In the quiet between holidays, on a dock in Nassau, after a 10-day intro trip into the Exumas, and with most of our kids aboard for a visit, I am reflecting on how our new lifestyle was only possible because of all of you.
We started the hands-on work towards our goal of cruising exactly one year ago this week. With the preparation to stage the house and get last repairs done before listing it. Our kids remember the huge hole in the bedroom ceiling caused by air conditioner condensate as I repaired the plaster work over the holidays. From there we made lists and began moving out the furniture and keepsakes to storage. Within two months we had the house staged and listed. And two months after that we had sold it, two more months we were living downtown in an antique carriage house. Two months after that we had driven a 45' road schooner to New England and delivered furniture and gear to our daughter in Burlington and to our summer retreat in Royalston. And two more months we were full time liveaboards driving ourselves crazy in preparations to unhook and cruise.
So here we are in Nassau Harbor awaiting the New Year and our second time to see Junkanoo. The first, on Boxing Day morning, was a river of human fireworks and "Mooosic!". The photos really don't do the spectacle justice. And I had run my battery flat by the time the high-powered teams of Roots and Valley Boys showed up. It is a community-wide competition involving a year of work to build the costumes and floats, many of the individual costumes weigh in at 100# and are clearly a serious physical strain to carry much less make them dance to the bands' mooosic. Valley Boys won Round 1, but the Saxons are coming back strong we hear.
We have seen a small taste of the outer islands in the Exumas with beaches, lobsters, iguanas, and hammerhead sharks. We have attended church at a charming very old Anglican sanctuary (think Thomas Hardy and Wessex era) with a rector who is a complete gas and clearly a positive force in his community. We have dealt with mechanical failures, mast ascents to make repairs, sea sickness and strenuous weather. We have not been plagued with balmy sunny skies and lounging about in swimwear (haven't had the full mainsail up since we cleared in to the Bahamas at Chubb Cay weeks ago). And while we aren't sure of our new home, ourselves and our ship, we are getting more so with every encounter with the boundary of Adversity.
This is what we came for, and we still wonder if we should be here, but we are here and we are doing exactly what we had hoped for, making discoveries about the world and ourselves which we didn't even know to ask the questions for.
So as the New Year bears down on us: thank you for all of your support as we stressed and strained, made seemingly weird decisions, walked away from easy ties to family and friends. It was hard for you and hard for us. So again, thank you.
Happy New Year my friends. I love the blog as I can only see the two of you sitting and drinking in exotic ports in the Caribian. ;-)
ReplyDeleteSo Kiki and I are thinking about flying to Nassau on Jan 10-13th. My parents are down to take care of Sterling and are kicking us out for a much needed long weekend away. Please check your email or Call me as we would enjoy seeing you.