An old
friend just proved an often heard adage is not quite right. It's been
said the two happiest days of a boater's life are when he buys his
first boat, and when he sells it. We just sold our old friend,
Namasté, our 21 foot Chris Craft and we honestly say it was not a
really happy day. We had many good times on the boat, and learned a
lot about the west coast of Florida in the process. It wasn't always
fun, though, but we will miss her. She was safe and secure in rough
seas, and at home in a three foot chop as any small craft I've been
in. She was dry under full throttle even though an occasional rogue
wave could drench the cockpit. Namasté was at home just about
anywhere on the water. When we picked her up, we thought her
exquisite, aesthetically perfect lines were prettier than any boat we
had seen. There was one major problem, we had to rename her.
Blazoned
across her mustard colored hull was the huge white lettered name
“Whim Wham.” Great, just the boat you want to take your
grandkids out in. We bought her from a fellow in Punta Gorda who
looked like he hadn't named her. He hadn't. Really, he looked more
accountant than swashbuckler. He was the second owner. The first
owner probably died of VD or rampant alcoholism, but we liked the
boat in spite of the name and brought her home across Charlotte
Harbor towing a six foot dinghy that was included in the deal. That
was luckily included in the deal, I should say, as I sat in it for an
hour while I unbent an unmarked, wire crab trap by hand from around
the propeller. Lesson: never venture out without a tool kit and
avoid bleeding in shark infested waters. Actually, the alligators
keep the sharks away in the Myakka River, but my hands were pretty
well lacerated by the time we finally got underway. When we finally
got her home, I tied her to a neighbor's dock while we had a boat
lift and a seawall installed. The day she was lifted into place was
indeed a happy day.
We
took trips to Cabbage Key and through Boca Grande pass, exploring
Charlotte Harbor and the Peace River without worrying about expending
the 80 gallons of fuel we carried. Of course, gasoline was only a
buck and a quarter a gallon back then, and we didn't have the
destructive ethanol additive to worry about. Gas tanks and
carburetors stayed clean and we ran just fine. As the price of
gasoline crept up, our trips got shorter. And slower. But the
noisy, thirsty 200 horse power Mercury Black Max outboard motor had
developed another problem: it was becoming unreliable. We had to make
a decision about the boat: fix the motor or replace it, or possibly
even the boat. I borrowed a trailer big enough to handle our 3500
pound baby and hauled her into the yard next to the house in the
spring of 2006. I rebuilt the carburetors and replaced ignition
coils. I swore in frustration as love bugs got sucked into the open
carburetor throats and stalled the engine. I replaced all the chrome
hardware that had deteriorated from the exposure to salt water,
including all the hinges and cleats, and meticulously, gently removed
the name. She only came with two seats, so I installed two more in
the stern. I replaced the Bimini top with a new, longer top. After
cleaning and waxing the hull, I carefully applied her new name,
Namasté. After six weeks of work, we relaunched her only to find
the engine problem hadn't been fixed. Out she came again and this
time I tore all the wiring out and rewired the entire engine. Finally
she was put back in the water and she started up and ran the way she
had when we brought her home, but she was as noisy as ever.
People
a block away could hear her when I started her, and conversation on
board, even while we were at idle, was out of the question. We
actually took cotton wads for our ears with us on one trip, but they
were no help. I decided the next time the motor gave us problems, it
was coming off. Two years later we pulled off the Black Max and
installed a rebuilt Yamaha 200 hp outboard motor. It was like night
and day! We had our old boat back! Unfortunately, the price of gas
soon went to 4 dollars a gallon and we found ourselves in a quandary,
we couldn't afford to take her out every time we wanted. A full gas
tank was worth $320! We finally had a quieter, reliable engine, but
no place to go.
We continued to take her out though, sometimes with fishing friends, sometimes with guests to see if we could find Dolphins. Still, when we had more than four guests, we had to take a fold up lawn chair placed in the center at the stern. We had one poignant trip when we asked dear friends to join us for a sun-down cruise to the river. Their adult son was dying from cancer, so the trip was special for all of us. In a cruel turn of fate, his mother and father were also gone within a year.
We continued to take her out though, sometimes with fishing friends, sometimes with guests to see if we could find Dolphins. Still, when we had more than four guests, we had to take a fold up lawn chair placed in the center at the stern. We had one poignant trip when we asked dear friends to join us for a sun-down cruise to the river. Their adult son was dying from cancer, so the trip was special for all of us. In a cruel turn of fate, his mother and father were also gone within a year.
In a memorable return trip down the Peace River from visiting the Navigator restaurant with friends from Germany, we passed under the Blue Angels as they performed for a near-by air show. I saluted the blue F-18 as he leveled out just above the water off our starboard bow and he returned the honor with a wing waggle as he passed a few feet over head.
We will miss our old friend, but we have a new one coming next week to take her spot on the boat lift. The new boat doesn't have the beautiful, sleek lines of the old Chris Craft. Rather it looks like a utilitarian barge. Her replacement is a pontoon boat. With only a new four-stroke 70 horsepower motor, our fuel consumption should be cut in half and we will be able to carry on normal conversations at idle. It has comfortable seating for eight people. We started with a small 22 foot sail boat, then made the jump to our big power boat. The new one should fit somewhere in the middle.
Another old boating adage says power boats are going somewhere but sailboats are already there. The new boat will nicely fit both worlds. We'll call her Namasté II. It couldn't have a better name.