Category Archives: boat

The Fitzgerald Freewheel draws closer…

For some time, R and I have planned to take a ‘grown up gap year’. For a long time it’s been a vague dream, an adventurous year away from work and a chance to transition away from London.

This January, we crystallised our plans. We’re selling our boat ‘Jessie’, and hope to start a three-month tandem cycle trip to Istanbul in September. When we return to the UK, we plan to voyage the British canal network for six months or so. Things are rather open-ended after that, but I am planning to start an MPhil in philosophy in October 2011.

It’s a strange time at the moment.

Right now, we’re painting and sprucing our boat, taking a few viewings in the hope that we find the right buyer soon. It’s a funny kind of limbo; we are both still working full-time, and it seems like we have a myriad of practical obstacles to tackle before we turn our wheels towards Istanbul. And yet we’ve set the wheels in motion – colleagues at work all know what we’re planning.

Occasionally on my cycle to work I try imagine what it’ll be like on that day when we totally shift gears, moving from a busy London life to nothing in the diary for three months. On other days it all seems unachievable. What if we don’t get a buyer for our boat? What if the sale takes too long and we can’t cross the Alps before the snow? What if I don’t do well enough in my philosophy exams?

I know in my heart that a big  part of what we want with our ‘gap year’ is freedom from obligation and stress. I know that whatever specific shape things take, we’re guaranteed adventure and change. In one sense, we just can’t imagine what the trip will be like. I just need to be patient and wait for that first morning of the big cycle, whenever it comes.

Tide & time

This is a very handy Mac Widget for a narrowboater- it gives the latest tide heights for your local area. Image is The Great Wave off Kanagawa, by Katsushika Hokusai, (葛飾北斎), (1760—1849)Picture_1

Jessie’s forthcoming voyage

We’ll be taking our boat from Blackwall to Uxbridge:

View Larger Map

Neighbourliness

Living on a boat means you’re automatically more in touch with your neighbours, much more so than conventional London living.

I think it’s a combination of the shared way of life, the fact that you pass each other frequently on the pontoon, and perhaps the fact that moorings are generally locked, so people on the pontoon can only be other boaters.

We’ve recently changed moorings, and have found our new neighbours to be as friendly as our previous ones. Friday night in particular stood out: dinner with our next-door neighbour (planned), a drink with some new neighbours who popped by, and off to another boat for more drinks and a conversation late into the night (all unplanned).

It’s also wonderful to be able to call on neighbours for help, like when I dropped my keys into the 9 metre deep water. A new neighbour gladly lent me their ‘Sea Searcher’ magnet, which caught the keys first time! (I was almost disappointed that I didn’t haul up loads of sunken treasure in the process)

I suppose the only potential drawback is that neighbours fit into the same social category as family- you can’t really choose them, and it’s often hard to escape them. If you were a shy and retiring sort, you might find the regular socials a bit trying. You might also feel obliged to be sociable to someone you’d rather run away from.

Thankfully, I don’t feel any of the anxieties expressed above. In fact, I feel greatly blessed by my neighbours- they’re a great community. In particular, the many spontaneous things we share with our next-door neighbour (meals, cycle trips, episodes of Doctor Who) bring loads of fun into my life.