We won’t live on a sailboat forever. Oh, there are many folks who continue to live on their sailboats that are much older than we are. But 4 ½ years ago when we moved aboard, we said that it would be for 2 to 10 years, “as long as we’re enjoying it."
Well, it is beginning to feel like we are on the backside of
that mountain with regard to our live-aboard years. We talk about living on land again from time
to time. We try to figure out what we will do next. How fortunate we are to
have the luxury of thinking about it for a while.

Today we are alone, resting in the Winyah Bay, just off the Atlantic. We’ve seen a few fishing boats across the inlet,
but other than that, it’s very quiet here. Just nature and us. Earlier today, we
watched a pod of dolphins, through our binoculars, as they were some distance
away.

There were at least 6 of them that we could see based upon the number of fins that broke the surface in various locations. They were swimming slowly round and round in a long loop. Gathering their dinner we figured. Occasionally, we saw one big splash and sometimes a small bit of some thing come flying out of the water and land back in again. Part of a fish, no doubt. The rest of the fish would have been in a dolphin’s mouth, I’m sure.

There were at least 6 of them that we could see based upon the number of fins that broke the surface in various locations. They were swimming slowly round and round in a long loop. Gathering their dinner we figured. Occasionally, we saw one big splash and sometimes a small bit of some thing come flying out of the water and land back in again. Part of a fish, no doubt. The rest of the fish would have been in a dolphin’s mouth, I’m sure.

I guess the reason that I think it won’t be those things is that a person could get on an airplane, or drive a car to go see those places. When we arrived there, we and every other tourist was interested in seeing the same things—historical sites and local foods and art. And we enjoyed them thoroughly.
We will never have the good fortune to be escorted across
the Bahama Bank by a group of dolphins that take turns at our bow. When the
lead dolphin peels off another immediately takes his place as the lead. As if
they are playing with us and saying, “come this way.” Oh, and the hundreds of
dolphins that we met one day, all day
on the Atlantic—we were sailing south off the New Jersey coast and the dolphins
were all headed north to the fall hunting grounds.







And of course, the Magnificent Frigate birds whose mating ritual is a soaring and swooping dance so beautiful that it took my breath away. Oh, to see love expressed in such elegance! Or lust. It’s possible to see Frigate Birds on land, too but rather unlikely to see the dance in the sky.
And oh my, I have fallen in love with snorkeling. I guess I
could go on snorkeling vacations again when I live on land, but it won’t be
anything like jumping off the back of the boat and seeing incredible creatures right
there, beside our home. There are so many things that live
in the water that I had no idea existed.
Seventy one percent of the earth is covered with water, and
we have seen only a tiny bit of it. I
guess it will have to do, won’t it.
3 comments:
Gorgeous post. Be assured, though, that all this comes with you. You will never be the same person as you were before cruising. The sea has changed you forever for the good. You will always have those wonderful friendships, ours included, that will last way past the time you will dock Northern Star for the final time.
Miss you guys,
Deb
SV Kintala
www.theretirementproject.blogspot.com
So many cool things to experience. Thanks for sharing them with us!
Thank you for your comments. I am starting to become a little melancholy. Your thoughts buoy me up.
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