Friday, October 29, 2010

Press Conference October 28, 2010

Following is a transcript of my recent press conference. In the interests of time, I thought I might let it stand in for a blog entry.


Susan: Welcome. I guess we all know why we’re here. Interest in our life, Bob’s and mine, has swelled to unmanageable proportions, lately, and I felt the need to address some questions and perhaps clarify some misconceptions. Let’s get right to it. Yes-- (she points at the cutest male reporter in the room).
(Cute reporter): Do you think you’ll ever get that boat done?
Susan: This is the question we’re asked nearly every day, by folks at the grocery store, people touring the boatyard, even strangers on the street. We get bags full of mail weekly, and every one of them is full of letters and postcards with nothing on them but this question.
(Cute reporter): Well…?
Susan: The assumption under which we operate is that we will get the boat done. We do not know when. My latest personal assessment is that it will be finished in the Spring. Bob thinks we can finish it sooner, but between you and me, he is not known for his ability to estimate how long stuff is going to take. Yes. (she points to another reporter)
He: You say the boat will be finished “in the Spring.” Would that be this coming Spring, or the Spring of 2012?
Susan: I’m going to ignore that.
Female Reporter: Didn’t you say, at your last press conference, that the boat would be finished by Christmas? (Simultaneous shouted question) Is it true that you told your neighbor, who lives in the trailer nearest you, to shoot you if you were still there in November?
Susan: One at a time, please! I may have said something to the effect that we would be finished by Christmas. As far as the neighbor thing, I was reminded of that a couple of weeks ago. But he’s out of town right now, and anyway, it’s still October.
Reporter: Is this the hardest thing you've ever done?
Susan: No.
Reporter: Is it the hardest thing you’ve ever done that you don’t feel you can complain about?
Susan: Absolutely. Our life today is in many ways the result of our choices. Therefore complaining about it is awkward, at best.
Reporter: Is the condition of the boat your choice?
Susan: No, as a matter of fact, it’s not. When we bought the boat, we had no idea that there was ANY wet wood or delamination (fiberglass separated from its wood core). We paid a lot of money for an expert to examine the boat very carefully. He photographed the boat with something called infra-ray thermography, which turns out to be a great tool for discovering rot on boats if you know how to use it. He apparently didn’t know how to use it. We discovered a soft spot in the deck, which is the first indication of wet wood, about 6 months after we bought the boat. It’s pretty much been downhill since then.
Reporter: Can you describe the process you go through to fix the boat?
Susan: Yes, I can. Simply put, the decks of the boat are like a fiberglass sandwich, with fiberglass being the bread. We remove the top layer of fiberglass, take out the rotten wood that is in there, replace it with new wood and close it back up again.
Reporter: That sounds like a pretty simple process. How come it’s taking you so long?
Susan: What if I tell you that it involves about 25 different tools and 7 different
materials to do what I made sound so simple? Also, we cut the decks in about 2-foot
sections, and there are approximately 88 feet of decks. Plus cabin-top. Plus some interior walls that have had to be replaced, one of which included a corner that was the intersection of about 8 different angles. In a way, we are completely rebuilding this boat, in the midst of its own continuing deterioration. It feels like ¾ of a step forward, ½ a step backwards every day.


Reporter: Do you find it embarrassing that you’re still working on the boat?
Susan: Yes, in a way, I do. We never thought it would take this long, and it’s very hard to explain it or justify it. On the other hand, the boatyard is full of boats that people planned to “fix up”. For the most part, those boats end up abandoned. Even if we give up one day, I’m proud of us for persevering this long.
Another Reporter: Do you see "the light at the end of the tunnel"?
Susan: We thought we saw it a few times, but it turns out it was just the reflection of our worklight on the little mirror we use to dig out wet wood from places you can’t see straight on.
Reporter: Do you ever feel like quitting?
Susan: Just about every day.
Reporter: If you had known how long it was going to take, would you still have started this process?
Susan: The answer to that question isn’t easy. Of course if we’d known the condition of the boat, originally, we would not have bought it. But owning the boat as we do, we would have had to put up with leaking portholes, ceilings, trim, and the decks getting more and more unsafe—not for simply walking on, but for taking the stress of sailing. As time went on, the condition and value of the boat would have continued to deteriorate. But still, I think there’s a chance we would have been able to learn to live with all that. It’s hard to say. We’ve had to learn to look at this huge delay in our plans as part of life—by that I mean be happy, despite the fact that we’re living in this nasty old trailer, and working our butts off every day purely as the result of some negligent actions on the part of the surveyor and the original owner, and some mistakes of our own as well. Such is life, right? The trick has been to not look at it like “the adventure begins the day we put the boat in the water,” but more like “the adventure begins today.”
Reporter: Does every day feel like an adventure then?
Susan: No. But most days do. We’ve walked off the edge of a cliff. Even the falling is an adventure. (There is silence in the room)
Reporter: Care to finish that metaphor?
Susan: Just a little cliff. Just sliding down a short slope. A nice green lawn at the bottom. Hopefully we won’t have to mow it.
Reporter: Have you ever thought of mailing a bag of wet wood to the guy who surveyed your boat?
Susan: Why yes, as a matter of fact, I have. I haven’t done it yet, but I might. I would mail a similar bag to the previous owner, who did some very clever painting and staining on the interior of the boat, or we would have been able to see there were water intrusion problems. It’s too bad we aren’t all playing by the same rules. Bob and I would not be able to hide or lie about the condition of something we were going to sell. We’re in line for tickets to the world where nobody does that kind of thing.
Reporter: Can you update us on your friend who needed a kidney transplant?
Susan: Yes. She still needs one. Call me or e-mail me if you’re even the smallest bit interested in donating, and I can give you a contact name at The University of Pennsylvania. Or go online yourself at www.pennmedicine.org/transplant, for info, then email stephanie.neal@uphs.upenn.edu.
Reporter: Is it true that you don’t actually like sailing?
Susan: I’m sorry, I see that we’re out of time! Thank you all for coming, and be sure to pick up copies of the photos I’ve supplied.


 Above: "Before": One little cupboard, with stainless steel pieces that support the mast.
And the same cupboard, today. What doesn't show in the photo, and is clearly not yet "finished," is the stuff in the lower corner, pictured below. I have no idea what it is. Ach.

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

May 25, 2010

Well, I’ve been sick all week, which has been a real pain in the ass, but if sickness ever comes at a good time, then this past week, for me, was that. A time to stay in bed, re-read Salinger, drink tea-- I recommend Lemon Zinger, with plenty of fresh lemon and some sorghum syrup from Elroy, if you can get your hands on it. Here is our life to date, in bullet points:

  • My kidney-needing friend has had to switch doctors, and institutions, in an effort to find her new kidney. Both her brother and I were rejected by the original doctor, for reasons that nine out of ten doctors agree are bogus. Her brother, being the first choice, is now up at bat again (the lineup having been run through once already). So if you’re one of the people worrying about me and this donation, hold on to that thought for awhile. Or better yet, put it aside. Meanwhile, send your best thoughts and/or prayers (or both!) my friend’s way.

  •  Kai graduated May 14, from NC State. Yippee! Not that we ever had any doubts, but the reality is nice all the same. As is the reality of an actual job, which awaits him at Duke Energy in Charlotte. He’s planning to work a few years, pay off debts, save up some money, then go back to school (not necessarily NC State) for his Master’s. For the occasion of my child’s college graduation, I treated myself to a manicure, a pedicure, and some new clothes. I was happy until I saw the photo the waitress took of us at the lunch after graduation—somehow I don’t show up as the beauty queen I thought I was at the time. Or even the handsome matron. As a matter of fact, I think I looked better last winter in my pink Snugli, or Shruggie, or whatever that thing was called. So I include, instead, a very sweet photo of Kai.

  • Kalliope (Boat #2) is sold, and gone, as of this past weekend. We actually signed a contract with her new owners two months ago, but the process has dragged out some (okay, a lot, or as a friend called it the other night, “torturously”). The new owners wanted a heating/AC system installed, which Bob did for them, beautifully, carefully, s-l-o-w-l-y, over a period of many months, it seemed at the time, though it turned out to be just the two. Here she leaves the slip at Holden Beach for the last time, under her new name, Alethea.

    Here’s what owning Kalliope taught us: We like living on a sailboat, though some of us are still not completely sold on the idea of “sailing.” We prefer the layout of Trio (Boat #1) to that of Kalliope. And we enjoyed, on Kalliope, the solidity, the cleanliness, the feeling that there were no unknowns—no places you just didn’t want to think about. Trio has many of these places. Trio needs a lot of work. Her decks are, to put it nicely, rotten. Replacing them is, for the most part, how we’ve been occupying our time for the past several months, before, after and in between working on Kalliope.

    Working on Trio is like remodeling an old house. The window is leaking, so you check the sill. It’s rotten. You try to remove it to replace it, but in the process you break a window pane. The window was old anyway, and not very energy-efficient, so why not go ahead and put in a new one? But when you finally get the frame pried out from the wall, you smell a funny smell. You dig around a little in the wall and discover that a family of flying squirrels has been living there, together with a snake, three turtles and seventeen ducks, because the wall actually opens, without a barrier of any kind, you now realize, into what appears to be a huge sinkhole in your back yard-- (where did that come from??)-- one with black, mucky edges on all sides except the side where someone has started a trash dump, and set some old tires on fire, and chained up some really scary-looking dogs….

    But it’s okay. We like working together, for the most part, though there are days when the blend could be better. When you have a work force of two, half of which is looking at every aspect of every job in peaceful contemplation of how to make it better, and the other half is sighing, rolling its eyes and asking questions like “Can we just get on with it??” you’re bound to have some rough moments.

    So the goal is to get the boat in good shape (all decks replaced, all hitherto unexplored spaces explored, all equipment installed and functioning well) and in the water by the end of October, or maybe November. Christmas at the latest. Really. At the very latest.

    Have a great summer. I’ll keep you posted!

    Saturday, January 23, 2010

    January 24, 2010

    I hate to leave you all hanging so long that you forget the story line here, or worse, cease to care. But I will nevertheless try to keep this one short. We’re still living in the trailer from hell, but, two days ago, the old rusted don’t-even-think-about-what-microbes-are-living-in-it window heat-a/c unit died, in a loud and violent way, and instead of saying “Tough nuggies, isn’t it obvious we’re never putting a dime into that place?” the owners kindly allowed us to purchase and install a new unit, in return for which we will not pay rent for a few months. Now we have nice clean air to breathe, we can hear each other talk when the heat is turned on, and it doesn’t cost us a small fortune to keep the place hovering around 60 degrees. I’ve been wearing an average of 5 layers of clothing, top and bottom, and I want you to take that into consideration when you view the photo of me in the newest fashion rage—pink Snuggie, avec scarf at neck and waist. I have a pink tam too, which matches the Snuggie as though they were designed by the same French Fashion House, but I rarely have to wear that any more, inside.

    I still have two kidneys. My friend is recovering right now from surgery to remove the cadaver kidney that has been kindly keeping her blood clean for the past 15 years. It had gotten exhausted and stopped working about 6 months ago, having lasted about 3 years longer than the usual donated cadaver kidney but, in its death throes, had begun putting out chemicals that were making my friend very sick. So it had to come out. She’s on anti-rejection drugs now, in preparation for my kidney which, as soon as I get finished with the last two of the seven thousand tests I’ve had done, I’ll be happy to give her. Here’s a picture of us as little girls. When this photo was taken, we’d already been friends for about 4 years.



    What else? Kai is enjoying his last semester of school at NC State-- designing electrical-type projects in lab, and training for road races with the Cycling Club. Bob is still working on our friends’ boat—here’s a photo of the railing he built on their deck. I help him when he needs it, otherwise I write, bake cookies or bread, my new (renewed) fun thing to do to keep me awake at night and make this trailer feel like home. I walk on the beach nearly every day, sun or rain, cool or cold. It’s free, it’s different every day, and it's always, to me anyway, astoundingly beautiful.Trio still awaits our attention, and we still need to sell Kalliope. If you have any sailing friends, give them this link! www.kalliopechallenger40.webs.com


    We’re fine, we’re happy, we hope you all are as well. We'd love to hear from you! Suzy