This is the second installment of the 12 Days of Christmas in Portugal. I hope to complete the series in a couple of weeks, occasionally interspersed with more recent news from Barry. — meps
We traveled to Portugal for three reasons: To see what was there, to go to a kick-ass New Year’s party, and to look at a boat for sale.
Our first view of Matanie in the Portimão boatyard (above right).
Of our three reasons, the boat intrigued people the most, and we had about a hundred different conversations with people about it during the Christmas party season. In every conversation, once we established that we were going to Portugal to look at a boat for sale, the immediate response was what I now call, “Question Number One.”
“But how will you get the boat home?”
Even when we returned, we still had the same conversation with new people. Last night, I had the conversation with my brother, who lives in Ohio. I told him we had not bought the boat, but that we had not ruled it out. No surprise, he then asked Question Number One.
I sighed, and I tried to explain the plan. This was followed by Question Number Two, in the most incredulous voice I’d ever heard from him:
“You mean you’d go and live there?”
Evidently, the thought of his little sister going to live on the other side of the world was completely preposterous and not a little disturbing.
His reaction illustrates why, for us, Question Number One is so hard to answer. As Barry says, it’s not how we’d get the boat home, but how long we would take to do it. At a minimum, years or decades, but who knows what other interesting detours life might provide in the meantime?
The problem with Questions Number One is that our lifestyle represents such a different paradigm that others can barely fathom it. For most people, “home” is the place from which everything else is measured. Everything you own, even if it’s a 6-ton, 33-foot floating object, has to eventually get “home,” right?
Not necessarily.
Interestingly, we talked with a couple of friends who did not ask Question Number One. Carlos did not ask us how we planned to get the boat home. That’s because Carlos calls Portugal home. He knows that his country has great sailing and wonderful people, and the cost of living is reasonable. If we bought a boat there, why would we want to leave?
Kris also didn’t ask. He has the same gypsy-vagabond-nomad tendencies that we do and understands that boats are to be used wherever you find them. He recently found a screaming good deal on a 35-foot Challenger in Florida and purchased it, no easy feat when you live in Capetown, South Africa.
So if we bought Matanie and we moved aboard, we could live in Portugal, or we could, slowly, take her someplace else. Matanie — and the whole world — would be our home.
Unlike Kris’ Challenger, however, Matanie is not a screaming good deal. She’s a little tired and a lot unusual — a junk schooner rig on a fiberglass production boat with an uncommon interior layout. When you throw in the lousy exchange rate and the steep European VAT tax, we can get a better deal closer to home.
That brings us back to the question of “home,” and whether we still live in the same paradigm as the people who ask us, “But how will you get the boat home?”
Severing our ties to the U.S. and moving aboard a boat that’s over 3000 miles from our nearest family member is akin to ripping off a Band-Aid. If we buy a boat here in the Northwest, or even in North America, we can say our goodbyes much more gently.
We want to buy a boat to see the world, not because we want to run away from home. We love the Northwest and we love our families, scattered across the U.S. If we can reconcile that with a boat on the other side of the world, we still might buy Matanie. So far, we haven’t been able to. And so the search — from our contented life here in the Northwest –continues.
To see a few of our photos of Matanie, go to www.mepsnbarry.com/pix
If you’re interested in more technical details about Matanie, please see the Yachtworld listing
You have done such a wonderful job of explaining where you are at! Did the writing help you to come up with this, or did the writing come afterwards? I guess I’m wondering if it’s the writing and journaling that really helped you figure out why you are not sure of buying the boat, or if you solved that whole issue then wrote the post.
Needless to say, I would be very, very sad to lose you to the other side of the world. This little bubble has been hanging over my head for, what, 10 years? As long as you have had your plan. I keep hoping you’ll change your mind and just buy an RV and travel this side of the hemisphere. Of course, I also want you to be happy (-;
Good move not buying that boat – what a piece of junk (grin).
I understand what you mean. The bulk of the people I know seem to be attached to a particular place. I’ve never understood that. I’m pretty attached to planet Earth, which is, after all, my principal diety (Gaia). I greatly enjoy a lot of the locations on her, too. And there are people I care about. But I didn’t think about Question 1. If you wanted her in North America, you’d sail her to North America, right?
Calvin of Calvin and Loretta
Another never Questoned One friend. My questions being: when are we going?
Could it be in October? And, how fast are they processing US Passports? Buy this
boat, I need to get back to Europe. All the sincerely best, Captain Jac, SPARROW
As the first owner of Matanie I was disappointed by Barry ‘n’ Mel’s’ comments here when I first read them, and hope they’ll be a little more careful if they ever come to sell Flutterby. Maranie was in a perfectly good condition when I left her in the hands of a broker in Portimao but, at circa 23 years old she obviously needed regular maintenance. Boats can easily slip downhill when left ashore with no owner to keep an eye on them. Meps and Barry saw her perhaps a year after we put her up for sale. She is still for sale now I believe (23.11.07) – search Apollo Duck for ‘junk sunbird’ – and lots of work has been done on her by the guy who bought her, inc. a replacement engine. My guess is she’d make a good, cheap boat for the Med. She’s also advertised on YachtGrots – who in their right mind would choose a site by that name to sell a boat?