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05-03-2013, 00:49
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#1
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2013
Location: Vancouver
Posts: 2
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Escaping Insanity
Hi,
My name is Kyle, I'm 26 years old from Vancouver BC Canada. I left my job of 7 years when I realized I wasn’t happy and needed a change. Over the past year I took it easy, did a lot of thinking, reading and self reflection. I sold my car, my bike, and moved in with my best friend. I don't want a life where years melt together doing the same old thing, and slaving away to pay off a house and crap that doesn't matter. Instead, I want to see the world and experience and learn everything I can. I'm mechanically inclined, I'm nice, courteous, and respectful. I'm leaving everything behind to break away from my cyclical sheltered life that I’ll never be content with here. Hopefully someone will take me in and show me the ropes because I don't have a boat to sail! But plan to learn one way or another and eventually get my own.
I've been enlightened, now I need that first hand perspective of what life should really be about. Cheers to everyone following their dreams.
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05-03-2013, 01:06
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#2
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Senior Cruiser
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: gettin naughty on the beach in cornwall
Boat: 63 custom alloy sloop,macwester26,prout snowgoose 37 elite catamaran!
Posts: 10,594
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Re: Escaping Insanity
sounds like you need to join the navy and see the world
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05-03-2013, 01:38
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#3
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: Moss, Norway
Boat: 35' Jeanneau Espace 1000 DL
Posts: 354
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Re: Escaping Insanity
Welcome to the forum mate!
You might wanna try Dutch Harbour.. You could get lucky and score both offshore experience and funds for a boat. Say hi to all the crazy norwegians for me.
.manitu
__________________
Is it possible that my sole purpose in life is to act as a warning to others?
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05-03-2013, 01:48
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#4
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CF Adviser
Join Date: Oct 2007
Boat: Van Helleman Schooner 65ft StarGazer
Posts: 10,280
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Re: Escaping Insanity
The problem with enlightenment is that it doesn’t guarantee entitlement.
Sometimes you need to work for it and have a plan.
Best of luck!
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05-03-2013, 03:27
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#5
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Senior Cruiser
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Thunder Bay, Ontario - 48-29N x 89-20W
Boat: (Cruiser Living On Dirt)
Posts: 49,524
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Re: Escaping Insanity
Greetings and welcome aboard the CF, Kyle.
__________________
Gord May
"If you didn't have the time or money to do it right in the first place, when will you get the time/$ to fix it?"
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05-03-2013, 09:12
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#7
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2013
Location: Vancouver
Posts: 2
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Re: Escaping Insanity
I might be a tad naive, but I do understand that nothing comes easy. I'll be more than happy to share my setbacks and successes along the way. Happy to have found this community.
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05-03-2013, 10:09
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#8
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: In transit ( Texas to wherever the wind blows us)
Boat: Pacific Seacraft a Crealock 34
Posts: 4,115
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Re: Escaping Insanity
Yes you can. I "ran away" from home at 19, drove to the ocean, happily found that I loved boats too. So desperate to be near/on the ocean, I worked for free. Then as I learned the bow from the stern, I began to hop on any boat that would take me. Pretty soon people started to pay me to crew, dont tell, but I'd of done it for free.
Learn, read, take classes if you can ( though I didn't till much later) help out aboard a boat. Crew the races, but know their screaming, cussing, and grabbing of their own body parts to relay a point to another, is not the norm , sailors in general are a very laid back gang.
After a few scary situations, I learned that family boats were the best boats to crew on. They really appreciate your help, the boats are usually better maintained, and the safety gear up to date. This is not true for all boats so use your eyes and ears and especially your common sense when picking a boat to crew on.
The professional deliveries, though not as laid back as the family cruiser, can be a great source of money. It is pretty wild to get a check for a couple thousand dollars to sail a beautiful boat around the Atlantic, but someone has gotta do it .
I'm 40ish now and look back at that great leap of faith and thank God I did it!
I hope you are able to realize your dreams,
Erika
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05-03-2013, 10:17
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#9
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2012
Location: La Marque, TX
Boat: Mac 26X
Posts: 713
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Re: Escaping Insanity
The "Join the Navy" Idea isn't a bad one! It might not be as "happy go lucky" as you'd like but it's more certain! But whatever you do, just go.
There are tons of menial labor jobs (yah gots to eat) in any large boat city, whether in a yard or a restaurant, and you'll soon make friends with boats if you hang around the right bars or marinas. I'm sure you will be on the water before you know it.
__________________
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Gordo
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05-03-2013, 12:47
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#10
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Arctic Ocean
Boat: Under construction 35' ketch (and +3 smaller)
Posts: 2,762
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Re: Escaping Insanity
Quote:
Originally Posted by fique tranquilo
Hi,
My name is Kyle, I'm 26 years old from Vancouver BC Canada. I left my job of 7 years when I realized I wasn’t happy and needed a change.
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That's the way to go! I did the same thing once changed to eskimo to musher to fisherman to reindeerherder to wilderness guide to pilot to diver among some other things
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05-03-2013, 13:23
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#11
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Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2009
Boat: 1979 Hughes 35
Posts: 219
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Re: Escaping Insanity
5 years ago I was living in Whistler shred'in the mountain and living the dream.....or so i thought. I started to realized that although this was a sick life, it would get old without some sort of change.
I found a 35' boat in Oak Bay, Victoria for sale and ended up scoring it for $12k. I had never sailed a boat before, but I just jumped on it and sailed her into Squamish. There wasn't any room at the docks so i just tied her up to the pilings and rowed to shore everyday for work....it wasn't ideal, but it worked and i loved it.
Long story short, by Sept '13 I'll be quitting my job and heading to the tropics.....its going to be a wild ride no doubt.
Forget the long road, just buy a boat asap and get going.....its really not that hard.
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05-03-2013, 13:29
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#12
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2012
Location: La Marque, TX
Boat: Mac 26X
Posts: 713
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Freerider
5 years ago I was living in Whistler shred'in the mountain and living the dream.....or so i thought. I started to realized that although this was a sick life, it would get old without some sort of change.
I found a 35' boat in Oak Bay, Victoria for sale and ended up scoring it for $12k. I had never sailed a boat before, but I just jumped on it and sailed her into Squamish. There wasn't any room at the docks so i just tied her up to the pilings and rowed to shore everyday for work....it wasn't ideal, but it worked and i loved it.
Long story short, by Sept '13 I'll be quitting my job and heading to the tropics.....its going to be a wild ride no doubt.
Forget the long road, just buy a boat asap and get going.....its really not that hard.
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hehe...are you related to Black Oak?
I think the OP has a pretty sane plan :-)
__________________
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Gordo
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05-03-2013, 13:32
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#13
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Registered User
Join Date: May 2012
Location: Baltimore, MD
Boat: Cal 2-27
Posts: 843
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Re: Escaping Insanity
Quote:
Originally Posted by Freerider
5 years ago I was living in Whistler shred'in the mountain and living the dream.....or so i thought. I started to realized that although this was a sick life, it would get old without some sort of change.
I found a 35' boat in Oak Bay, Victoria for sale and ended up scoring it for $12k. I had never sailed a boat before, but I just jumped on it and sailed her into Squamish. There wasn't any room at the docks so i just tied her up to the pilings and rowed to shore everyday for work....it wasn't ideal, but it worked and i loved it.
Long story short, by Sept '13 I'll be quitting my job and heading to the tropics.....its going to be a wild ride no doubt.
Forget the long road, just buy a boat asap and get going.....its really not that hard.
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you should start a thread with your story, sounds like a good one!
__________________
76% of statistics are made up.
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05-03-2013, 14:46
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#14
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Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2009
Boat: 1979 Hughes 35
Posts: 219
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Re: Escaping Insanity
Quote:
Originally Posted by ElGatoGordo
hehe...are you related to Black Oak?
I think the OP has a pretty sane plan :-)
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Black Oak?....I don't follow...maybe??
As for a "sane idea".....joining the Navy certainly isn't one. Although i admit, sanity is all perception.....the way we throw the term around anyways.
Fique Tranquilo, welcome to the forum, you live in a great sailing area, deep water, big tides and lots of current; you'll be a pro in no time!
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05-03-2013, 15:07
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#15
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Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Catskill Mountains when not cruising
Boat: 31' homebuilt Michalak-designed Cormorant "Sea Fever"
Posts: 2,114
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Re: Escaping Insanity
BlackOak's story is here:
http://www.cruisersforum.com/forums/...uda-91566.html
Good for any beginner to read. Non-beginners, too.
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