Current:Home > InvestMy wife and I quit our jobs to sail the Caribbean -Wealth Navigators Hub
My wife and I quit our jobs to sail the Caribbean
View
Date:2025-04-14 17:49:57
There's another universe not far from land.
It is devoid of buildings, trees, cars, cellphones and the internet. Seemingly limitless water extends uninterrupted in all directions.
You don't have to travel a great distance to discover this other cosmos. At 10 miles offshore, you're already there. At 100 miles, on a course away from shipping lanes (about a full day's sail in a small boat), the effect is complete: Civilization recedes, along with any sign of humanity.
It's the closest most of us will ever come to the isolation of outer space. And it is why I'm really into sailing.
I grew up around boats. My father liked to build them. The pride of his flotilla was not a sailboat but a small "power cruiser," Talisman, that he designed and built before I was born. My older sister and I were bundled into a car nearly every summer weekend until my late teens to make the trip from northeast Indiana to the south shore of Lake Erie in Ohio, where Talisman waited patiently through the week, tugging gently at the dock lines.
I was always more intrigued, though, by wind-driven vessels than any relying primarily on mechanical propulsion. As a kid, I devoured the adventures of Robin Lee Graham, the teenage solo circumnavigator, in the pages of National Geographic and, later, in Graham's book, Dove. However, it wasn't until about 20 years ago, well into my adulthood, that I took up sailing in a serious way.
I quickly learned (and am still mastering) the art and physics of "trimming" the sails, which often involves tiny adjustments yielding minute gains in speed that nonetheless can save hours or even days over longer passages.
I've made voyages in fair weather and foul, on my own boats and those of friends, and ranging from nearshore day sails to blue-water passages.
Eventually, I became a U.S. Coast Guard-licensed captain.
Still, I've made plenty of mistakes. While living in Asia, a sailing buddy and I set off across the South China Sea destined for Thailand, only to be slammed by a late-season typhoon that forced us to make landfall in Vietnam, shaken, without a mast and glad to be alive.
Along the way, however, I also learned the essentials — navigation and how to maintain a cruising boat's complex systems, such as rigging, electrics, plumbing and, yes, engine.
Years later, my wife and I lived aboard our 37-foot cutter, Symbiosis, while we saved enough to take a two-year sabbatical from our jobs to journey down the U.S. Atlantic coast and through the Bahamas and the Caribbean. We visited many places that never see cruise ships or airplanes and that are nearly impossible to reach any way other than at the helm of a small boat.
Far from shore, it is the sole responsibility of the skipper and crew to keep the water out, the people in, the boat on course and everything working. The corollary of self-reliance makes the isolation that much more splendid.
As much as that appeals to me, so does the company of fellow cruising sailors. We remain close to many we met in our travels, particularly in the Caribbean, and to many who helped us along the way and whom we, in turn, helped too. Regardless of our backgrounds, we understand the same triumphs and perils and share many common experiences — the perfect sail, the rough passage, the close call with a rocky shore, the pod of frolicking dolphins.
But boats are expensive and time-consuming. After returning from the Caribbean a few years ago, we decided to sell Symbiosis, resolving instead to sail only "other people's boats."
It didn't last. A few months ago, we found a good deal on a smaller boat — easier to maintain but still capable of some offshore excursions.
I think we'll name her Talisman.
Scott Neuman is a reporter for NPR's digital news team. What are you really into? Fill out this form or leave us a voice note at 1-800-329-4273, and part of your submission may be featured online or on the radio.
veryGood! (3)
Related
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Houston pair accused of running funeral home without a license
- Iran’s top diplomat seeks to deescalate tensions on visit to Pakistan after tit-for-tat airstrikes
- Princess Kate returns home after abdominal surgery, 'is making good progress,' palace says
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- Houston pair accused of running funeral home without a license
- AI companies will need to start reporting their safety tests to the US government
- New Orleans jury convicts man in fatal shooting of former Saints player Will Smith
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- Oklahoma trooper violently thrown to the ground as vehicle on interstate hits one he’d pulled over
Ranking
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- 2 are in custody in Mississippi after baby girl is found abandoned behind dumpsters
- Inflation has slowed. Now the Federal Reserve faces expectations for rate cuts
- CIA Director William Burns to hold Hamas hostage talks Sunday with Mossad chief, Qatari prime minister
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Oklahoma City wants to steal New York's thunder with new tallest skyscraper in US
- A driver backs into a nail salon, killing a woman and injuring 3 other people
- 'American Fiction,' 'Poor Things' get box-office boost from Oscar nominations
Recommendation
Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
Who is playing in Super Bowl 58? What to know about Kansas City Chiefs vs San Francisco 49ers
Shohei Ohtani joining Dodgers 'made too much sense' says Stan Kasten | Nightengale's Notebook
Biden praises Black churches and says the world would be a different place without their example
Paige Bueckers vs. Hannah Hidalgo highlights women's basketball games to watch
Detroit Tigers sign top infield prospect Colt Keith to long-term deal
Kate Middleton Released From Hospital After Abdominal Surgery
Pedro Almodóvar has a book out this fall, a ‘fragmentary autobiography’ called ‘The Last Dream’