|
It was a beautiful evening for a stroll tonight, so I went down to
one of my favourite places: Toronto's waterfront. Listening to the
melee of languages, observing the broad mixture of people, I was
thinking about upcoming travel plans, business issues, articles to
write for the website, and many other things. I liken this feeling to a
hamster on a wheel who's constantly spinning and moving. My brain was
working overtime, which happens a lot when I think about the website
and all the ideas and topics I'd like to write about.
So I am
strolling by the sailboat harbour at Ashbridges Bay, a particularly
serene place with a quiet little inlet surrounded by willow trees on
the east side, on the north side there is a private marina where
hundreds of sailboats are docked, on the south side there is a little
peninsula with just a few places where a variety of boats can anchor at
the municipal docks.
So I am walking, enjoying the reflections of
the evening sunshine playing on the water, listening to the joyful
songs of the birds, observing bikers, walkers, rollerbladers, watching
the boats......... and then I had an idea - I might as well interview
on of these boaters and find out a bit more about their lifestyle and
travel adventures.
I approached a houseboat and I saw that the
captain was sitting on the bridge. I knocked on the glass door and
asked if I could do an interview with him. The man, a white-haired
bearded man in his 60s, was very welcoming and invited me in. He
actually asked me to sit in the captain's chair and I shyly accepted.
He
introduced himself as Ron, "Captain Ron", a name by which he is well
known in the Lake Ontario boating community. Ron is a former corporate
sales manager, now comfortably retired, with an active lifestyle. Ron
still has a house in Whitby, just outside of Toronto, but he spends a
lot of his time on the houseboat, and many of his friends live
full-time on a houseboat.
His particular boat is an Intracoastal
houseboat, meaning it has a hull and is more seaworthy than pontoon
houseboats. It was made in 1970, and cost $17,000 when it was new. Ron
has had it for 18 years and he regularly gets offers from people who
want to buy it. Recently someone offered him $50,000 in cash for the
houseboat. But since Ron loves the lifestyle, and a new boat would
probably cost $150,000 to $200,000, it makes no sense for him to sell
his beloved house on the water. He politely declined the offer.
The
boat has an elevated bridge which not only houses the "steering wheel"
(is that proper marine terminology?), but also accommodates a fold-out
double bed. A few steps down is the galley on the left, and a bathroom
with a combined toilet, sink and shower on the right. Beside the
bathroom is a small door leading down to the cabin that has 4 bunk
beds. Behind the kitchen is the living room area with an eating nook
and another double fold out bed.
In theory the houseboat can
sleep 8 people, but Ron said that you would not want to cram that many
people on board with just one small bathroom. Makes a lot of sense...
Ron seems to be travelling mostly by himself, judging by the lone deck
chair that was located on the boat's top deck from where I had a
perfect view of the serene harbour setting. Ron says Ashbridges Bay is
one of his favourite spots and he was sitting there quietly, enjoying
the evening, when I approached him for the interview.
Ron uses
the boat about 6 months of the year, he puts it in the water in mid
April and takes it out in mid October and he mostly cruises Lake
Ontario with it. From the 1000 Islands in the east near Kingston, a
city that he loves (me too...), to Toronto with its islands, and St.
Catharines with its Port Dalhousie harbour, he actively cruises the
north shore of Lake Ontario.
He commented that the harbours on
the US side of Lake Ontario are not as clean and unfortunately since
911, the American Coastguard has become overly protective, he said even
paranoid, and the minute they see him, they figure he must be a drug
smuggler and they put him through the third degree. So he prefers to
cruise the Canadian side of the lake.
Many of Ron's friends
actually live on a houseboat full-time. They sail northern waters in
the summer and then connect through the Ohio River - Mississippi
waterway system down into Gulf of Mexico from where they sail down to
southern Florida. On the way back in the spring they take the
Intracoastal Waterway (the "Ditch") to come back up north for the
summer.
Ron also has a lot of friends who have ocean-going
sailboats who spend much of their time in the Caribbean. As a matter of
fact, one of his friends has a unique type of sailboat that was
recently commandeered by the producers of the sequel for "Pirates of
the Caribbean".
Naturally I asked Ron about the cost of
houseboating. Apart from the purchase costs, which he estimated at
$150,000 to $200,000 for a new boat, there are dockage costs, fuel,
insurance, repairs. He said he spends about $1000 on fuel, and about
$5,000 a year for dockage and other operating costs. According to Ron,
the people that do the Canada-Florida run usually spend anywhere from
about $10,000 to $30,000 for the round-trip which could take a whole
year. The cost at the lower end means that you are using the on-board
kitchen (or rather, galley) facilities, you are staying at town docks
rather than private marinas, using the boat's shower, rather than the
marina's expensive facilities. Since Ron is a good cook, he practically
always uses his boat's kitchen to make his meals, a huge savings.
Captain
Ron has really figured out a perfect retirement lifestyle for himself.
He houseboats in the summer, goes deer hunting in the fall, heads out
of Ontario to Florida or British Columbia in the winter, where he
either stays with friends and family, or rents a reasonably priced
apartment inland from the coast. Or, if he sees a good offer in the
newspaper, he might just hop on a plane to Mexico for a quick getaway.
And he loves to spend the summers in Ontario, where he cruises Lake
Ontario and spends some time on beautiful Georgian Bay where his
brothers live.
According to Ron, the key thing in retirement is
health, and he works hard to stay healthy. He plays tennis, rides his
bike, he loves to swim and he works out. He said, particularly if you
want to travel to the US as a retiree, being healthy is critical. His
brother had a heart attack in Florida, and his health insurance
wouldn't cover his treatment costs, and he ended up a with a $150,000
bill at the end. No wonder Captain Ron considers good health a key
factor for travelling....
Captain Ron gave me a glimpse into his
unique lifestyle, and I couldn't help but envy him a little. He seemed
so peaceful, so relaxed, enjoying the evening sun looking out over the
water. I realized that he's figured it all out, and he's created his
perfect little niche for himself...
Susanne Pacher is the publisher of a website called Travel and Transitions(http://www.travelandtransitions.com).
Travel and Transitions deals with unconventional travel and is chock
full of advice, tips, real life travel experiences, interviews with
travellers and travel experts, insights and reflections, cross-cultural
issues, contests and many other features. You will also find stories
about life and the transitions that we face as we go through our own
personal life-long journeys.
Submit your own travel stories in our first travel story contest(http://www.travelandtransitions.com/contests.htm) and have a chance to win an amazing adventure cruise on the Amazon River.
"Life is a Journey Explore New Horizons".
The interview with photos is published at Travel and Transitions - Interviews
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Susanne_Pacher
Views: 920 | Print | E-mail
Only registered users can write comments. Please login or register. Powered by AkoComment Tweaked Special Edition v.1.4.6 AkoComment © Copyright 2004 by Arthur Konze - www.mamboportal.com All right reserved |