Serial Boat Collecting
Tim -
The pathetic thing is that I posted only a fraction of the boats I've acquired, worked on, used and then sent down the road--or down the bay, in the case of larger ones. I'm always thinking I need a boat for every imaginable purpose, but the end result is that you spend way too much time working on them, thinking about them, buying and selling them...and never enough hours actually enjoying them.
The only saving grace in all of this is that I've gradually weaned the total number of boats down sharply, and I've also stopped going after the physically larger projects. The boats I'm focusing on now are noticeably smaller, maybe even achievable as projects. (They have to be--I can't afford the big boys anymore!)
Also, the older I get, the more I'm naturally drawn to smaller craft that are simpler to maintain and actually use. I've always loved traditional small craft, and kept a few particular ones for decades--knowing I'll have them until the end--but lately I've started viewing them as my "main" boats...not just little accessories. (One is Black Boat, a 1925 cedar skiff that I've had longer than any other; another is an 1870-design 14-foot Seaford Skiff, a rowing-sailing duckboat built for the Great South Bay of Long Island.) Photos below...
There are others that I love and hope to hold onto longer-term, but these two boats are the "forever keepers," no matter what.
- Marty
Tim -
The pathetic thing is that I posted only a fraction of the boats I've acquired, worked on, used and then sent down the road--or down the bay, in the case of larger ones. I'm always thinking I need a boat for every imaginable purpose, but the end result is that you spend way too much time working on them, thinking about them, buying and selling them...and never enough hours actually enjoying them.
The only saving grace in all of this is that I've gradually weaned the total number of boats down sharply, and I've also stopped going after the physically larger projects. The boats I'm focusing on now are noticeably smaller, maybe even achievable as projects. (They have to be--I can't afford the big boys anymore!)
Also, the older I get, the more I'm naturally drawn to smaller craft that are simpler to maintain and actually use. I've always loved traditional small craft, and kept a few particular ones for decades--knowing I'll have them until the end--but lately I've started viewing them as my "main" boats...not just little accessories. (One is Black Boat, a 1925 cedar skiff that I've had longer than any other; another is an 1870-design 14-foot Seaford Skiff, a rowing-sailing duckboat built for the Great South Bay of Long Island.) Photos below...
There are others that I love and hope to hold onto longer-term, but these two boats are the "forever keepers," no matter what.
- Marty
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