Now it gets interesting

I’m slowly coming around.  I don’t miss the west coast so much that I feel like crying when I think about our move anymore.  This Saturday Joy and I will pick up our "new" 17-year-old boat.  She is a 32′ Carver Mariner out of New York.  Joy is itching to get her cleaning supplies aboard and give the boat a good scrubbing.  I can’t wait to play with the new GPS chartplotter.  Moku seems to like boating more than riding in the car.

Some folks are mountain folks, some are house, some are yard (Joy?), some are dessert (my bro), but I am all about water.  The ocean is the best, but I get off on anything from a decorative fountain or aquarium on one end to a long-breaking wave on a sandy point on the other.  Words cannot express how excited I am that we will be spending our weekends on the water, now.

I hope the weekend holds something special for all who read this.  God bless.

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In search of the perfect boat

We are in the coldest part of winter.  Any trip to the shore entails subjecting oneself to cold wind penetrating to one’s body’s core.  It is really quite foolish to subject oneself to such weather.  It is also foolish to even consider buying a boat.  Boats are not necessarily that expensive to buy, but to keep one and keep it well?  Ah, there’s the rub.

So if going to the shore is foolish and buying a boat is foolish, how would one describe the combination of these two acts?  You see, Joy and I have felt compelled over the last few weeks to prepare for summer by shopping diligently for a boat to replace the one we sold in California.

The boat with which we fell in love was an old woody.  One with the keelson in need of expensive repair.  Think of it as a floating Victorian home with a bad foundation.  Our hearts keep drawing us back to her, but, alas, we do have brains and have, so far, been able to resist her charms.  The problem being that her layout is as though it were custom designed with us in mind.  She is a 1963 Egg Harbor sedan.  Anyone familiar with these vessels knows that the interior is a showcase of wooden cabinetry.  Below decks the cabin is all on one level with every area accessible without going up or down steps.  The cockpit is large.  Between the cockpit and the helm are four doors that fold to the side leaving the interior of the boat completely open to the cockpit.  This creates a huge single space in which to lounge or socialize.

But in the interests of practicality we press on in search of a less demanding relationship.  No doubt we will settle for some sleek modern beauty that looks like and is laid out like roughly every other vessel we will pass.  We will enjoy her greatly, but in our hearts we will hold close the romance of the one we passed by.

Boat hunting, thy name is Folly.

Remember two well-deserved cliches:

"The happiest two days in a boat owner’s life are the day he buys his boat and the day he sells it."

"A boat is a hole in the water into which one pours money."

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My Soul Sits on the Wall

My favorite perch in Kuhio Beach Park.

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White Stuff

When my little dog, Moku, decided it was time to go out this morning, sleet had just begun to fall.  By the time I left for work, the snow was piling up (by North Carolina standards).  The main driving lanes on the freeway remained clear and people drove with caution.  When I came to my exit it was hard to find because it was buried beneath a thin blanket of snow.

Joy told me that Moku was so enamored of playing in the white stuff that he wouldn’t come when she called him.  I’m sorry I missed that, because it was the first time Moku saw snow.

Last week, one of the observatories on the Big Island was closed due to snow on the road.  I hear Malibu got their first snow in 20 years today also.  (Sadly, another cold snap finished off what was left of the California citrus crop as well.)  So now we get global warming and freaky winter storms?

Are we experiencing climatic change in the direction of a warming trend? in the direction of a decrease in stability (and, therefore, predictability)? or are we comparing recent phenomena to that previously experienced in our generation, which is only a small snippet on the great length of earth’s weather strip chart?

Chicken Little reporting from the North Carolina tundra.

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Anniversary of the Revolution

On January 17, 1893, 114 years ago today, a group of mostly American businessmen in Hawaii deposed Queen Liluokilani without firing a shot.  While 150 marines and sailors did come ashore to protect the lives and property of US citizens they did not participate directly in the coup.  The citizens militia of about 1500 men were acting in response to the Queen’s announced intention of overthrowing the Bayonet Constitution previously imposed upon the Hawaiian monarchy and re-establishing her sovereignty over her nation.  Grover Cleveland refused to give in to the rebel’s request to become part of the US, which did not occur until 1898.  Of all US states, only Hawaii has been tribal, a monarchy, an independent republic, a territory, and finally a state.  There continues to be strong currents of desire among those of non-European ancestry for a return to their sovereign control over what became the 50th state.  What are your thoughts on the current sovereignty movement?

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