Difficult Changes

Sometimes things just don’t work out, and that has been the case for much of the first half of 2021. As we emerged from the pandemic, JoAnn was diagnosed with stage IV pancreatic cancer, and, a month later, passed away on April 3rd. Here’s the obituary I wrote a couple of days later. We were so happy, so in love. I’m devastated. She wanted me to find a way to move forward afterwards, and that is what I seek to do. This blog entry is a small part of my approach towards healing.

Grief is a difficult thing, hard to understand, hard to live with. They say it gets better, but I’ve not seen much improvement thus far. Here is a bit of info about grief that I found helpful. If you are suffering from the same, you might wander through some links from the above, looking for little kernels of hope or wisdom. I particularly like the first sentence there, “Grief is the shadow love casts in the light of loss.”

I wish, I wish this, I wish that. None of it can be. Someone who suffered similarly told me that grief is a giant onion, and you just gotta keep peeling – but the onion does not get so small as to disappear. Time, I’ve come to understand, does not heal all wounds. But with time, we can learn to carry, with perhaps a bit more grace, the things that come along with us through life. I’m so sick of the sadness, the crying, the little cues that unexpectedly send me spiraling down. Sick of feeling. But there is beauty in it as well. This grief will always be a part of me, as I seek to be out among people, doing things, seeing the world, making new connections, and finding my way such as I am able. Peeling the onion.

JoAnn hunting for blue crabs on the dock pilings, summer 2020.

New Plans

Friends, we have come to the realization that the purchase of Gypsy Blue was ill-timed with respect to Covid-19: the things we hoped to do on such a boat – cruising in a way that would involve a good deal of interaction with other people. Upon reflection, we realize that we probably can achieve greater life satisfaction by selling this boat and perhaps buying a smaller, trailerable outboard boat, or at least spending more time on kayaks. Either way, we’ll continue exploring and fishing. With this brief post, we’re closing down the website except for an advertisement of the boat for sale – still working on the advert.

Gypsy Blue gets her survey

Overcast skies and the promise of intermittent drizzle and rain on survey day.

8:15 am

Here we go, heading into our second boat survey. Like the last one, we really like the boat owners as well as the boat. Here’s to hoping the outcome is better than the last boat we had surveyed – it had a bad engine, and therefore we did not get the boat.

We are calm, comfortable. The situation is different – not just Covid-19, and not just that our plans and the scale of the boat have shifted. There is no seller’s agent, no buyer’s agent. We have only a verbal agreement that we’ll buy the boat at a set price – a price agreed upon by both parties as seeming fair, and allowing both parties to look each other in the eye afterwards and remain on good terms. Unlike the last few days, the skies are overcast, with a chance of rain peaking at the time we are scheduled for haul-out.

JoAnn is making sandwiches for the owner, surveyor, and for us. Last night we shuttled the truck over to the haul-out marina, so that I can take everyone back after that is done, as the boat will stay there for hull cleaning, no matter what the outcome.


JoAnn taking notes at the dinette during the survey.
The surveyor beginning to check out the engine “room” beneath the pilothouse floor.
Boatyard worker using a 5000 psi sprayer to knock the barnacles off the hull, in the pouring rain, whilst his boss sits with us under the shelter of the covered porch.

2:45 pm

Survey is completed. We spent about 5 hours on and under the boat with the surveyor and owner, going over all the systems in detail. A few minor problems found, but nothing major. We took the boat out for a sea trial and got her up to full speed, before turning back towards the boat yard for haul out. Haul out was a 1 pm, just when it started to rain more heavily. One of the boatyard guys power-washed off the light coating of barnacles that had accumulated. Then I followed the surveyor around the boat in the rain as he tapped on the hull with a leather mallet, inspected the shaft, prop, zincs, and through hulls. We all spent a little while on a covered porch eating the sandwiches that JoAnn had prepared. Boatyard crew plopped the boat back in the water and we took the short journey across to waterway to Gypsy Blue’s slip.

No problems of a scale to cause us to back out on the sale, so it looks like we’ll own a boat very soon – just a matter of paperwork and insurance!