Rob44
New Member
Great advice, I do intend to do exactly that so prior to purchase.I’d go sail on as many different boats as you can during your training to see what you like, find essential, discover is not as useful as it looks. You’ll get dozens of opinions on the “right” boat for your trip. But I would say that step 1 is to define in very rough terms that trip. Where you want to go, how far you want to travel each leg, who might join you on the trip will all be factors.
I think the biggest challenge is insurers don’t like singlehanded sailors on multi day trips.
Oh, this sounds like a change from the OP? I assumed you had some sort of annuity or existing recurring passive income stream. Earning money will be hard - many visitors visa’s will not allow it. Even if you can find work you will likely be at the bottom end of the pay curve - when the “easiest” travel comes when exchange rates / economies play in your favour.
Personally I’d say this is a much more crucial question than how much to spend on a boat.
I think you also need to be realistic about doing maintenance, life chores (everything takes longer afloat), working and still having time to sail. Some people manage but I honestly think I’d struggle to do all that solo even without doing multi day passages.
Do you have any options that would let you say, buy a place to rent as an Airbnb in the summer, go sailing whilst it generates you money through the season with someone else going cleaning etc, then return to live in it and earn money in winter before repeating?
So maybe the greatest drawback for getting insurance is being single-handed? If so, wouldn’t finding some competent crew to cross, say from the Canaries to the Caribbean in December, be relatively straightforward?
I don’t intend living out the rest of my life alone and cruising around the world solo, but, I’ve been divorced and split with a long term girlfriend, so whilst I also want to be entirely independent if I need to be, I don’t want being single to stop me either.
It isn’t a change from the OP. I’ve only suggested a sum of £200K for initial boat purchase/savings and a £1400PM income. These are only example figures. My own are a bit different. I figured if I’ve spent, say, £100K on a boat and upgrades and there’s £100K savings left over, along with the £1400PM, eventually there’s going to come a time where the savings pot will have to be increased again.
I could sail for a period and come back to my old work, save like crazy, go back to sailing, or I could work for more years still, put more into the pension pot, get rid of the expensive car and so on…but life is getting shorter and so I’m super curious as to what experienced sailors might do with the amounts suggested and how and why. I’m hoping to learn from the suggestions and ideas.
I like the idea of renting my current house though, or downsizing and renting out something smaller, as mentioned earlier, and somehow financing the boat through other means. Maybe that’s key to it all. Finance for the boat, savings to reduce finance commitment, income from rent, and some income from the £1400PM might cover it all.
But the savings that I do have, not yet mentioned, I’d want for the courses and necessary boat upgrades. And the cost of the courses is one thing, the months doing them and not working and also paying a mortgage and so on is something else.
I think I have some serious numbers to crunch, but it’s also why I’m asking the original questions to help that process and give me things to think about that I haven’t thought of