AndrewB
Well-Known Member
I never knew you cared!
We can't go on meeting like this ...
We can't go on meeting like this ...
Agree that there´s definitely variety out there, each to his own and all that.
We find that when we want to stay somewhere for a while, there´s usually a reason. And when we want to move on, it´s usually because we want to. Sometimes one wants to stay longer than the other, but usually it´s a pretty close run thing. Guess it´s just about enjoying whatever takes your fancy (and not being too judgemental of others).
I think the question is a bit of an oversimplification - I know several liveaboards who stay pretty much full-time in one marina, but do sail the boat several times each week. While not strictly liveaboard - we do have a house that we visit most weeks - my wife and I are pretty much in this category. Really, it's down to your financial circumstances - we have fairly senior full-time IT jobs and don't have the luxury of wandering from place to place. Our boat certainly is 50% seaside flat, but I don't apologise for that - it cost under £100k and marina fees are around £3k per year - show me where we can find any kind of flat within travelling distance of London for that sort of price!
we could only afford a shoe box . . .
The original question is as answerable as "Do people move around?"1. People in permanent houseboats in designated sites.
2. People living aboard (theoretically) mobile boats in the UK.
3. People actively cruising around.
The various liveaboard issues are totally different for these three types. Type 1 are for all practical purposes little different from shore dwellers. I'd hazard a guess that there are similar numbers of type 2 & 3 - type 3 are growing faster though - but there are many who alternate between cruising and staying put.
Odd question I know but do liveaboards sail very much or tend to moor in one place?
Living aboard means just that, that the boat is your home. To have a house and then use a boat for a few summer months is the yuppy lifestyle of those who buy up all the cottages in Norfolk and barely use them.
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+1
My boat in Portugal cost £16k and will probably be worth £16k in ten years. Marina and hardstanding amount to £3k pa inclusive of water and electricity. Maintenance is pretty minimal. That £3k is more than compensated by savings spending the winter outside rip-off UK - we spend at least six months of the year on board
This is her (ignore asking price): http://www.internautica.de/lysander/
Some may sneer 'floating holiday cottage' but I don't know of any holiday homes on the Algarve for £60.00 per week.
How much sailing we do is down to us. The main advantage is that we do not have anything tied up in foreign property and we can move her at will. If push came to shove we could even just walk away. She does not owe us anything.
A shoe box eh? You were lucky, I could only find a sheet of corrugated iron!![]()