Well, readers, it's been a very long time since I published an update. But I wanted to tell you that I'd moved to The Liveaboard Takes the Suburbs. I moved in with my boyfriend a few months ago and Misty Rose has gone back to her much quieter life without a roommate.
We did not sell her -- she still sits in her old berth, where she is very comfortable (especially without all of my stuff crammed into every available cranny.)
Thank you for your support and friendship during the years I lived aboard. You collectively encouraged me and kept me going when I didn't think I could continue in whatever freezing winter, boiling summer or strange situation I found myself in and I thank you for it.
Living aboard was an amazing and wonderful experience and one I'm thankful for -- and it is certainly a period of time I'll never forget.
I hope to see you at the new blog where you can read about my efforts to re-acclimate to life on land!
Thursday, October 25, 2012
Tuesday, February 14, 2012
A hearty holiday...
Source |
To all our readers, family and friends: Thank you for reading -- and thank you for all your kind comments, both those typed in the comment section and those made to me in person and on Facebook. I can't say how much I appreciate them -- but it's a lot.
Now if you'll excuse me, Misty and I have some valentines to make for our friends.
Here's hoping you have a wonderful, sparkle-filled hearty holiday.
<3
Love,
Misty and Aleksandra
Wednesday, February 1, 2012
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
So do you like have a bathroom...?
Well yes, yes I do.
It always makes me want to laugh hysterically when someone asks me this.
Really? Do you think I'm a magical creature that doesn't make waste? Do I smell so bad you assume I never shower? (Yeah. That's right. I alluded to the fact that I use a toilet. Get over it.)
I think what they really mean to ask is, "What's your bathroom situation?"
I have a marine toilet, commonly called a head, on board. (Remember when I had to rebuild it?)
However, because my marina is awesome, I live RIGHT NEXT to the bathrooms. There is one boat that's slightly closer, but I couldn't begin to keep my boat in his slip (he's on the sea wall and my boat is too short for that!)
I have a personal access card to use one of four (or two in the winter) bathrooms.
Each bathroom is its own room with a fold-down seat for putting clothes on, a toilet, a sink and a giant shower stall. Bathroom No. 3 is my personal fave because it has a really nice showerhead. And it's one of the ones only accessible with an access card (and therefore not open all day long for everyone to use).
So yes, readers. I have a bathroom. And I know how to use it!
Wednesday, January 18, 2012
Better late than never...
Well, folks, I'm finally getting around to telling you about the 2011 Annapolis Sailboat Show. It was a LOT of fun!
I don't have a whole lot of pictures because it seemed more important to use my hands for my Pusser's Painkiller. For those of you not in the know, a Painkiller is a very tasty rum drink that includes pineapple juice, orange juice, maraschino cherries, an orange slice and.... some other stuff. Coconut I think. Anyway it's the breakfast of champions. I'm sure it was 5 o'clock somewhere.
I bought ONE THING all day: a discounted Henri Lloyd rain shell. Because my old one is from high school and the sleeves are a little short.
But the boat show isn't about buying stuff -- it's about walking around and seeing everything there is to see!
The one thing I was dying to see all day was a nice selection of ranges -- too bad none of the vendors brought any ranges. Seriously. I even confronted the people from Defender about it. And they said if I wanted to see ranges, I should have to experience unpacking them because they're very heavy.
But there were heads everywhere! And refrigerating units and anchors, oh my! Really? Not a range in sight?
I had to comfort myself with a lunch at Davis Pub in Eastport. It was the only thing to do. Greg had never been there. Did I mention Greg came to the boat show with me? He is pictured here with the post-lunch painkiller.
I found lots of interesting things, including a new way to have a door to the cabin, a self-setting anchor (not so sure if THAT works), stand-up paddle boards (you all know my obsession with that!), Lonseal floors, nesting cooking pots, custom-made latex mattresses (I wish!) and just about everything else you can imagine.
Oh yeah, there are boats there, too. But who looks at those?
We also saw this super cool line-making machine. Isn't that neat? We must have watched it for nearly 10 minutes. All those spools of line are doing a sort of maypole dance underneath the block in the top of the photo. Very cool. Especially when you're two painkillers in.
And finally toward the end of the day, we sat on the dock and watched the ducks. Just because we could and because Annapolis is fun.
I highly recommend a visit to the boat show -- it's a great day of entertainment.See you there in October 2012!
I don't have a whole lot of pictures because it seemed more important to use my hands for my Pusser's Painkiller. For those of you not in the know, a Painkiller is a very tasty rum drink that includes pineapple juice, orange juice, maraschino cherries, an orange slice and.... some other stuff. Coconut I think. Anyway it's the breakfast of champions. I'm sure it was 5 o'clock somewhere.
I bought ONE THING all day: a discounted Henri Lloyd rain shell. Because my old one is from high school and the sleeves are a little short.
But the boat show isn't about buying stuff -- it's about walking around and seeing everything there is to see!
The one thing I was dying to see all day was a nice selection of ranges -- too bad none of the vendors brought any ranges. Seriously. I even confronted the people from Defender about it. And they said if I wanted to see ranges, I should have to experience unpacking them because they're very heavy.
But there were heads everywhere! And refrigerating units and anchors, oh my! Really? Not a range in sight?
I had to comfort myself with a lunch at Davis Pub in Eastport. It was the only thing to do. Greg had never been there. Did I mention Greg came to the boat show with me? He is pictured here with the post-lunch painkiller.
I found lots of interesting things, including a new way to have a door to the cabin, a self-setting anchor (not so sure if THAT works), stand-up paddle boards (you all know my obsession with that!), Lonseal floors, nesting cooking pots, custom-made latex mattresses (I wish!) and just about everything else you can imagine.
Oh yeah, there are boats there, too. But who looks at those?
We also saw this super cool line-making machine. Isn't that neat? We must have watched it for nearly 10 minutes. All those spools of line are doing a sort of maypole dance underneath the block in the top of the photo. Very cool. Especially when you're two painkillers in.
And finally toward the end of the day, we sat on the dock and watched the ducks. Just because we could and because Annapolis is fun.
I highly recommend a visit to the boat show -- it's a great day of entertainment.See you there in October 2012!
Wednesday, January 11, 2012
My nest...
Well winter is finally starting to rear it's ugly, cold head. And that means it's really hard to leave my nest bed in the morning.
I sleep in the v-berth of Misty Rose. The v-berth is essentially a compartment in the pointy part of the boat toward the bow.
My v-berth has the holding tank beneath it (there is a wooden platform that acts as the "floor" of the berth completely surrounding the tank, don't worry, you'd never know). On top of the holding tank platform is my bed.
I used to be a simple, one-sheet, one-blanket girl and then I spent my first winter aboard. And then I got an electric blanket during my second winter. And during my second summer I sprained my ankle and acquired a large number of pillows with which I propped my swollen ankle.
And I never got rid of any of it.
So what you see to the right here is my bed currently. Believe it or not, I had a couple more blankets last winter.
I won't apologize for the sheet not being fully tucked in. This is not a regular rectangular bed. You try making a triangular bed with a flat sheet and see how it turns out. So there.
Anyway, I've got in the back there the pink quilt I made in my sophomore year of college, a down comforter I bought in college, five or six pillows, a faux snuggie I carted in from the couch last night (it was cold!), my light cotton summer blanket and my beautiful and wonderful brown fuzzy electric blanket. That's its cord hanging down in the bottom left of the photo. And the cord on the right is very sneakily leading to my lamp/alarm clock. My Kindle is also hanging out on top of the lamp outside the frame. Along with about five half-drunk cups of water. Cause that's how I roll.
So for all you who want to know if it gets cold on the boat -- yes. Yes it does. But I can always just snuggle up in my bed and turn the electric blanket on high...
I sleep in the v-berth of Misty Rose. The v-berth is essentially a compartment in the pointy part of the boat toward the bow.
My v-berth has the holding tank beneath it (there is a wooden platform that acts as the "floor" of the berth completely surrounding the tank, don't worry, you'd never know). On top of the holding tank platform is my bed.
I used to be a simple, one-sheet, one-blanket girl and then I spent my first winter aboard. And then I got an electric blanket during my second winter. And during my second summer I sprained my ankle and acquired a large number of pillows with which I propped my swollen ankle.
And I never got rid of any of it.
So what you see to the right here is my bed currently. Believe it or not, I had a couple more blankets last winter.
I won't apologize for the sheet not being fully tucked in. This is not a regular rectangular bed. You try making a triangular bed with a flat sheet and see how it turns out. So there.
Anyway, I've got in the back there the pink quilt I made in my sophomore year of college, a down comforter I bought in college, five or six pillows, a faux snuggie I carted in from the couch last night (it was cold!), my light cotton summer blanket and my beautiful and wonderful brown fuzzy electric blanket. That's its cord hanging down in the bottom left of the photo. And the cord on the right is very sneakily leading to my lamp/alarm clock. My Kindle is also hanging out on top of the lamp outside the frame. Along with about five half-drunk cups of water. Cause that's how I roll.
So for all you who want to know if it gets cold on the boat -- yes. Yes it does. But I can always just snuggle up in my bed and turn the electric blanket on high...
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