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5 Reasons not to buy a boat! - Sailing Q&A 23 - YouTube
Channel: followtheboat
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No this is not clickbait, this is a
genuine discussion on why you shouldn't
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buy a boat. And it's come about through
two recent episodes from friends of ours,
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one of whom got in touch. He'd read our
e-book which we put together, two e-books
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recently (if you missed it links below) on
"How to Become a Liveaboard" and "How to
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Buy a Boat". And he said they were great,
but he warned us that we've got to be
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careful not to lead people into a false
sense of security, in that buying and
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owning and living on a boat is
straightforward. He had run into a number
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of issues himself, and ended up paying a
lot of money with a broken engine. And
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we've just heard recently, two friends of
ours have recently just sold their boat
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and have quit this live aboard life. It was
really down to the amount of money, time
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and effort that they were spending on
their boat. And it got me thinking,
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got us thinking, didn't it?
Yeah, there're a lot of people in that situation.
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Yes, so we need to be realistic about it as well.
So we're gonna be warning you, aren't we?
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So here are the five reasons we've put together
for why you shouldn't buy a boat.
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So, first reason not to buy a boat... They
go wrong... all the time! Yeah they do, they need
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constant maintenance. Every day, every
week, every month, every year you will be
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spending a great deal of your time
working on bits of the boat, won't you?
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And although we were warned about this
before we started our sailing career.
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We had no idea how much time was gonna be
taken up by maintenance and fixing things.
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And quite a lot of that time eats
into your dream, so just be prepared!
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You cannot know the amount of maintenance that's
gonna be up there.
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Unless you really love tinkering around in a
workshop, be prepared!
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Yeah well there's, so many things aren't there?
I mean, just look at the boat.
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You've got the rigging, you've got the
sails, you've got the engine, you've got
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the deck. Then there's everything below.
There's plumbing, there's the electrics...
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All of those things you've got to stay
on top of. And you know we've said it
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before, I'm no mechanic. So I've had to
learn the hard way how to do basic diesel
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engine maintenance. You have to do it
because you know there'll be times when
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you're out there, and there is no one
else to fix anything but yourself,
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so you've really got to stay on top of all
those things. Yeah, you have you got to
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become a mechanic, a plumber
an electrician, You've got to be prepared,
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if you don't already know about those
things, to learn about them. And we mean
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really you have to learn about them. So
unless you are very, very rich and can
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afford someone to always do all your
maintenance and check things for you, and
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service everything, and do all the
repairs - you're gonna have to do it yourself.
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But even if you are very rich
things go wrong out there, they go wrong
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out at sea. Engine stops, sails break, you
will need to know what to do. You must be
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prepared to do that. Are you prepared to do that,
are you prepared to take on all these new skills?
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Boats kill relationships.
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Yeah, definitely.
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When you're living in the small confines of a
boat everything is magnified. So if there
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are underlying problems in your
relationship,
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they will come to the fore, believe me,
when you are
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spending 24/7 with each other.
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Yeah, and the other thing to remember is when you
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start this life is you both have to be a
hundred percent committed. It's no good
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if one of you is dragging the other into
this life, because those cracks appear
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pretty quickly, and there are boats all
over the world that were owned by
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couples who gave it all up.
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Yeah and we've seen many boats for sale, haven't we,
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because of this. You know, couples have
split up, and sadly they've had to sell the dream.
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Yeah, there are a lot of solo sailors
out there who weren't original solo sailors.
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So think very hard and
clearly about your relationship.
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Will it withstand 24/7, small space? Any cracks
that are in it now, try and repair them.
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Boats are never clean.
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If "cleanliness is next to godliness",
if that is your motto
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don't buy a boat.
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It's like living in a
house with the doors... all the doors and
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all the windows and the roof lights -
everything open 24/7. Because you have dust,
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and anything that happens to be
hanging around in the air, inside your
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boat immediately. And not only dirt and
dust, you get unwanted visitors!
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We have been fighting a battle against
cockroaches ever since we left the
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Mediterranean. Sometimes I win;
sometimes I lose. You get ants, you get
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mosquitoes, you get all kinds of things.
And worse than that, you can get rats as well!
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So be prepared for your lovely clean
home to be invaded at all times, and for
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it not to be a lovely clean home.
Unless you're one of these types that loves
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cleaning all day and all night!
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And going back to all of those things that you've
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got to be on the boat - in the mechanic,
the engineer, the plumber, the electrician.
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Whilst you're doing all that work, your
tools are going to be left everywhere.
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Liz absolutely hates this,
she gets so wound up by it.
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Of course she forgets that I'm
doing all the maintenance.
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Not quite all the maintenance!
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I do do the plumbing, but I put my stuff
away when I finish. It's all over the
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bloody boat all the time, it drives me up the wall.
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Because you've only got this much space to live in.
So yeah it's gonna be a quite a
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culture shock when you realize just how
dirty a boat can get.
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Boats will change the way you look.
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Yep, you don't have much space on a boat.
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And your wardrobe will be compromised,
so you will have to pare down all your
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fancy clothes to a very small, little space.
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It was heart-rendering when I had to
reduce my enormous wardrobe in order to
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move onto this boat. But I had to think
very carefully about functionality over
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beauty. So out went all the pretty
dresses and the high heels, and I now
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pretty much wear what you're seeing,
which is shorts and t-shirts, all the
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time. So my wardrobe, or my little tiny
locker,
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is filled with those things.
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In a cold climate you're gonna have bigger things,
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bulkier things. And so you have even
fewer of those because there is so little
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room on a boat to keep stuff.
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Don't forget that when you're on a boat you
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are rationing your water. Even if you
have a water-maker pretty much every
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boat will always be keeping an eye on
how much water you are using throughout
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the day and the week. So that of course
means that washing clothes can really
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drain your water resources. But also
washing yourself as well. So I think we'll
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be the first to admit we tend to wash...
slightly... not as much as we should do.
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And that's because we have to keep an eye on
water. Yeah, cruisers are notorious for
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being grubby. You wear the same thing for
several days, and you don't wash for
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several days, but we get used to it!
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And finally just one quick word to the
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ladies out there: forget makeup. Makeup
just falls off in the sun, and when
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you're sailing it falls off in the sea
spray. And it's a pain in the butt.
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So go natural!
You don't need make-up anyway darling...
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And finally... boats eat money.
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You can plan all you want, budget all you
want, but you never ever have enough money.
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No, one of the big things that you
have to think about is new parts because
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things, as we said earlier, go wrong all the time.
And if the thing that goes wrong is an
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engine that's ten grand! Straight away!
You've got to buy a new engine.
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Rigging - you have to re-rig every
ten years, if you're insured they require it.
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And rigging something like Esper is really expensive.
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Sails, brand-new sails. Sails blow out.
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So these are really big expenses,
and unless you've got huge
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savings somewhere, you've got to find a
way, and be prepared to pay for these things.
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Yeah and these things happen when
you least expect it. So forget about a
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monthly budget. We see a lot of questions
from newbie sailors who say what's your
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monthly budget for yachting? Well we
started doing a monthly budget, and it
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just went out the window. You can
have a monthly budget for your
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day-to-day expenses, but the big expenses
they really do come and bite you on the bum.
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Yeah, so what we tend to say is
have a monthly income and work to that
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income, which is what we try to do.
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And finally, boats are not an investment.
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You never make money on boats, you really don't.
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When we bought Esper, 12 years ago,
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we paid slightly less than what she's insured for now,
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but in that time we've paid the same money again,
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and more on updates, parts, refitting everything.
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So she's insured for probably half
of what we paid for her.
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They really don't make money.
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So those are five genuine, honest reasons
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as to why not to buy a boat. So if you are in the
market for a buying a boat,
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I hope these will help you galvanize
your thoughts, because these come from
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experience. This is from our 12 years, our
own personal observations, and what
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other people have told us as well. So just take them
on board, they are serious considerations.
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BUT, having said all that, Liz, why should you buy a boat?
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Oh, because when you've worked through
all the bad times (and there are a lot of them)
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they absolutely, completely
disappear when you're having the good times.
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Thanks for watching this followtheboat extra.
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If you have a comment please put it below,
we're very interested to hear from you on this subject.
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If you have a boat, or you're thinking of buying a boat, what's your experience been?
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And if you liked it, please "like".
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And and if you really liked it, please "share".
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Peace and fair winds!
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