The "About Me" in the sidebar reads:
60 years ago I gave up a secure job in engineering design and declared myself an artist on the pavements of France.
What it doesn't tell you about is the purchase and conversion of an eighty ton coal barge that made the transition possible. My blog post titled Grab a chance and you won’t be sorry for a might have been… tells you a little more about that daring escape to freedom. The post includes a photograph of Brookfoot on the day I purchased her just after she had discharged her last cargo of coal to the Thornhill Power Station.
My blog posts How it all Began and I Will Repent Tomorrow say more about those early days. I quote:
Having freed myself of a mortgage and nine to five job I declared myself an artist on the pavements of France. My wife Norma and two year old daughter Diana shared those precarious days. For all its hardships, it was an idyllic lifestyle. My sketches were the songs for our supper and when we had exhausted the possibilities of one location, we sailed on to the next.
The picture below shows Brookfoot passing through the lock at Boston en route for the French Canals. Norma and Di are looking on.
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