Posts Tagged With: Do what you love

Dinghy Cruising West Florida

Slowly sailing east from Pirates Cove, Alabama, with the intention of bumping into places interesting.

Pirates Cove~Alabama

At around thirty-five feet long, the Wharram Tangaroa is certainly not a dinghy, but she does share some dinghy like qualities. For example, with a draft of only two and half feet, if we run aground I can jump in the water and push us off. And, to be honest, there has been a couple times where the depth of water and choice of direction have been at odds.

All sails can be easily raised and lowered by one person, as can the anchor with the help of a winch to pull it from sucky mud. The ketch rig balances well, and helps tremendously when tacking through light wind.

‘Curious’ is not a boat that encourages speed or a rushed schedule. She has enough volume in the hulls to accommodate long distance cruising, but overall is small enough to gunk-hole along the coast like a sailing dinghy.

Small-ish ~ Simple

We are not coastal cruisers in the traditional sense. We are dinghy cruisers who happen to be able to sleep aboard in a full sized bed and cook in a wrap around galley. My schedule is defined by which beach we’d like to stop at, our navigation is done in shade, and our overall distance ambition is an ever changing concept.

Lots of Lonely Coastline

The western coast of Florida—beginning roughly around Perdido Bay and stretching east then south in broad, slow waters—is a place uniquely suited to shallow draft boats and slow days. It is not dramatic coastline. There are no majestic cliffs throwing themselves into the sea with crashing waves, no lighthouses with heroic backstories, no fat ocean swells coming from the Gulf of Mexico. Instead there is water that behaves itself, land that doesn’t ask for much, and an endless series of places where a shallow-draft catamaran can slip in, drop the hook, and immediately forget what day it is.

Which for me happens fairly often.

Heading out on a small adventure

This western end of the Florida panhandle and coastal Alabama is a civilized place to provision, repair, delay departure, and find reasons not to leave. The shoulder seasons of Fall and Spring are unbelievably comfortable weather wise. The weather forecasts however, are largely theoretical.

The Gulf Coast, at least in this stretch, operates on a system of how much, and from which direction the wind blows. The winds control the water depth more than tides, the tides arrive whenever they please, and squalls behave like drunks in a bar. They turn up, make a mess, then disappear. This makes it ideal for people like me, who prefer sailing plans that can be altered mid-sentence.

When we finally leave Pirates Cove, our Tangaroa slides along with the soft competence of a boat that has done this before and doesn’t feel the need to comment on it. The water shifts from forest greens to coastal blues with something resembling tea with too much milk in various places. The shoreline gets a little more remote. The buildings retreat. Trees and beaches take over.

Progress becomes optional.

The Gospel of the Dinghy

On a boat like this, the dinghy is not just an accessory. It is the primary means of resupply and exploring the really shallow places. The big boat is for sleeping, cooking, fixing things, and arguing with my cat about anchor scope. The dinghy is for jaunting about.

A Little Cat for the Big Cat

Florida’s west coast is riddled with shallow bays, creeks, passes, and unnamed bits of water that appear to exist solely to reward curiosity. The Tangaroa can nose into many of them, and the dinghy can go everywhere else. These little bays are shallow enough that stingrays ripple the surface when they scurry away and sea grass covered mud flats are home to Blue Crabs, Speckled Trout, and Manatees when deep enough. Skinny creeks that are narrow enough to make you question your choices but not enough to make you turn around. Even when a 6-8 foot alligator launches from the bank 20 feet from the dink.

This is where the Wharram design shines—not because it is fast (it can be), or stable (it is), but because it frees you from the tyranny of marinas. You anchor somewhere quiet, lower the dinghy, and the coastline opens up like a long conversation you don’t have to finish.

Some days the dinghy trip ashore is a purposeful affair—water jugs, groceries, a cold beer at a bar. Other days it is entirely recreational. You row simply because the water looks pleasantly rowable.

Anchoring as an Art Form

Anchoring along this coast is less about technique and more about manners. You choose places where your presence feels appropriate. Places that won’t mind you staying a while, away from the crowds and condo’s.

Delightfully Alone

There are broad bays where you can swing all day without bothering anyone. Narrow creeks where the trees lean in close enough to overhear your thoughts. Sand-bottom coves where the anchor sets with a quiet confidence that makes you trust it more than you probably should.

The Tangaroa, with her twin hulls and shallow draft, settles into these places without fuss. She does not roll. She does not complain. She allows you to forget that boats are supposed to move.

At anchor, time stretches. Breakfast becomes a relaxing process. Reading becomes an activity that takes up way too much time. Maintenance tasks expand to fill whatever space the day provides.

And then there is the dinghy again—waiting patiently, like a dog who knows you’ll eventually want to go somewhere.

Shore Life, Lightly Touched

The west coast towns are not destinations so much as interruptions. Small places with boat ramps, bait shops, post offices, and restaurants that serve food you didn’t know you missed until you smelled it from the dinghy.

Apalachicola

You come ashore salty, and slightly out of step with land-based time. People are kind. They’re curious, but not intrusive. They ask where you came from, then where you’re going, which is the correct question.

There is a particular pleasure in tying up the dinghy somewhere unofficial—no signs, no docks, just a bit of sand that looks as though it has been used before and will be used again. You walk into town knowing you’ll be leaving the same way you arrived: quietly.

Weather, Briefly Considered

Weather along this stretch is a background character. It exists, it has opinions, but it rarely insists on being the center of attention, unless it’s towering up and dark. Morning calms, afternoon breezes, the occasional rain squall that announces itself politely before passing through.

You learn to read the horizon rather than the forecast. You notice how the air feels. How the birds behave. How the boat feels as it dances with the wavelets at anchor.

Certainly Agreeable

Sailing days are chosen not because they are perfect but because they seem agreeable. The Tangaroa responds to this approach with steady, forgiving performance. She will sail in very little wind and tolerate quite a bit more than you’d planned for.

When conditions turn unfriendly, there is almost always somewhere nearby to hide. A bay, a hook behind an island whose name you never learn.

The Pleasure of Not Getting There

Progress southward is incremental. Measured in familiar anchorages and new ones that feel familiar immediately. You may travel ten or twenty miles in a day. Or none at all.

This is dinghy-style cruising: the big boat is transportation between playgrounds. The coast reveals itself in pieces small enough to appreciate. You learn the texture of different waters. The smell of different shorelines. The way the light changes in the late afternoon when the sun slides down into the gulf instead of cliffs.

Feels Kinda Magical

You stop caring where you are on the chart and start caring how the sun feels on deck.

Why This Coast Works

Florida’s western coast doesn’t call for heroics. It rewards attentiveness. It favors shallow draft, patience, and a willingness to spend an afternoon going nowhere in particular.

A Wharram Tangaroa fits this environment not because it was designed for Florida specifically, but because it was designed for people who value access over speed and simplicity over convenience. It’s a boat that forgives indecision and encourages lingering.

Cruising here feels less like travel and more like temporary residency. You are not passing through so much as borrowing space.

Evening

At the end of the day, the dinghy comes back aboard or is tied off astern, depending on mood and mosquitoes. The anchor holds. The light fades. The sounds shift from boats to birds to something you assume is a fish but could be anything.

Best Restaurant

You cook something simple. You eat it slowly. Sip a little rum for captains hour. Then sit and watch the water change color until it decides to stop.

Tomorrow you might sail. Or you might not. Either way, the coast will still be there, doing what it does best: offering just enough to make staying worthwhile.

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Writing from a Hammock on a Catamaran

There’s a certain kind of magic in writing from a hammock strung between the masts of a small sailing catamaran. The gentle movement of the water, the whisper of the wind in the rigging, the occasional splash of a curious fish — they all conspire to create an atmosphere that’s equal parts peace and possibility.

For many, the idea of crafting stories or articles from a tranquil anchorage, laptop balanced on their lap and seabirds circling overhead, sounds like a far-off dream. But for those traveling long-term on a boat, it can be a regular part of life.

Hot Weather~Cold Drink

This is not a romanticized fantasy. It’s a real, tangible lifestyle — always challenging, often rewarding, but constantly inspiring. Here’s what it’s like to write articles from a hammock, and why more writers, digital nomads, and creators are chasing this fluid way of life.

The Setting: A Floating Writing Retreat

Imagine a quiet bay, fringed with mangroves or lined with rugged cliffs. The catamaran is gently tugging at her anchor chain, facing into the breeze. You’re lying in a hammock, strung under the shade of the mainsail boom or in the netting stretched between the bows. The soundscape is soothing — lapping waves, the distant call of gulls, the occasional creak of the anchor bridle.

This is your office.

Instead of traffic or an office copier humming in the background, you have dolphins chasing food nearby or the rumble of a dinghy heading off for provisions. The distractions are different, and often more beautiful, but the work remains the same: throw down many words, re-read, chop out and replace, read again, chop, replace, and again, and again.

It does take time

The Tools of the Trade (Afloat)

To make this lifestyle work, a few essentials are non-negotiable:

A reliable laptop or tablet.

Solar power, which is gold on a boat. A solid setup with solar panels, charge controllers, and a reliable battery bank means you can keep your gear charged when anchored off-grid full time.

Internet connectivity is critical for research, publishing. Many use mobile hotspots with local SIM cards, Starlink satellite internet, or long-range Wi-Fi antennas to stay connected.

A notebook or journal for those messy brainstorming sessions.

Comfortable seating, including the hammock. On my catamaran, options abound: cockpit cushions, netting between the bows, or feet dangling in the water from the rear swim deck.

With these tools, you can write just about anywhere — at sea, at anchor, or pulled up on a delightfully deserted beach.

Yep, As Lovely As It Looks

Inspiration in Every Direction

Writing from a boat opens your mind in ways not available on land. Living close to the elements sharpens your awareness. You’re tuned in to the rhythms of the weather, the phases of the moon, and the shifts in tide and wind that can change your day.

This awareness seeps into your writing. Even if the articles are not just about sailing or travel, the clarity of thought and reduction in stress can dramatically improve your productivity and creativity.

That said, the stories that unfold around you are often too good not to write about. Maybe it’s the 3 a.m.- 50 knot squall, combined with having dropped the anchor on an old crab pot, and being blown into the beach… and being stuck there for three days. Yep, that did happen.

Big Storm + Crab Trap = Beach Days

These stories become metaphors, anecdotes, and color in the work. Hopefully they help my writing be richer, deeper, with a unique perspective.

The Challenges: It’s Not Always Margaritas and Manuscripts

To be real: writing from a hammock on my catamaran is not always idyllic. Some days, it’s plain uncomfortable.

Heat and humidity can make concentration difficult, there’s no air conditioning, especially if there’s no breeze in a hot anchorage. Heat becomes oppressive, your brain fogs up, and your skin feels on fire. Deep cold can have the same effect.

Motion can be distracting. Even at anchor, strange swells can rock the boat unexpectedly. It might feel dreamy to sway in a hammock, but a harmonic can set up, wildly slinging you side to side. Within two swings I’ve been violently thrown side to side with arms and legs flailing like an epileptic spider.

Internet loss can delay deadlines. Although to be fair, it’s usually because I couldn’t be arsed to do the work on time.

Honestly, Couldn’t Be Arsed

You don’t have a desk, or consistent workspace. You learn to be flexible, literally — shifting between cross-legged on an engine box, leaning against a bulkhead, or sitting on sand…and, let’s not forget, the hammock.

Noise is different but it is ever-present. Wind through the rigging can get old quickly. Water slapping against the hull or the dinghy can feel rhythmic or irritating depending on your mood. Rain, or neighbors in nearby boats cranking up their version of ‘music’ can disrupt your train of thought.

But despite these drawbacks, the benefits far outweigh the inconveniences.

Routine and Rhythm: Writing in Sync with the Sea

Living on a boat means living by rhythms: tides, weather, sunrise and sunset. Writing fits into these patterns surprisingly well.

A Nice Way To Wake Up

Early morning for me is the golden time to write. The boat is quiet, the world is slowly awakening, and the growing light is gentle. With a pot of coffee and a fresh breeze, maybe some Enigma from the speakers, ideas and thoughts flow freely. It’s a sacred time before the day begins. Dreams from the night before are still fresh, and dreams of the future feel more attainable.

Midday, especially in the hotter climates, are for siestas or swimming, and sometimes boat work. Occasionally writing resumes in the late afternoon or just before sunset. More often though, it’s a cool drink and just watch the world as it happens.

The Freedom Factor

There’s no boss looking over your shoulder. No traffic jam on the way to an office. No beige cubicle walls. You answer to the wind, the weather, and your own motivation. Which in my case can be seriously lacking at times. I’ve always been the kid staring out the window with a chalkboard duster flying my direction.

Writing on a boat demands discipline, but it gives back an incredible sense of freedom. You might spend a week anchored near a town, writing at a table in a local bar, and the another in a remote little bay, swinging in the hammock as you polish the latest jumble of thoughts on the page.

You don’t have to wait for a writing retreat. You’re already living one.

Monetizing the Lifestyle

To support this life, many writers diversify their income streams. Here are a few common ways writers afloat stay afloat financially (I look forward to being one of them!):

Freelance writing for blogs, magazines, and online publications

Content marketing for companies that allow remote work

Writing and self-publishing books, particularly about sailing, travel, or digital nomad life

Running a blog or YouTube channel, monetized via ads, sponsorships, or Patreon

Offering editorial services, like proofreading, editing, or ghostwriting

Apparently the key is to maintain consistency — in delivering work, and managing expectations. Some may never appreciate you’re working from a hammock on a catamaran — and that’s fine. Others may find it fascinating and want to hear more…I like them.

Connection, Solitude, and Stories

Writing on a boat gives you solitude — the kind that fuels introspection and creativity. But it also gives you connection: with nature, with other sailors and people you meet along the way.

Good Times

And all good stories are born through connection.

Tales are shared over sundowners in the cockpit. Experiences and ideas are traded with fellow cruisers. You get invited into local communities where your outsider eyes notice things others take for granted. All of these moments become fuel for articles, whether you’re creating a narrative essay, cultural commentary, or instructional outlines.

Final Thoughts: The Floating Writer’s Dream

I guess there’s no one-size-fits-all way to live and write from a boat. Some writers are full-time cruisers who work between passages. Others split their time between land and sea. Some are novelists, others are bloggers or journalists. But what they all share is the ability to adapt — to embrace change, learn to appreciate discomfort, and create even when the world beneath them constantly moves.

Writing articles from a hammock on a boat, or on the sand of a beach, it isn’t about luxury. It’s about choice. It’s about choosing a slow pace over speed, balancing presence with productivity, and story over schedule.

Yep

And when the sun sets over a glassy anchorage, the stars come out, and your latest article is saved and submitted, you can know one thing for certain: no cubicle in the world can compete with this.

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Ordinary People Today Enjoy More Luxury Than Royalty 100 Years Ago

If you think life today is tough, pull your head in.

Throughout our recorded history, up until less than just a century ago, even the very people that controlled our world, the most wealthy, prominent, and influential didn’t have air conditioning, they did not have antibiotics, for crying out loud they did not even have Netflix.

Our modern world provides us with comforts that make everyday people of now far richer than any royalty of the past.

The Hidden Royalty of Modern Life

A hundred years ago, luxury meant something entirely different. Kings, queens, and industrial tycoons, they may have lived in palatial accommodation, but they still battled heat, disease, and discomfort. And now, in most of our first and second world countries, very few live in fear of these concepts.

Instant Access

You and I? We actually live better than many monarchs of 1925. We have clean water on tap, shit gets piped straight out of our homes, entertainment can be instantly provided on a device not much bigger than a deck of cards.

We have global communication, and medical miracles. I casually chat with family and friends on the other side of the planet, instantly! Both my wife and I, over the last bunch of years, have had serious accidents that, until not too long ago, would have been 100% fatal, but we’re still here.

It’s All Relatively New

Kings couldn’t buy what we enjoy on a daily basis. Yet most of us don’t feel royal at all, rarely do we even acknowledge our good fortune of being born into this day and age.

Let’s take a look at just how extraordinary our “ordinary” lives really are.

1.

We Command the Seasons: Climate Control for All

At the start of the 1900’s, nobody could escape summer heat or winter chills. Yes there were fireplaces and open windows, and with a bit of coin you have servants to tend these things, but you could not have air conditioning. Today, adjust the thermostat and nearly every home can live in a perfect temperature.

Someone’s Gotta Do It

No more shivering in the cold or sweating through the night. You press a button, and the weather is modified to your desire.

2.

Feasts on Demand: A Global Kitchen at Your Fingertips

Royal chefs once struggled to create feasts with exotic foods. Many fruits were considered treasures; strawberries in winter were unthinkable, bananas in North America? Nope! Our local markets now have tropical fruits, international spices, and ready-made meals from every cuisine.

Too Good

These days, if you want, in most cities you can have snags (sausages) and bumnuts (eggs) for breakfast, sushi for lunch, French for dinner, and a Thai dessert—and have it all delivered to your door. Your local grocery store is more abundant and lavish than a royal banquet pantry ever was.

Fancy

3.

Cleanliness Fit for a King: Hygiene and Plumbing

A century ago, indoor plumbing was a luxury. Many homes used outhouses and hot water for a shower was rare. Now, hot and cold water is at our fingertips. Bathrooms reek of lavender and roses, flushing toilets remove our nasty byproducts, and scented soaps and shampoos allow us to believe we don’t really stink.

A Flick And It’s Gone

Add electric toothbrushes, deodorant, and clean towels, and even our cheapest apartments rival the royal bathhouses of recent history.

4.

Miracle Medicine: Health Beyond Imagination

In the early 1900’s, antibiotics as we now know them did not exist. Common infections from a cut could kill you, childbirth was a dangerous activity, and many diseases had no cure.

Kings may have had private doctors, but not modern science.

A Modern Benefit

Today, vaccines, antibiotics, anesthesia, and advanced surgery are standard. We live longer, healthier, and with far less pain than anyone a century ago could imagine.

5.

Transportation Triumphs: Royal Carriages for the Masses

Again, in the early 1900’s, our now vanguard, luxury vehicle was a noisy, unreliable machine made by Rolls Royce. Today’s cheapest cars now have climate control, airbags, GPS, and a very smooth ride.

Old School

And how about flying? What was once reserved for the ultra-rich, is now enjoyed by millions who cross oceans yearly, watching movies and sipping coffee midair.

6.

Mastering Light

Before widespread electricity, people lived by the sun, using candles, and oil lamps to light up a room.

Now, entire cities, homes, and screens light up at the touch of a switch. Nighttime darkness no longer rules our lives, and I honestly think we suffer because of it.

Not All Bad

7.

The Internet: A Library Greater Than Kings Ever Owned

Once upon a time, only the very wealthy could amass knowledge through creating libraries full of books. We now collect browser tabs. In our pockets, we now hold the entire sum of recorded human knowledge—encyclopedias, tutorials, languages, art, and news.

Information once held only by scholars, artisans, and masters of crafts can now be found in seconds. “How do I make a mitre joint? Roast a chicken? Tune my Maserati?”

Not The Same As The Internet

We are all librarians now, ruling over information empires and unfortunately, we don’t actually need to retain any knowledge.

It’s all there at the touch of a button.

8.

Endless Entertainment: Streaming for the Sovereign

Only the wealthy elite had live musicians and private theaters. Today, you can stream an orchestra through an astoundingly good sound system, watch a blockbuster film, or a global sporting event in seconds, all in the comfort of your own home.

Most of us now hold in our hands, more art, music, storytelling and information, than the greatest of palace vaults.

9.

Instant Communication: The Power to Speak Across the Globe

It wasn’t long ago that a written note took days or weeks to arrive on a door step. Now, we text, video chat, and translate foreign languages around the globe in an instant.

Emperors, kings, and military leaders didn’t have the reach we now have as a mere civilian. Every one of us now has a voice across the world.

Almost Anywhere Anytime

We may choose to watch funny cat videos and porn instead, but we could do great things if we wanted to.

10.

Democratized Luxury: The New Definition of Wealth

Once, luxury meant exclusivity only available to the more wealthy of the world. Now, comfort is quite common. Air conditioning, refrigeration, smartphones, and reliable cars are accessible to billions.

I don’t think true wealth is now about possessions—it’s about awareness. Not many in this day and age are unaware of the wars and struggles around various parts of the world. These things may not affect us directly, but having that knowledge can help us appreciate just how good our life truly is.

11.

Gratitude Lost: Why We Forget We’re Royalty

Ironically, it seems that the more we have, the less we notice. We can now complain about Wi-Fi speeds and lukewarm coffee, forgetting that just a century ago, one didn’t exist, and the other was completely our own fault.

A Modern Office

I think that now true royalty comes not from owning more—but from appreciating that which we have. We may not be royal by decree, but we certainly live within the benefits of a royal existence.

12.

A Modern Monarch’s Day

Our average day would be inconceivable to a 1925 king:

You wake in climate-controlled comfort.

Brew coffee from beans grown oceans away.

Softly commute in a climate-sealed carriage, with music.

Eat meals from global cuisines.

Communicate worldwide instantly.

Watch movies, learn skills, or summon food by tapping glass.

We live a life of abundance and control that royalty could only have ever dreamed of.

13.

The Future Will Look Back on Us

Imagine another hundred years from now, people may very well pity us for our traffic (we used roads and cars that stay on the ground), our “primitive” technology (no idea what that’ll be, but it’s bound to be different) and may wonder, “How did they cope with such hardship in the olden days?”

The Future?

Progress never stops, but real wealth is timeless: appreciation, curiosity, and gratitude.

14.

Conclusion: King of the Everyday

We live in an age of comfort. Clean water, hot showers, medicine, light, endless entertainment, all of which are gifts of progress and science.

To live the way we do today is to live royally. The only thing really missing, I think, is awareness.

Not A bad Time To Live

So the next time you adjust the thermostat, or stream a film in your house, or enjoy a coffee or cold beer without concern of bloodshed and mayhem, pause and smile.

You’re not just ‘living’—you’re living better than most of histories royalty.

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