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14-09-2008, 03:01
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#1
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 13
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Are there any books about modern people who built/bought very cheap boats...
...and cruise on an equally low budget by radically simplifying their lifestyles to the point of near ascetism?
I just finished reading "Into the Wild" by Jon Krakauer (story of a well-to-do young man who abandoned his wealth & posessions to travel the wilderness of N. America and was later found dead in Alaska), and while I would never consider doing such a thing myself I found it to be a very compelling story with some real perspective-altering themes about what we value and how we lead our lives.
This led me to think that there have surely been people who have tried to do such things on a boat, and I'd like to read their stories if they're out there in print somewhere. Any ideas?
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14-09-2008, 03:52
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#2
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Massachusetts
Boat: Morgan OI 30' Itinerant
Posts: 254
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I suppose Lin and Larry Pardey count. They've been doing what you describe for over 49 years. They have several books out including The Self Sufficient Sailor. I'm sure if you check w Amazon books you'l find others.
__________________
A man who is not afraid of the sea will soon be drowned, he said, for he will be going out on a day he shouldn't. But we do be afraid of the sea, and we only be drowned now and again.
J.M.Synge, in The Aran Islands
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14-09-2008, 12:11
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#3
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Currently San Francisco Ca.
Boat: Down East Yacht, 42' Danser Nu
Posts: 87
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Lin & Larry Pardy is probably the best modern day account of this life style. Especially in their early years with a very limited budget. Some very interesting reading there.
__________________
Nothing scares me. I've raised childern!
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15-09-2008, 03:21
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#4
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Moderator Emeritus

Join Date: May 2007
Location: Ohio
Boat: Now boatless :-(
Posts: 11,580
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Gibbous
(How many people) cruise on an equally low budget by radically simplifying their lifestyles to the point of near ascetism?
I just finished reading "Into the Wild" by Jon Krakauer (story of a well-to-do young man who abandoned his wealth & posessions to travel the wilderness of N. America and was later found dead in Alaska),
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Hard to tell -
Maybe when people pull a Krakauer on the ocean they aren't found?
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15-09-2008, 04:27
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#6
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Registered User
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Guatemala and Caribbean
Boat: Seafarer 38 cutter rigged
Posts: 286
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Some of those sound like good reading. Maybe I'll improve my grammar and spelling and write one myself in seven years. lol. All I know about sailing on the cheap is that it is possible. It has to be possible. The wife and I WILL figure it out as we go along.
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15-09-2008, 07:20
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#7
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Moderator Emeritus

Join Date: May 2007
Location: Ohio
Boat: Now boatless :-(
Posts: 11,580
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Sorry about my sarcastic little poke. People who are prepared and have prepared their boat for austere cruising are to be admired.
When I read "Into the Wild" I spent most of my time shaking my head. It's a good example of how not to go about it.
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17-09-2008, 00:20
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#8
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2008
Boat: none
Posts: 38
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Gibbous
This led me to think that there have surely been people who have tried to do such things on a boat, ...
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Which, traveling alone or perishing on a wind-swept piece of god-forsaken ground with one bullet in your gun hoping to pass out before the wolves rend your limbs?
__________________
"Star - bo-l-e-e-n-s, a-h-o-y! Eight bells there below! Tumble up!" - Heman Melville, "Moby Dick"
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17-09-2008, 04:59
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#9
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Senior Cruiser

Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: 29° 49.16’ N 82° 25.82’ W
Boat: Pearson 422
Posts: 16,254
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Before the Pardey's there was Eric and Susan Hiscock who started out on very small boats with a very small budget and spent their lives crusing. They wrote a whole series of books about their lives afloat.
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18-09-2008, 17:47
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#10
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 13
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ex-Calif
Sorry about my sarcastic little poke. People who are prepared and have prepared their boat for austere cruising are to be admired.
When I read "Into the Wild" I spent most of my time shaking my head. It's a good example of how not to go about it.
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In all fairness Krakauer was just the author, I guess it should be called pulling a McCandless. I too found my head shaking at how the guy prepared for what he was doing, but there were also some much worse examples in the book. If not for a bit of bad luck he might have made it out alive.
Quote:
Originally Posted by starbolin
Which, traveling alone or perishing on a wind-swept piece of god-forsaken ground with one bullet in your gun hoping to pass out before the wolves rend your limbs?
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The dying on a patch of god-forsaken ground part isn't a requirement, nor is being alone I suppose. I'm more interested in how people arrive at the decision to make do with less in order to live a more free life, how they went about it, and the how's & why's about their results.
Thanks for the recommendations so far, I'll look into what's been suggested.
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18-09-2008, 18:09
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#11
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Moderator Emeritus

Join Date: May 2007
Location: Ohio
Boat: Now boatless :-(
Posts: 11,580
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Gibbous
The dying on a patch of god-forsaken ground part isn't a requirement, nor is being alone I suppose. I'm more interested in how people arrive at the decision to make do with less in order to live a more free life, how they went about it, and the how's & why's about their results.
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I joke with my wife all the time that if we could live for 5 years like we did in college, we wouldn't have to work again for 50 years.
But here on reality island that is simply not possible... For us anyway...
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18-09-2008, 18:49
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#12
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Southwestern Yacht Club, San Diego, CA
Boat: Searunner 40 trimaran, WILDERNESS
Posts: 3,153
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"The Case for the Criuising Trimaran", by Jim Brown. He pioneered a concept when it was decidedly counter to the popular trends, then took it one step further to third world cultures. He paid it back and forward. It's a great read with funny cartoons, and every bit as applicable today as when it was written in the 70's.
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11-11-2008, 15:23
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#13
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Palm Beach County Florida
Boat: Hinckley Pilot 35
Posts: 20
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Have you checked out Fatty Goodlander's work?
I appologize if he was already mentioned, I have not read the entire thread.
Paul
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Sailing Yacht Pyxis 1968 Hinckley Pilot
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11-11-2008, 16:53
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#14
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: North Wisconsin
Boat: Liberty 28 Custom Cutter - "Native Dancer" For Sale
Posts: 209
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IMHO, Fatty Goodlander doesn't need a boat; he's quite capable of floating high and dry on his ego alone!!! But in a nice way...  ... not!
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11-11-2008, 17:10
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#15
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Registered User
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Sandspit, New Zealand
Boat: Farr 46
Posts: 132
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Annie Hill's book, "Cruising on a low income" (or similar name, can't remember for sure)
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