
Consumer Fatigue
We’re back in the U.S. and we’re spending money like drunken sailors…well, we’ve spent very little on booze and none in brothels, but we’re spending lots. Neither of us enjoys it.
We’re back in the U.S. and we’re spending money like drunken sailors…well, we’ve spent very little on booze and none in brothels, but we’re spending lots. Neither of us enjoys it.
An experienced cruiser offers tips to keep your stuff dry in the dink.
Wendy Mitman Clarke gives you a peek inside Osprey‘s onboard medical kit. Web extra from our June 2012 issue.
You often hear folks claim that the trip from San Diego to Cabo San Lucas is so easy that anyone can make it on a 55-gallon drum. Of course, this means it is an inherently difficult passage when heading the other direction.
There is no reason we must leave. We just want to go someplace else, see something else. I guess this is wanderlust.
How will the cruising lifestyle shape the world view of voyaging kids?
Here’s a simple solution for your onboard paper-towel roll that you can add to the “why didn’t_ I_ think of that?” file.
The distinction between the minimalist cruiser and the rest of us is how they determine what gear or system earns a place aboard.
In early 2006, after our second daughter, Frances, was born, I had the mother of all epiphanies: we should quit our jobs, sell everything, buy a boat, and sail around the world.
Inspired by a story in Cruising World, the author wonders if the cruising lifestyle is really in his kids’ best interest.
In our twenties, we traded our boat for a house and our freedom for careers. In our thirties, we slumbered through the American dream. In our forties, we woke and traded our house for a boat and our careers for freedom. And here we are.
Canadians Craig Acott and Laurie Bowers chose the Antares 44i for their sailing adventures.
We’re back in the U.S. and we’re spending money like drunken sailors…well, we’ve spent very little on booze and none in brothels, but we’re spending lots. Neither of us enjoys it.
An experienced cruiser offers tips to keep your stuff dry in the dink.
Wendy Mitman Clarke gives you a peek inside Osprey‘s onboard medical kit. Web extra from our June 2012 issue.
You often hear folks claim that the trip from San Diego to Cabo San Lucas is so easy that anyone can make it on a 55-gallon drum. Of course, this means it is an inherently difficult passage when heading the other direction.
There is no reason we must leave. We just want to go someplace else, see something else. I guess this is wanderlust.
How will the cruising lifestyle shape the world view of voyaging kids?
Here’s a simple solution for your onboard paper-towel roll that you can add to the “why didn’t_ I_ think of that?” file.
The distinction between the minimalist cruiser and the rest of us is how they determine what gear or system earns a place aboard.
In early 2006, after our second daughter, Frances, was born, I had the mother of all epiphanies: we should quit our jobs, sell everything, buy a boat, and sail around the world.
Inspired by a story in Cruising World, the author wonders if the cruising lifestyle is really in his kids’ best interest.
In our twenties, we traded our boat for a house and our freedom for careers. In our thirties, we slumbered through the American dream. In our forties, we woke and traded our house for a boat and our careers for freedom. And here we are.
Canadians Craig Acott and Laurie Bowers chose the Antares 44i for their sailing adventures.
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