Posts Tagged ‘Corribee’

A statement of intent

October 26th, 2008

I read quite a lot. Never fiction though because it takes me so long to read a book that it seems such an awful waste of time to get to the end without learning from somebody else’s mistakes.

Joe Simpson’s classic Touching the Void was the book that started me off I think. I was climbing a lot at the time and a friends dad was reading it. He said it was fantastic and I should give it a go. Me, reading a book? With my reputation?

Thankfully I grew out of my books-are-for-stupid-people-without-a-telly stage and bought a copy. From the first few pages I was hooked. This guy was doing exactly what I’d been dreaming about aspiring to as I was clambering around the Wilton quarries near Bolton. The infamous accident was the least important part of the book to me, the shear flame of adventure had me hooked. By the way, there’s another cracking read, “The flame of adventure” By Simon Yates (the unjustly deserved ‘rope cutter’ from the former book). Nothing really happens, it’s a wonderful documentation of exactly what the title says.

Soon I was reading more and more, until finally one day I picked up a copy of Ice Bird (David Lewis) from the local library. It’s essentially the story of a guy that goes completely mad and decides to sail, on his own, to the antarctic.

Single handed sailing was now firmly in my mind as the ultimate test of one’s mettle. It doesn’t matter where you go, as long as you don’t know you can do it. Hell, taking a trip down the Leeds-Liverpool single handed is no small feat if it means you leave your own personal safety net of near guaranteed success. I think that’s the key to a personal challenge, and unless it’s solo you still don’t know if you alone could have pulled it off. As I read all these books curiosity was beginning to take root somewhere in the great big play area that is my mind.

Joshua Slocum, Robin Knox-Johnston, Ellen McArther, Dee Cafari, Roger Taylor; all these people seemed to be living my own dream. They were all scaring the crap out of themselves to see where it would take them, heck, some of them scared themselves so much they started to enjoy it!

Wouldn’t it be fantastic if I were like them. What a dream. Just the thought of it sends a chill down my spine. Solo, in an ocean. They must be super human!

It’s Roger Taylor’s fault. This ridiculous blog post I mean. It was while I was reading his book that it clicked. The thought that could well be the start of my demise is that the one and only difference between him and me, is that he has gone and done it. The only difference between me and Ellen MacArthur is that she has been and done it… and she’s a girl… and I don’t cry that much.

That’s it though isn’t it. The only thing stopping you is you. You need a great deal of experience to do what these people do, sure, but that’s a crap excuse if you’re trying to convince yourself that you can’t do it. Every single thing required to live the dream, I posses. I have intent.

Cold, harsh, brutal intent, and I intend to cross the Atlantic ocean in my 21ft Corribee. I must be dreaming, right? No. I know that it could well be a living nightmare, I know that I am going to have to spend a small fortune on the boat to make it ocean worthy, and I know that I am going to have to gain a huge amount of experience to do it, but I will. I have to.

So, my statement of intent. Posted here in public, because even the best of intentions sometimes need a kick up the arse. :)

I am going to cross the start line for the Jester Challenge 2010.



Timeout

October 12th, 2008

I decided to go home for a bit. The non stop alcohol fueled, public house hosted mostly-work-but-more-play party that is the currently economically depressed London, was getting the better of me, so I am here. Here has standing headroom and a bath, which is a pleasant novelty, not to mention the fast internet connection which is pure bliss for the digitally impatient.

Using the internet connection I have been following the start of the Volvo Ocean Yacht Race, putting my virtual money (I don’t really gamble) on Delta Lloyd, who are at the moment becalmed. This is why I don’t really gamble you see, well, almost never, I do on occasion put a quid on the lottery, or use some pocket change to buy a scratch card when I’ve been to the super market. Last week I won twenty quid on a scratch card, then yesterday I went to buy some bits from Tesco, and put a whole pound on a lucky dip!

I haven’t checked the results yet, but here’s what is going to happen; I am going to win, just £24,000 though, and with that I am going to quit work and take my little Corribee south, around to the coast to Dorset. I’m going to sail her up the Avon in Christchurch and get her lifted out, where I shall do a little work over the winter to convert her into a solid ocean boat. Namely, fill her with foam and make Kudu unsinkable. Obviously I shall take my time over doing this since there’s no rush to be anywhere in the winter. January will see a trip back to London for the boat show, where I’ll buy a couple of solar panels and a Rutland 503 wind turbine.

Once I’ve fitted these, I’ll probably take off for a couple of months, heading to Cornwall. I do like it there. I’ll come back to the boat for around March, when she’ll be lifted back into the water, and I’ll head out into the solent and turn right. I’ll go as far west as I can be bothered and then turn south, right accross Biscay for some late winter adrenalin. When i’ve scared myself sufficiently, It’s a short stint toward Gib’ and into the Med, where my year of sun will commence.

I really don’t want to check those numbers.

Friday update

July 4th, 2008

I finished all the jobs on my list, great! But I did find some new one’s to re populate it with.

The big news is that the rudder is back on, which was my last major job. Unfortunately I’ve cocked up the sealant on the galley so that will need redoing at some point. It was the first time I’ve ever used Silastic and, foolishly, thought I could just scrap it off to trim when it was set. You can’t do that, and it now looks a bit crap. I think maybe next time I might go for transparent sealant.

New jobs on the list are… I’ve painted the bilges, and started varnishing the cabin floorboards. I’ve also come up with the idea of wrapping the mast compression pole in pipe lagging, then making a cover. It’ll soften up the cold metal pole and provide some collar bone protection in rough weather ;)

Introduction

June 30th, 2008

Have you ever had a silly idea? An adventurous dream, that for a just for moment seems possible? I did; It was a brief fantasy about three years ago, or so I thought.

As with most great ideas, this one came about by chance. I was 22 and had been living with my girlfriend in our first proper flat for almost two years. We’d been slowly building a collection of crockery and assorted kitchen paraphernalia, as well as furniture, pets, and general house filling junk. It was a bit of a dive, and never really felt like home, but it was a house and it was not our parents’. Our neighbour was an absolute arsehole too, he used to listen to Boyzone at full volume on a Wednesday night after the pub, a worrying trait for a 40 year old builder I thought.

Then one day, out of the blue, it all changed. She left. I, of course, took it like a man and cried for days, but little did I know at the time, that that event would be a catalyst for everything that happened since. Now everything that happened since is a lot, and I’m not going to go into it all since this is not a book about my life, it’s a blog about my boat; but to suitably introduce why I’m writing a blog about my boat requires I tell at least a little.

So back to the scene. I’m all miserable and feeling sorry for myself after the loss of the only thing that made the flat that never really felt like a home just about bearable. I needed to move, but not to another flat, I wasn’t going to risk being stuck next to another 40 year old can’t quite get out of the closet built like a brick shit house Boyzone fan!

Then the thought occured. A canal boat! I lived in Chorley, I’d spent most of my life growing up with the Leeds-Liverpool on my doorstep, why not? It was quiet, it was peaceful, it was cheap. It was perfect!

Now I feel that this introduction is dragging on a little and as it is still a blog and it is still not a book, I’ll axe a huge chunk of this tail, skip by some facts, and jump on to the juicy bit…

Narrow boats are bloody expensive! £55,000 was the best boat I found; not pocket money, and to my dismay, I found marine mortgages are not very poor person friendly. 20% deposit and a maximum loan term of 10 years in this case. I looked for progressively cheaper boats; narrow boats as low as £16,000. Small motor cruisers for £7,000. Sailing boats for £6,000. I had the cash for none of them. I had to abandon the dream, along with my newfound freedom as I moved back into my parents house.

That period in time had one outcome, it firmly planted a seed in my head that I absolutely had to have a boat, a sailing boat. Since I was now back at my parents I managed to scrape together enough money to buy my first boat, a Leisure 17.

Ok, I can’t sit here and pretend I was a reformed spendaholic. The aforementioned ex girlfriend lent me a considerable amount towards the boat out of her student overdraft. I towed the little dayboat back from York to Douglas Marina at Hesketh bank, near Preston. There she sat on a Pontoon in the the River Douglas and I loved her. Jalina was her name, and she was my pride and joy. In fact there’s a couple of lengthy stories to tell about her, but now is not the time.

Axing yet more story; I ended up selling Jalina in a fit of stupididty, and for reasons I shan’t disclose, and thus paused my boating career.

Jalina sat on the pontoon at Hesketh BankPulled back from York by a £160 Cavalier!

After about a year of boaty dreams interrupting my thoughts on at least a weekly basis, I finally succumbed to the temptation and bought a Thompson T24, placing the winning bid on my mobile phone in a layby somewhere in Gloucester, as I drove to my Grandads for Christmas. The Thompson, ‘Pirimela’, had been in an accident and the mast had smashed through the cabin roof.  I thought I could manage the job easily, but it turned out to be much bigger than I thought and well beyond my ability and timescale. After removing ALL of the cabin and decking from the mast bulk head to the transom, I gave up and sold her, to a lovely chap who had both the ability and time to restore this wonderful boat. I still would love to sail a T24 by the way, I imagined she would cross the biggest oceans with ease as I walked around her huge keel where she lay at Preston Marina…. perhaps not, but pride in one’s boat seems to add quite a lot to it’s performance figures.

Pirimela\'s cabin now removed, we found even more rot so had to continue

Then, the liveaboard dream came back proper. Having just sold the T24, I spotted a Stag 28 for sale at the same yard in Preston. It had been taken by the marina after the owner vanished for years without paying any fee’s. I didn’t have ANY money, but put in an offer for the boat anyway – half the asking price. To my surprise the boat yard agreed, and I set about finding the money to pay for it. I went in to the brokerage office at Preston and handed over the £700 I got from selling the Thompson. I then had a month to find the rest of the money under the terms of sale. I financially contorted, convulsed and sweated until I raised the money, and a month later, to the day, I paid the remaining sum.

Now you may be thinking that I must have robbed a bank to raise, in a single month, enough money to pay for a Stag 28, a very fine boat for a 28 footer, but the truth is I’d taken on another project. The boat was essentially brand new. It had never been in the water since the hull was moulded in the late 80’s. The previous owner(s) had fitted her out almost completely down below, but she needed finishing. Standing rigging, running rigging, stern gear, the engine needed plumbing in… the list was endless but I didn’t care. I finally had a boat that I could feasibly live on. She had standing headroom throughout AND room for a shower in the heads. Brilliant. All it was going to take was hardwork and every penny I would see for the next 2 years…

The aptly named Stag 28 - \'Dreamer\'For a 28 footer, the Stag was well equipped. Shame it wasn\'t finished.

.. but then fate stepped in again. “Nathan, we’re closing the Preston office. You can either work from home or move to London”. It was a no brainer really. I couldn’t work from home. I’d go stir crazy being sat in my bedroom at my parents all day. I just couldn’t do it, so I sold the Stag and moved to London, which brings me almost towards the end of this lengthy introduction (my apologies if this has eaten your entire lunch break).

You’d think that living in central London couldn’t be further from anything with a mast and sails, but oh how so wrong you would be. Everyday for the last year, on the way to work, just before I get my morning Mocha from the French guy with a coffee machine in the back of a rickshaw (best coffee in London by the way), I stroll along the dockside of St Katherine’s. Once a working dock bringing all kinds of exotic wares to the capital, it’s now home to everything from the huge ‘Playbuoy’ (sigh) motor yacht, to even a Thompson T24 (If it’s yours, PLEASE let me come and have a look :D ). Once again I’ve found myself nagged by boats each and every time I walked to work. I finally cracked a few weeks ago and started looking with a vengeance for another boat.

Since moving to London I have quite literally doubled my salary, but once again my spendaholism prevailed and I had no savings. Whatever boat I got had to be cheap, and it had to be complete; I didn’t have the time to be working on a project boat anymore. I was spending most evenings browsing boatsandoutboards.co.uk and the other sites who’s names allude me, and had narrowed my list down to a few potentials. Then the though occurred to me. Where the hell was I going to keep it!? I made some inquiries and found the price of moorings in London was almost as much as the rent on my house.

Once again my dream was smashed with a cold wet dose of reality. I just couldn’t afford to pay £400 a month on mooring as well as my rent. The only way I could afford a boat in London would be if I didn’t have any rent… wait a minute! If I LIVED on a boat in London I wouldn’t have any rent. I could afford the mooring. Oh this is perfect, I thought. The plan was back on.

But hold on, I have no savings, and the boats I’ve been looking at are circa 21ft. I can’t possibly live on that, can I? I had almost convinced myself that I could when I started reading Ellen MacArthurs book, she told of her little Corribee ‘Iduna’ and how after sailing around Britain she lived on it for a while. A Corribee was on my short list. “Hell, if Ellen can do it, so can I”. I booked a train ticket to Leicester to see the Corribee and within 10 minutes and a brew had agreed to buy her.

Which, to your relief I am sure, brings me to the point of all this ranting. My little Corribee, Kudu was delivered to my parents house in Lancashire in May and I have set about preparing her to liveaboard. I’ve been traveling up from London as many weekends as I can muster, and working on her for two days before heading back down to the smoke for a working week. The blog will follow my progress, the troubles and achievements along the way until the end of August, when she’ll be transported to the South East coast and sailing up the Thames to our new home. The question is, can this 25 year old software analyst actually pull it off? We shall see. ;)