Time Warp

19 December 2011 | Seattle, Washington
19 November 2011 | Seattle, WA
28 September 2011 | Oak Harbor, WA
05 August 2011 | Oak Harbor, WA
01 August 2011 | Oak Harbor, WA
23 July 2011 | Oak Harbor Marina, Oak Harbor, WA
18 July 2011 | Oak Harbor Marina
15 July 2011 | Oak Harbor Marina
10 July 2011 | 350 nm off Cape Flattery
07 July 2011 | Somewhere out in the Big Pond
01 July 2011 | 37N; 153W
01 July 2011 | 36N; 155W
28 June 2011 | 29N; 157W
25 June 2011 | Poor Boyz Yacht Club, Ala Wai Yacht Harbor, Honolulu
22 June 2011 | Ala Wai Yacht Harbor, Honolulu, Hawaii
21 June 2011 | Lahaina, Maui
11 June 2011 | 20.5N; 151W
11 June 2011 | 18.5N; 148W
11 June 2011 | 18.5N; 144W

Slideshow published

19 December 2011 | Seattle, Washington
Peter
We have (finally) published a 1-hour movie slideshow on youtube which represents the best of our over 7,000 slides we took on our voyage. It starts with our cross-country trek from Seattle to Charleston, South Carolina and ends with our delivery from Panama to Seattle via Mexico and Hawaii. It is set to music for your enjoyment.

Enjoy...and Merry Christmas to all!!!

The new chapter!!!!

19 November 2011 | Seattle, WA
Peter
Lots has happened since the last blog. The biggest news is we finally have some direction in our lives. When we arrived back in WA/USA in July we really didn't know what we wanted to be when we grew up! (IF we grew up!!)

We tried doing a charter business in the San Juans. But the season is so short that none of my spreadsheets that I created showed us making any money. Hmmmm. Not good.

That period of our lives was sooooo stressful. Every day included 15 life-changing decisions, half of which would get or be changed the next day. Try living like that day after day for months on end. It is most trying and very tiring. Crying was the norm. It was one of the most difficult periods of my life...and I have been through some real shit!!!!

Finally, after the management company we had hired to manage our rentals had us swimming in debt, the light went on! "I can do that bad!!" And presto! A new property management company in Seattle was born!!

I won't bore you with the details of the other company. Actually, the details aren't boring at all! What these yahoo's were doing is head shaking and mind numbing! But I'll try to keep this as positive as possible and flush them once and for all. If you are anywhere near the Seattle area with rental property, DO NOT hire Yates, Wood, and MacDonald to manage them! They nearly drove us all the way into the ground, and would not have cared if they lost the account becasue of it! OK, enough bashing!

Once we made the decision to start our own property management company, it was pretty much a no-brainer that we had to move back to our house. So we kicked out our renters Nov. 1 and moved back in about a week later.

We've been unpacking ever since -- moving our boat home, our apartment home in Oak Harbor as well as our Seattle home all under one roof. So many boxes! Yikes! But we are starting to see daylight.

Two items before I forget. First, if you have any interest, check out our website at Full Service Property Management and let me know what you think. In fact, check out our Facebook page, too. I guess it all helps us get visibility and we need all the help we can get!

Second, we are having a "rum squall" at our house Sat., Dec. 6. If you are anywhere near the Seattle area and would like to drop by, leave us a comment and we will get you an invite. We'll be showing our photos from our trip, drinking rum from all the Caribbean islands we visited, and sharing Christmas cheer. Hope you can make it!

And if you aren't in the Seattle area, then Happy Thanksgiving and an early Merry Christmas!!

OK, so maybe it wasn't the last blog!!

28 September 2011 | Oak Harbor, WA
Peter
Fooled ya!!! OK, fooled me too!

I have been thinking of getting back on and doing some blogging. I have gotten a few requests as well, that has generated more thoughts. So maybe I will add some posts...just not as often as before.

Let's see, what has happened? Well, the biggest part of transitioning has trying to figure out what I want to be when (if) I grow up!!!

We thought about doing the crewed charter thing. Indeed, I think it was right here on this blog I was raving about THE new crewed charter company. Something about pushing Moorings/Sunsail aside, or something of that nature! That was a swell idea for awhile because it gave me something to work on which meant I had less time for getting in trouble!

But then I ran into several roadblocks, not the least of which is that you can't make any money in the crewed charter trade; at least not in the 3-week season the Pacific Northwest offers. So I kinda ditched that idea.

And for about a week or so I was in this purgatory. I was excited in that it meant I had options. The problem was I had too many options! I didn't know what direction to take with my life. And then it hit.

I had been told by Laura and others that I should become a property manager. After all, I have been managing properties for over 25 years. But my idea of a property manager was some (cute) girl (which I am not!) sitting in a leasing office of a large complex making 40 grand a year. That wasn't very inspirational. Well, the cute girl part was, but that wasn't going to make me any money!!

Anyway, I finally stumbled upon the idea that I could ' own a property management firm'. Ooooh! Pretty advanced thinking, huh? That is why they call me 'Captain'! It only took me a few months to get that message!

The more I researched it, the more I liked the idea. I kept telling people about the charter business that I think I like 'growing' business more than I like actually 'doing' business. Don't get me wrong. I can -- and will -- roll up my sleeves and get in there and do the work. But on a long-term basis, I am much better suited for the growing part. Owning a business lets me do just that!

So Ruth and I (and Will -- who turns 15 today!!!) are starting up a new business. We are calling it Full Service Property Management. I'll talk about it more in the coming weeks. We are pretty excited about it because I think the business model I have developed could possibly reinvent the entire industry!

Pretty heady stuff, eh? I don't know that our biz will do all of that. But it will certainly carve out a HUGE niche. But more of that later!!!

Last blog - thanks!

05 August 2011 | Oak Harbor, WA
Peter
I think this may be our last blog. (Sniff...sniff!!) Maybe not -- you never know. But our land-based activities aren't nearly as exciting, and the need to blog seems to be diminishing. (If you think otherwise, let me know.) But for now the plan is to close down this blog site in about a month (to give time for everyone to realize what is going on), and switch to our Facebook site.

Yes, it is true. We reopened a Facebook page. I resisted Facebook -- mostly because all the notifications were so intrusive. But Will showed me how I can turn those off. Plus I heard that Facebook is really important to budding business such as ours. So if you are on Facebook, and want to check out the biz, you can do so. We signed up under the name 'Northwest Charters'.

The first charter is next Tuesday and we'll micro-blog from the boat onto the page. I have gone from not even having a telephone to now having a smartphone and iPad 2. So we are fully plugged in, baby, and ready to rock your world!! :-)

I wanted to start this blog out (and failed) by THANKING EVERYONE who contributed to this site. Even if you read it but didn't comment, thank you! That was contribution enough. What kept me/us going with posting these blogs was knowing you were reading them. Thank you very much. It was very inspirational all of the time, knowing people cared about us and were sharing in the highs and lows of our adventure.

I miss the cruising lifestyle very much. Yes, it was difficult. Things broke allll the time. Bad weather. A host of other issues. But those bad memories fade fast and all I am left with from our trip is memories of fantastic sunrise/sunset vistas, 24/7 with my family, incredibly awesome cruisers (and non-cruisers), historic wonderment, flora and fauna beyond belief, and God-made natural works beyond compare.

So the current plan (subject to change on a weekly basis!) is to work the next 5 years or so, get Will into college (if he wants - he'll be a freshman in high school this year! Yikes!!)), and set sail again -- this time for the S. Pacific and SE Asia. The cruising is so free. No pat searches or wand scans when you enter a country by boat. Having a 30-mile view out your "office" window every day, all day expands and stretches the mind. And, of course, moving your home around this big ball all speak to a freedom lifestyle I find increasingly choked out here in America.

Without going political on you, I am becoming increasingly intolerant and frustrated by all of the government regulation and intervention. I just want to live and not hurt anyone, without the government telling me everything I can and cannot do.

For now we will survive and keep the spirit alive within us. I look forward to staying in touch with the many friends we made "out there", as well as the ones closer to home. We have such love in our hearts for each and everyone of you/them! God bless.

Or as a sign at a church nearby says "Love God...grow together!"

Making the adjustment

01 August 2011 | Oak Harbor, WA
Peter
It has been a little over two weeks since Jim and I hit land (not literally 'hit', you numbskull!!). One week of that was taken up with Race Week. So I have been 'home' a total of ten days. It seems like a blur.

We got moved into our apartment....barely. We haven't gotten anything out of storage, so we are living out of boxes on the floor. It reminds me of 'The Godgather' when they talk about moving into flats and "going to the mattresses". Ruth has assembled an ecclectic collection of household items she has collected from the boat, friends, local shops and thrift stores and we are pretending to be 'home'. But it is physically tough.

Mentally we are fine. Living in Oak Harbor is much, much better than that urban jungle they call Seattle. So the call was a good one for transitioning.

The charter business has been ramping up well beyond expectations. So we are busy getting the boat ready for that. We have been blessed beyond our dreams with not only several charters, but charters from really cool people! I think I am really going to like this charter biz if the clientele keeps up with our first batch!

Race Week

23 July 2011 | Oak Harbor Marina, Oak Harbor, WA
Peter
We arrived a week ago Thursday and I had just enough time to catch my breath before Race Week started last Sunday night. Whew, that was close! I got a ride on my friend's Beneteau First 35s5 -- J Rosenbach and s/v 'Bodacious' -- and I was glad we made it in time for the racing. It was good!

They put us in with the P30 group -- a bunch of 30-footers that include Olson 911s and S2 9.1s. It is a fun fleet, even if I did diss them in a letter-to-the-editor several years ago! (Ooops! Another "foot-in-the-mouth" move!) Anyhow, we also had a Cascade 36 with what I will affectionately call a "gift rating"-- s/v 'Rain Drop' from Portland.

This boat has had so many facelifts it makes Joan Rivers look like she only recently took up knives and sewing!! This thing is a late 70s/early 80s vintage sailboat that looks like it has had about $80,000 crammed down its 36-foot length. It is really too bad because the boat takes away from the good sailing that the crew aboard did all week. Any good sailing the crew did was immediately chalked up to this really whacko boat and its 'improvements'.

Anyhow, we got off to a slow start on Monday. I think the crew might have been a little intimidated. There was lots of competition and it was alllll good! I know I was a little intimidated. J had me calling tactics -- a position I am still growing into. Being up there on "the big stage" kind of got to me, I think.

The boat was going OK, but between a few bad calls I made and a few crew snafus, we managed to eke out a 2nd in the 3rd and last race of the day to save our pride. Tuesday was slightly better -- again with one 2nd but also with some more crooked numbers. Instead of posting a 2-5-8 on Monday, Tuesday we posted a 2-5-9. But the crew was feeilng 'up' because we were definitely sailing fast. The 9 came when we had a huge 'issue' that sent us from 2nd to last, only to claw back to 9th. So we knew we 'shoulda' had a 2-5-2.

Wednesday came and we knocked off a pair of 4s. Not really a stellar performance. But a bad call on my part in the last race of the day gave up, like, 2-3 MINUTES to the competition! We had 3rd locked up and I went and threw it all away going to the wrong side. Had we gotten a 3rd, we would have finished 3rd for the day and been in the prize giving.

I was feeling bad cuz I couldn't deliver the hardware (trophy) to J for the day. Thursday morning I woke up hungry for a trophy and confident. We had the boat going well and we were just getting better and better. I knew the team was peaking at a good time. When the breeze in Penn Cove picked up, I knew we had a fighting chance.

Sure enough, we scored a 2-1-2 in Thursday's 3 races and now J had the pickle dish I so desperately wanted to deliver on. A side benefit was that it moved us from 5th place overall to 3rd!! Not only did we have a pickle dish for the day, but we were in contention for the week as well. All we needed to do was sail well on Friday (which we were already doing) and protect our lead.

The wind was real light on Friday -- not conditions that favor our boat. But the breeze never filled in and with no races on Friday, 3rd in class was ours.

The whole week was a positive experience for me. Even though I made a few bad calls early in the week, I redeemed myself later in the week when the chips were down. Plus there were a couple of times when J let me drive down wind and I either held our position or gained. So both of those positives helped me gain confidence.

Calling tactics can be a 'pressure position'. Make the wrong call and everyone points the finger at you. Make the right calls and the crew pats themselves on the back for a good race. But J's crew was great -- keeping the pressure off and letting me do my thing. And it worked out great.

We did a year's worth of lee bows in one week. The competition was fierce and I got a chance to sail against some of my old crew -- Jeff Janders, Kelly Havig and Jeremy Groesz. Sailing against them was almost as much fun as sailing with them. Maybe if they hadn't beaten us and finished 2nd in class it would have been more fun!! :-)
Vessel Name: Time Warp
Vessel Make/Model: Jeanneau Sun Odyssey 45.2
Hailing Port: Seattle, WA
Crew: Peter, Ruth & Will
About:
Seattle-based crew out for 3-4 years. We'll start in the Med in Spring, 2009, visit the Caribbean, Panama Canal, So. Pacific, and eventually end up in Oz. After that? Who knows! Peter is an avid sailor and world-class racer. Ruth is learning to sail, and Will is a very good youth sailor. [...]

Who: Peter, Ruth & Will
Port: Seattle, WA