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 Part 2 - The  Kit I got tired of always  dealing with engines and old outboards, so I bought a shiny new 6hp Yamaha one  day when I was feeling plush.  It is a little undersized at times, but the  weight savings compared to the 8hp models is enormous and lends me confidence  when I'm hefting it on and off of mounts, and it saves 15 kilos worth of  freight each time I move.  I have a collection of  plastic UN-approved and sized 20L jerry cans: two red for petrol, four blue for  potable water, and two white for anything else.  This way I don't need to  rely on integral tankage, and having all of them of equal and manageable size  allows them to stack beautifully.  I made bicycle panniers that hold  one can each side, but I fit them to whatever bike I find locally.               I have a galley box with  all of the essential utensils and implements, and a single-burner MSR  multi-fuel backpacking stove that happily runs on the same gasoline as the  outboard, so I only need carry one type of fuel.  I have a  collapsible charcoal grill at the moment as well, which generally (but not  always!) gets used shoreside and sometimes with foraged wood.  I use a Sawyer gravity fed water purifier when needed.  I'll probably add a  composting toilet at some point, when I come across a boat that doesn't already  have something that is make-workable.  I have a hefty Whale portable manual bilge pump that so far has (luckily) been used for  everything except pumping water out the bilge.  Electrical systems are  the hardest part to generalize and need to be dealt with individually.               Individually rechargeable  lights are always a great solution, though more often than not I manage to  cobble something workable together with what's already there.  I have  considered building myself a box-mounted distribution panel and harness  "octopus" that I could move from one boat to another (there are  really only a couple of layouts used in sailboats in this size range, right?),  but again, I've not yet run into a situation where what was already there was a  completely lost cause.  I like making what I have, work.  I bought a used Watt & Sea hydro-generator from a guy who was disappointed by its  performance (expecting miracles, I suppose...) and that has proven fantastic as  a source.  I take the moorings that nobody else likes because they are in  a high-current or tidal flow, and it happily spins out watts all day and  night. I really like the fact that it encourages me to sail more.  It  starts putting out current at less than two knots of flow, but really shines  when it has about five, so that does create a practical minimum waterline  length on any potential hull.  It is also pretty pricey.     I've also got a roll-up  solar panel that is useful at keeping the anchor light working when I'm away  from the boat, or keeping the cell phone and stuff charged.  The hydro-gen comes with  it's own controller, as does the solar panel.  I let them both operate  independently, but it is rare that both are ever used at the same time.  All of my navigation kit  (software, GPS, etc) is laptop based, and I have both wifi and cell boosters.   The cell booster isn't completely universal, but has worked fine over my  past few locations.  It probably seems extravagant, but my data plan is my  connection to the world and lets me work on contracts elsewhere; it's a  necessity for work, not for living.  I have an  old-but-oddly-reliable Simrad tiller pilot as my extra set of hands, and I generally have  enough electricity from the hydro-gen to run the pilot and my laptop while  sailing along and working from the cockpit all day; I reach off in one  direction in the morning and then come about and reach back in for the  afternoon.  Life is good sometimes : )  I use handheld compass,  GPS and VHF, but mostly as a safety tool in the event that I go MOB so they are  always stashed in my PFD.  Tools -  Of course, I've  got an assortment of the usual hand tools including fids, needles and a  stitching palm that lets me keep old rags useful and earn a few extra bucks  when I need to.  There is also a bunch of useful bits of rigging that I  always take with me, ranging from shackles and blocks to cordage and tape.  I  organize it all in canvas bags inside of appropriately sized buckets, which are  always useful to have on hand.  I don't have anything  too crazy, partly because I work in and around boatyards so a few bottles of  beer and big blue eyes often get things "done" for me.  I have two  Japanese-styled handsaws, because they are light and break down into very  little space.  I like to whittle, so I have few knives and gouges and  rasps.  Spanners, sockets, screwdrivers, allen keys, side cutters,  linesman's pliers, caulking gun, rubber mallet, hatchet, sand paper, paint  brushes, scrapers.  The outboard came with every tool that is needed for  user-servicing.  It usually all sits in a bucket.  None of it is  interesting or exciting, but on a boat that doesn't have too much, not much can  go wrong nor needs to be fixed.  I avoid power tools,  because the electricity common to each of these places varies.  There  really are very few places where 110-120VAC is used in the world, but I'm still  hesitant to commit to 220-240VAC tools (adapting two available 120 receptacles  to one 240 line is easy enough) even though I don't have a really good reason  why I haven't.  Aside from not having had to yet. Toss in the  differences in frequency, and the chargers of cordless tools get even more limiting.  Fasteners and  adhesives -  Ziplock baggies full of new and reclaimed screws, bolts, nuts, and  washers.  In bags they all cram down into a very small space and are worth  shipping especially after an Asian stint.  Fibreglass is very  easily available so I don't bother, and resins have a very short shelf life so  they really shouldn't be kept.  They would have shipping issues as well, I  suspect.  I've always got a tube  of silicone and a tube of not-too-adhesive bedding compound on hand, because  old boats leak.  A lot.  I don't ship any of it.  I suppose I  could figure out at which point a product becomes a candidate for saving and  shipping based on weight, but I tend to look at it as partial tubes have such a  short life that they aren't worth going through the hassle of listing,  declaring, and proving safe to ship.  I'm really good at giving things  like that away to the next guy.  Shipping the Kit I don't have a preferred  method of shipping my gear, instead trying to make the best use of carriers and  agents that we're already using at the boatyard.  Using local shipping  agents also lets my little and relatively light pallet ship as part of a full  consolidated container, though that sometimes means that things take a bit  longer to get back into my hands at the other end.  I often use an empty  pallet and crate from an engine because they are sturdy and light, and let the  customs agency that has been getting all of the boat building material into the  country figure out how to get my stuff out. I have always had easy access to  crates, so I've not thought much about what it could be if I were to want it to  be reusable. Maybe a two-piece dink could be designed to close like a clamshell  with everything inside.  It is always  surface-shipped, as none of the previously fuel-containing articles can be  shipped by air.  The same is true of lithium batteries in many cases, so  that needs to be kept in mind.               My most recent shipment  coming back to Toronto from Perth had a bunch of clothing and "stuff"  and weighed in just over 100kg crated and took about a month, door-to-door;  those two points are just about as far apart as is possible on the globe.  General Thoughts I think a camp cruiser  kit is quite viable, with thousands of twenty to twenty-four foot boats out there  to be had wherever you might be or want to go.  There were so many of them  built and they are easily and inexpensively had that buying two just to merge  them into a single, slightly better one is an option (especially with scrap  lead selling for over a dollar a pound so the discarded keel might help finance  other parts of the project).  Camping gear is readily available, and so  long as one doesn't fall for the marketing it can be very affordable and all  fit in the trunk of the car or a broom closet at home.  Maybe an  all-in-one kit box that is freight-company-acceptable might be marketable?  Languages!  It  makes things interesting, that is for sure.  I used to work really hard to  learn the local language, but have found that most of the official entities and  port authorities have provisions in place for dealing with English-speakers.   Learning the indigenous language makes my day-to-day life of shopping for  vegetables and underwear a lot easier, even if only because I am trying and the  locals appreciate that.  As far as work goes, I tend to deal largely with  fairly well educated people and they have long known that being able to  communicate in English is invaluable, so it has made it easier for me.   Sometimes, though, there is merit in keeping my mouth shut, my ears open,  and my comprehension secret.  To Sum Up               Advantages to the way  that I approach life afloat?  Two advantages, and two reasons:  (i) The biggie:  It  gets me on the water wherever I might be quickly, as I usually don't have to  build or repair much of anything.  I hand over an envelope with a bit of  cash, shake hands, check the through-hulls, paint the bottom and go.  (ii) The fun:  It  lets me pick a boat that suits the waters that I will be in and the type of  sailing that I will be doing, even if that might sometimes be dock-bound.   I can afford to be a bit frivolous and try out something different if I  want to because I'm not overly invested of time, money, nor sentiment in the  boat itself.  (iii) The peace of mind,  on a professional level:  I'm holding myself accountable for the part that  I have played in creating the mess - the wasteland of forgotten dreams - by  quite literally living with and in it.  (iv) The right thing, on  an environmental level:  The most environmentally-friendly boat choice (at  least as it relates to construction) is one that has already been built.   I'm not making anything worse.  *****  Clearly, hermit  crabbing is not for ‘all the people, all the time’. But it’s something to  keep in mind when opportunity arises over some far horizon.  It’s a way to see some  more of the world, accumulate inexpensive education or establish a base along  any sea. The possibilities are  endless... |