My nose is an icicle. Apart from my icy
forehead, it’s the only part of me exposed to the artic air. Beside me the
captain lumbers. He is a hibernating bear. If it wasn’t for his body heat, I’d
have died during the night.
Outside there is the constant thwap thwap
of some boat’s halyard’s and then she howls – the wind, through all the masts
in the boatyard. It’s eery. And it lets me know it’s going to be even colder
outside. God forbid one of us has to use a toilet. The walk across the yard is
unfathomable.
A week ago we arrived back in Florida, back
to our boat. As we drove, we peeled off layers of Canadian winter clothes,
migrated from coats, wool hats and leather boots to rubber flip flops. I
announced the rising temps on our dashboard as we made it further and further
south. And when we arrived, there was a full week of shorts and t-shirts and
big silly grins on our faces.
But then winter followed us here, and it
does not care about our lack of insulation. It doesn’t give a damn that when
boats are on dry dock and you are silly enough to live onboard, you cannot use
your own toilets and have to walk half a kilometer across the yard to use the
grimy public ones…
We thought we were quite clever back in
August, buying a car to take on an epic road trip – all to avoid working on the
boat in the excruciating heat. We’d come back in January, we said. We’ll do the
work in the cooler weather we said. Well here it is. I was far warmer in Canada
on the minus 21C days. At least there was heat.
There’s a boat behind us that sits quietly
for days at a time, waiting for it’s sensible owners who come down from
wherever their home is, when the weather is good. And they work on her a bit,
getting her ready for a season in the Bahamas, and then they go home again.
Home. It turns out that it’s not just a
concept. Home is where the heart is, and all that. Nope. Those of us who have
no home – except one that floats – come face to face with this all the time.
“We live on our boat!”. “But where is ‘home’ really?”
For JW and I, the issue is even more
serious. We have never lived together in either of our home countries. If we
wanted to, it would involve a lot of immigration red tape. We lived in Ghana,
we live on a boat. People thought it was exotic when we lived in Ghana, but
this living on a boat?! We’re practically insane.
And to border patrol agents, we’re a couple
of potential drug smuggling, tax evading, dirty-hippie, good-for-nothings.
We came through the border from Canada, like
all the day trip shoppers in the queue of cars. And then we pulled up to the
little window, handed over our passports and said those fateful words. “Where’s
home?” “On a boat!”
“Please pull over to the right and enter
through door 2.”
Oh no! And so we did. As all the people
with homes drove through without incident.
Three hours later, we emerged from that
interrogation shaken visibly. I wanted a cigarette and I don’t even smoke! I
wanted a whisky too but had to make due with warm Diet Pepsi that I’d left in
the car when we went through Door 2.
The moral of that story was ‘NEVER SAY YOU
LIVE ON A BOAT.’ Even if it’s true. And if you are part of a couple where
neither is legally allowed to live in each other’s home country, just give two
separate addresses. Even if it’s not true.
It turns out that our officer-de-jour was
hell bent on catching us out, proving we were smuggling something, evading
something, living illegally in the states. Because no one lives on a boat, so
we MUST be lying! In order to catch us out he interviewed us together, then
threw a piece of paper at me and shouted, separated us and interviewed us with
the same questions in different forms.
“Where do you work?”
“We don’t”.
“What do you mean you don’t work?!”
“Ok then, where do you pay taxes?”
“We don’t.”
“What?!!!! How can you not pay taxes?”
“Well neither of us work or own any
property in either of our countries of origin and since we don’t live in any of
those countries…”
“Stop, stop talking.”
“So,” He asked, with a snide demeanor, “you
say you live on a boat?! Where is your home port then?”
“Toronto, in Canada, but the boat has
never, and will never go there.”
“Why not?!”
“Well it’s too cold, and we’d have to pay
duties and taxes…”
Eyeroll.
“So where are you going in this boat when
you get to it?”
“Bahamas.”
“WHERE in the Bahamas?!”
“Well it’s a sailboat, so hopefully lots of
places.”
That was obviously taken as insolence. He
was sooooo unimpressed.
“Where will you dock the boat? What will be
the marina base?”
“None. We anchor everywhere.”
Big big eyeroll. “Go sit down!!!!”
He then called me up alone and asked me
“what contraband items am I going to find out there when I search your car?!”
So, shaking in my seat, I admitted to the
bag of pitted dates I’d bought at Costco a week before…
“What?! Dates?!” He guffawed, rolled his
eyes and dismissed me. And the dogs descended on our car.
So nearly three hours after it had begun,
he called us both to his desk and admitted he could find nothing to hold us for
or deny us entry. And he confided in us, “If you don’t want this to happen
every time you come into the states, don’t say you live on a boat!!!”
So there it is. Our lifestyle is socially
and legally unacceptable.
And it sucks when we are in a boatyard too.
Way too hot or in this case, bloody cold. I can see my breath as I write and my
fingers are seizing up. Also, when we are out there on the ocean there are
storms and bad seas. Lots of things suck.
It’s definitely not always paradise. But it
is amazing. It’s freedom. And when it’s good it’s nature and beauty and long
walks on uninhabited beaches.
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But not today. Not this month. All this
work will lead to one of those days, though. And then it will all be worth it.