Friday, May 21, 2021

Houses are but badly built boats

With my family and friends aboard Dan Bowen's yacht Romadi. English Harbour, Antigua,1973. 
That's me, with a glass of rum, on the far right.

The greater part of my life - and the best part - has been spent living and travelling aboard boats; everything from a canal barge to an ocean going ketch. Pinned to the bulkhead of all my boats were the words of author and fellow sailor, Arthur Ransom.

Houses, are but badly built boats so firmly aground that you cannot think of moving them. They are definitely inferior things, belonging to the vegetable not the animal world, rooted and stationary, incapable of gay transition. I admit, doubtfully, as exceptions, snail-shells and caravans. The desire to build a house is the tired wish of a man content thenceforward with a single anchorage. The desire to build a boat is the desire of youth, unwilling yet to accept the idea of a final resting-place.

I'm proud to have been a sea gypsy in the days when small boat sailors sailed on a shoestring and earned their living as they went along. Now the scene has changed. Rather than swinging at anchor for free, you pay to pick up a mooring or tie up in a marina. Throughout history all travelling people have suffered the same fate: There's a byelaw to say you must be on your way, and another to say you can't wander.

The last line is from the classic song by The Dubliners with vocal by Luke Kelly, Farewell to the tent and the old caravan, The tinker, the gypsy, the travelling man... 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Uq30FeeLTM

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