harfagre.  Don't get me wrong, I have an amazing, well paying career as a Plant Superintendent which affords me a very comfortable life.  But a realization that we are conditioned at an early age to work for the machine and always look to the future to follow our dreams...  Where do you think Bull Shit expressions like, "waiting for your ship to come in" or "good things come to those who wait." come from?!  

  That second one is the worst expression and a prime example of the conditioning we are taught. 

Why do we set a goal and then take the long way around?  So many have jobs or careers to cover their bills but hate their job?  Just so that one day we can maybe realize a dream one day?  Wait till we're retired to start?  Why not make daily decisions with your dream as your goal? 

A few years I made this mind change.  When I was out shopping, see a great big TV..  Man that would be nice, but can I fit that in my sailboat?  No?  Move on.. Keep doing that and that long twisted turning path to your dream starts straightening out.  Now I live at least 6 months a year in the sun, surrounded by palm trees.  Its a good life.  Last piece of the puzzle was to utilize my skills as an engineer to take contracts for the summers so I can adventure all winter.  

In came Draken..  She is a tough ship to work on.  I was hired on as the Chief Engineer in 2016 and enjoyed a great season in 2018 as well.  The 2018 season saw us sailing the East Coast of the USA from Mystic Seaport to Norfolk Virginia and back.. Check it out HERE





What an experience this ship is.. It is famous with thousands of people in each port yelling and clapping as we come into port..  What a surreal feeling.. Never been asked for autographs before until this ship.  I love the energy..  I love the people.. 



The crew is largely made up of volunteers with a core crew of between 7 and 10..  The other 20ish crew is volunteers from all different walks of life.  This makes life a little tough in a few ways...  The rig is a traditional square rig weighing over 3000lbs.  and the largest rig like it in the world.  The training as crew come and go for their 2 or 4 week legs means constant training.  











But also, the hardest part is the relationships we make..  We make connections and then before we know it, a new group of volunteers shuffle through all wild eyed and excited.  The energy is amazing..  But that is a sailor's life right?  Always saying, "see you later."











This ship is built like no other..  As the chief Engineer, I am in charge of all the more, non-traditional parts of the ship..  Means at times 12-14 hour days..  But I love it and I will continue on with it.
 



















With Draken Harald Harfagre, we have some huge plans for the near future

Monday, 27 February 2017

Distance

Distance from home,  from friends,  family and work.  Sometimes the distance is good,  sometimes it's bad..

 I will never regret my choice to travel.

 I know some may consider this choice to be non sustainable but neither is working everyday,  day in, day out.  Working OT to puff up that paycheck.  Tonight,  the distance seperated me from hearing of the death of a man I considered a friend.  He died a month ago..   A tough prick that when we first met, wouldn't even talk to me.  I was too new at the plant to be trained by him...  But I wore him down. Shift after shift I worked at him like I do and we became friends.  We joked during long and exhausting graveyards and bitched about plant issues together...  Looking back,  it was just to pass the time..  He worked everyday..  seriously every fucking day..  THAT is not sustainable..  His heart gave out.  His wife and kids will miss him.

Tell you what is sustainable...  Being free. Free to drop hook in paradise after paradise. Free to slip over the gunwale to spear my dinner. Free to meet new people and love them..  Free to say goodbye to them too.  Free to camp under the stars with amazing friends.  Free to open my heart up in the middle of the night knowing it is for not. To rub a friend's back and feel myself fall and then pull myself back.   To worry about my people and spend all my energy on them.  Free to end that too.  Free to wander down a foreign street during carnival with my headphones on in obscurity.  To not give up. To wait, to love, to let my walls down. 

My point is, beyond the obvious, so many can not see the full picture.  Most people see in 2 dimension.  They see what society has made them..  Drones set to work,  pay bills,  live in their little box. 

  The world is not 2 dimensional,  nor is it 3 dimensional. It is so much more than that.

This life gives freely if you are just not afraid to reach for it..   This last year I almost died in South America by a kid with a machete over a backpack. Made me realize my life needed to change..   So I made the change.







I have fed wild monkeys bananas and coaxed their babies to trust humans.   












 I sailed an amazing viking ship with an amazing crew. Slept beside them, sweat with them, sang and danced with them..  Made lifelong friends..  I was terrified when I quit my job to set sail..   Like the saying goes, I threw off the lines.  Stepped off into the world with no solid plan, just an unmanifested dream and a 27ft sailboat.




I will never regret my choice to travel.




Whether it is the rush of surfing down waves under full sail or waking up to the gentle lap of the water on the hull. Or seeing the look of happiness on a friend's face before we get hurled through the air on a Mexican carnival ride.  Or watching my mates look for lobsters under rocks and then buying them for dinner..  None of this would have happened.. My life wouldn't have been made richer by all these experiences if I had stayed cradled in that rut.  I'd have never met so many of my people..  I live a blessed life.  I am richer for it..



I will never regret my choice to travel

Sunday, 22 January 2017

Slowly the VLOG is set to catch up!

Sunday, 22 January 2017

Now that I am tied comfortably in a marina in the Cortez,  I am hoping to be able to catch up on some blogging and put more out there for the VLOG.

The original intent with the VLOG was to keep the friends and family engaged with the voyage.  A video stimulates so much more than words and pictures.   Here is a list of the videos in the VLOG so far.  If you have time, enjoy them! ☺😎

https://youtu.be/VCkZ9NrPXs8

https://youtu.be/4Y9u7kgl0l8

https://youtu.be/PsoCYS43adg

https://youtu.be/6DMlPe-7gSg

https://youtu.be/6lHbLyDj3bQ

Hope you enjoy!

Thursday, 8 December 2016

Choices

Flat calm. An ever so subtle transfer of energy from the ocean to the hull brings me back from my thoughts as I lay on my foredeck.  The lights of the small village I float nearby all go dark as if by que as the generators shut down for the night.  The stars already bright suddenly glow brighter as slowly my eyes adjust and I slip back into my thoughts.   Slight blues and red flash as some stars reveal they are not all white.  Maybe they didn't just reveal this, maybe I just started to pay attention.  Or maybe the absence of all man made distraction helped me to see.  Or maybe the barely perseptable movement of the Golden Hind on which I float, tethered  to Terra by a mere hook and rode shifted my thoughts to notice. 

Dawn will again come, all this will be masked by a deep blue, pinks, reds and finally day will break..  Again so many stars disappear from sight.  That's ok because the warmth of first light will touch my skin and distraction from these thoughts are replaced with another beautiful gift.  Life, a life spent living it my way.  For now, I will sacrifice a world I was conditioned to need to live a life with time.  A currency so easily spent by far too many, far to easily.  A currency which seems to be endless until it is too late.  A currency we all have but valued differently by everyone.

I am lucky, not because I am laying on the foredeck on a warm December night floating 35 feet above the ground on crystal clear water.  That was a series of hard choices made and dedication.   No, I am lucky because of the country embossed on my passport.  The choice by those who rule afforded me the chance to choose.   Not all have this. 

 I watched two young boys today, maybe 8 and 10 run out of their fibreboard shack with kitchen pots obviously sent by their mother to fetch water halfway across town.  This sight touched me a bit because I know this is their life. Their little chore and their little dedication to their family.  They will have very little chance for escape for better things.  Maybe one of those little boys will be a shimmering blue or red light unlike the miriad of simple white spots.  Different from the mould.  I hope they see it.

And yet here I am, anchored 600 feet from their doorstep by choice.  I fetched water from the same sistern yesterday. 

If the chance is given or a choice is an option, choose to take back the time.  Don't spend it on money. Money can not buy you time.  Take the conditioned barriers that are built around you since before birth and push them aside.  Take back your time and pursue your life.  This is not a rehearsal and no divine master is going to beam you up when your currency is all spent.  Take it and choose how to spend it.  Chase a dream, be brave and gybe for the first time.  Resetting your sails takes effort and energy to catch the wind in a new direction. The wind is there and the choice is yours which direction you choose, it is not dictated. 

All that is needed is a moment without distraction to see the difference between so many choices that all look the same.  It is easy to miss the subtleties that make one choice shine a little differently.  Not all the same are the paths chosen.


  Right now is the time. Do not wait for tomorrow when today shines so brightly.

 


The Unknown


Today I learned why you should always carry a knife when cruising in Mexico.

I am a very cautious man. When it comes to sailing and sailing offshore I typically double think things and ensure I as well as my boat is prepared for the next journey.  I like to research unfamiliar topics and glean advise from other possibly more experienced individuals to ensure I am as prepared as possible..  I rarely shrink back from a challenge and typically try to over achieve. .  This has been both a help and a hindrance in my life.

Before I set off from the safety of my familiar waters, I heard much talk of piracy and banditos on the Baja as well as elsewhere in Mexico. 

Today I was lucky to have been carrying my dive knife in my backpack.  I wasn't packing it out of fear of being mugged.. No, I only had it on my person because I had just came from a day of free diving and spearing fish for tonight's dinner in the crystal blue waters off an offshore reef..  

After catching enough food for 3 nights supply for Duke and I, I kicked off my flippers, pulled anchor and powered my dinghy back to the sheltered Cove where my sailboat floated lazily on her hook.  The Sun was hot today, and the warm air crystallized the salt on my skin as the chill from evaporation was replaced by the sun's heat aided by the dry air and the spead across the calm water.  I have taken to searching for reefs further from shore, pinnacles where the larger fish roam. This time just around the corner to my starboard is Santa Maria and the small shark fishermen camp where Hammerhead,  Maco are the main prey.  Those big boys are further out.   To my port is a small fishing village of Belcher Bay where they toss the byproducts into the water which according to the locals brings in Tiburon in the 5 ft range for a free dinner.  . Armed with my knife strapped to my leg, a homemade hawaiian sling and a lung full of air, I haven't had to buy meet in weeks.

As I journeyed down the coast, I waited for the water to finally warm and clear enough to hunt.  This would also mean entering another country where things are done differently from my home in Canada.  On the southern trek I passed through areas of extreme oppulance and shady neighborhoods where walking to get supplies, poor women offer favors literally for alcohol.  In these places, I didn't feel in danger or nervous but I felt sick because of how society needs the extremes to push people to the top.  The first rule of physics applies here as well.  I was warned fervently about the corruptness of the people just a few lines of latitude south.  Undaunted, I set the sails and caught a favorable breeze south in the early evening for the overnight passage to clear in.

What I have been met with since entering Mexico has been extremely friendly and helpful people.  There is the typical larceny on the beach by young men wanting money to "watch my dinghy" much like Brazil where this is done in almost every parking lot or street.  I was used to it and somewhat expected it.  But that has only occurred in Bahia Tortugas where the Baja Ha Ha and FUBAR have inadvertently taught the locals that they can expect money from sailors.  This has been isolated to this one location so far but hey man, these locals ended up being very helpful and giving, inviting us to party with them into the late of night.  And that young man did "watch the dinghies" as the rising tide almost washed away a few if it wasn't for him keeping watch and running  out there to drag them higher up the beach.  Well worth the 25 pesos.

This brings me to my bay.  I have spent over a week exploring the huge bay solo as one group of boats headed south and I waited for the rest of the group to catch up. Affording me time to really get to know the people.  I roam the sand roads, waved at by the chubby men and weathered women.  Invited to sit in the shade and engage in a match of 'decipher this sentence'.  I enjoy the interaction.  My Spanish is increasing exponentially as they laugh at my pronunciation. 

Lupas, Moy amigo.  He has found me gasolina when I was almost out, bargained with the water man to get me drinking water straight from the Desaladora Planta cistern.   Gave me two massive lobster simply because I help him with his English.   These are the people of the Baja.  These are people with very little.   Little boys with slicked over parted black hair running down the beach to help me get my dinghy in the Agua.   Beeping their horns and waving as they pull their pangas down the beach road.  They know of me as I live just out of reach in my floating home.  

Any good sailor is self sufficient. Able to find or fix their way out of any situation.  

Arriving back at the Golden Hind IV, I lifted the bucket of fish over the gunwale and spun the inflatable around for shore.  Duke has been on the water for a few hours and needs to take a break.  After landing on the remote beach and the wind picking up, I laced my arms and slid the backpack on for a quick hike.  All is great except for the wind steadily building..  There is a change in the weather coming. A front is clearly visable as the stacked clouds line across the sky.  Shirtless and in shorts, I pull the dinghy across the crushed shell beach and back into the water as duke jumps onto the bow as he has been trained to do.  Firing up the engine, and gunning it to push upwind to the boat,  I quickly sucked up a scrap of fishing net into the prop. Unable to free it by hand and being blown further down the bay, I remembered the dive knife.  I was lucky as this was the first time I packed a knife. Now my multi tool is always on my belt.  Saved me a long long paddle back home.

I know that as this adventure continues, I will pass through areas not near as trusting and safe.  But for now, I can tell you that the people of the Baja in these small, dry fishing villages are gems.  They are rough around the edges but their souls are good and I have been lucky enough to be embraced by them.

Monday, 14 November 2016

Cruising Life

So the expedition to head for Mexico with the expectation to be in San Diego by Oct 20th and across the Mexican border by Nov 30th will not be realized.  Expectations need to be very loosely made.  The Sept/Oct cruising season down the west coast has been very unsettled to say the least.  With major storms wreaking havoc, long periods of no wind or southerly's has slowed the Southern progress.  Maybe that's a good thing. It has forced me to slow down and just take things as they come.  It is good in another way as well.  The slower push south has given me extra days layed up in snug little harbours otherwise blasted by on a faster route.  

Sausalito was a great stop.  San Francisco skyline at night is a treat, floating on the lumpy Anchorage. What was originally going to be a 3 day stop over to reprovision turned into over 2 weeks with impending storms which brang 40 knots at times in Sausalito but also spawned a tornado on the Oregon coast.   This came at the same time as the East coast was blasted by Hurricane Matthew.  

Finally able to head south, I made the 24 hour jump to Monterey Bay, making landfall by 7:30 am.  A day and a half there was more than enough to explore cannery row and take in the aquarium.   Beautiful little city but somehow left me wanting more.  

I was eager to leave monterey to catch the 15 hour weather window which would get me almost to my next destination of Morro  Bay.  This small town is a must stop for cruisers.  Although the bar can be dangerous on an ebb tide and high weather,  it is easily transitted on slack or flood in low and medium conditions.  The flat calm protected Anchorage is home to many different breeds of sea birds, sea lions and pacific sea otters.   These otters are so accustomed to humans that they don't make a move as you paddle right up to them to discover that most of the proud mama's have babies laying on their stomachs.  The crystal blue water and the massive Morro rock make an idealic stop over.  The main street caters to tourists with many coffee shops pubs and restaurants .  The temperature in late October is easy t shirt weather.  Paddle boards and dinghies are an excellent was to explore the dunes and watch rays fly along the bottom, disturbed by the floating craft above....

Duke and I will be stuck here for maybe a week as a calm period passes through leading to strong southerlies.  I'm ok with that.  I plan on snorkeling the delta, chase some rays and enjoy my morning coffee as sleeping sea otters with their heads buried in their paws drift lazily by the Golden Hind.  

Cabrillo bay, Newport Beach and San Diego will just have to wait.  I'm fully in the cruising mode along with my friends made along the way and enjoying what I never had before...  Time.

Saturday, 13 August 2016

A Liquid Life is Finally Heading offshore!

 

So finally after 6 years of rebuilding the Golden Hind IV,

 we are leaving the safety of port and sheltered waters of  

      Eastern Vancouver Island!

 
 




It has been a long road since I bought "Goldie" as one of my good friends has dubbed her.  We have been through a lot of changes as she experienced all my love and attention bringing her back to cruising shape.  She has been given a new lease on life and will soon be heading out to explore the wide open blue like the proud little ship she is.




The plan:
  • Quit the job.  Check!!
  • Finish up all the last minute projects.  In Progress!!
  • Provision the ship for an offshore run to San Fransisco, San Diego and Cabo San Lucas.
  • Spend the winter months exploring the Baja and Mainland Mexico.!
  • Decide in the spring if we head for the South Pacific or South into Central and South America,









So its time to pack the foul weather gear, life equipment and sunscreen.  The Golden Hind IV is about to put some serious miles under the keel!










If you are interested in following her journey, please check out the link to YouTube  here !

Also on FB at A liquid life - aboard - Albin Vega Golden Hind IV

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Thanks for checking out this page and fairwinds!