Showing posts with label love of boating. Show all posts
Showing posts with label love of boating. Show all posts

Thursday, March 8, 2012

If I Had A Boat...I'd Rather Be Boating!


Introduction by William L. Gills aka Bos'n Bill

Have you ever been in that place where you wager, if I could be anywhere else, do anything else other than what I'm doing right now I'd give anything to be there?  I know I have and that place is usually on the water in a boat.

They say a picture is worth a thousand words. I think music can speak another thousand and when you combine music with pictures you have the next best thing to fully experiencing in real time what the words and pictures express. Linda Brown has given us a gift of both in her video gallery of sailboats on Puget Sound/Washington combined with Lyle Lovett's, "If I had a Boat".

Take some time out from you busy day to indulge yourself in one of your favorite pastimes. Thank you Linda Brown for sharing your love of boating in this way.





William L. Gills aka Bos'n Bill, webmaster of this site, is the author of the book Lubber's log, published by Llumina Press; a boating journal and adventure story of the author's first time experiences in the preparation, maintenance and piloting of a new, unfamiliar boat. You can visit his website here.

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Early Boating Memories - Awakening of a Passion



by William L. Gills aka Bos'n Bill

What is it about passion, where does it come from and why do most of us have one or more in our lifetime? I had one that started at an early age as I think it does for most of us. When my sister was a wee girl it was the majesty and beauty of horses; she became an equestrian. For one boyhood friend it was taking things apart and putting them together again; he became a mechanical engineer. Ken used to doodle houses and geometric structures on his school notebook; he became an architect. Me? I had an early boating memory that burgeoned into a zeal. The passion is still with me to this day and it's as fresh and clear in my memory as if it had happened moments ago.

In my vivid recollection, Dad rowed me out about a hundred yards offshore onto the Great Sacandaga Lake in the Adirondacks, NY in a fourteen foot heavy wooden rowboat, painted battleship gray with red gunwales. The anchor was concrete, hardened in a rusty paint can.  When we were out of sight of family and other fellow “beachers” on shore, he dropped a would-be anchor over the side and sat down on the rowing seat to show me how to thread a worm on a hook, to catch whatever fish was waiting on the bottom for a drop in meal.  I didn’t like seeing the worm squirm and writhe as he ran the hook the length of the defenseless victim.  I must have turned away several times with a pained look on my face as my father laughed in the knowledge that this was the same way he must have looked to his father the first time he had to endure the lesson of...sometimes life has to be gross to net a prize fish.

When the worm had turned soft, lifeless and pale we returned to shore, fishless to the throngs on the beach. As we were landing the boat, kids ran to our aid crying out expectantly, “Did you catch anything?”   They wanted to see some fish.

Truth be known, I was glad we hadn't caught anything because I wasn’t ready to endure any new lessons in the fishing primer which I would later learn involved the tearing of an embedded snelled fishhook from a pike's swim bladder and the removal of the head of a living fish, gills undulating apart from a severed body, giving me a bad case of the willies.  With time and experience I hardened into a snakes and snails boy and eventually into a fisherman, but in that process I realized it wasn’t the fishing I was so interested in, it was the boat!

Later, when I was a little older, Dad got serious and bought a three horsepower, blue Lightwin Evinrude outboard motor to expand our fishing horizons:
  

I was thrilled.  I couldn’t wait for him to clamp it on, gas it up and take us for a spin. After he had tested all its features, he let me come aft from the rowing seat to “drive the boat”.  Wow, I was the one propelling the boat through the water, moving us through the ½ ft chop with ease, splashing water port to starboard as the bow hit the backside of each wave, stirring up a bubbling, churning eddy behind us creating a white boat-made wave that I later learned is called a wake.  I was in control of a moving vessel with my dad, a veteran yachter in the WWII Picket Patrol.  The drone of the Evinrude, the little outboard motor at all levels of throttle sounded like to latest fifty horsepower engines, the most powerful of the day.
I felt I had arrived. I was exhilarated and hooked like so many fish I had caught.

As summer turned into off-season I solicited all the boating fodder I could muster in the manner of catalogues and manuals.  I was even going to build a wooden boat; they were cheaper, though still not within my budget until I was much older.  I dreamed of boats, I craved them, probably even more because they were out of my reach.  They have never lost their allure and I’m sure they won’t until I’ve departed my wits and find glamour in a wheelchair.  I hope it floats.

So what's so special about boating you wonder, it doesn't excite me! Who cares? Well, I understand how you feel, I don't get your passion either. All I know is this early memory is indelibly etched into my cerebrum and it's impact has been far reaching. I bet yours has too.

On further reflection, as I ponder the power of passion, I realize how consuming it can become to the neglect of other life's demands; it needs to be tamed, honed and leveled. But, you don't have to understand it to know that life is so much richer for having had it, not only for the pleasure derived in pursuing it and engaging in it, but in the way you can share it in a special way most can't comprehend, but can appreciate. For me my spark was an early boating memory, and it awakened a passion. Got a match?

Visit The Great Sacandaga Lake:  



William L. Gills aka Bos'n Bill is the author of the book, Lubber's Log published by Llumina Press; a boating primer and adventure story about a couples experiences in moving up to a bigger boat.  


Saturday, April 30, 2011

Why You Might Need A Bigger Boat


Introduction by William L. Gills aka Bos'n Bill

It doesn't take long to come to the realization that we want to take the next step, keep growing, not only figuratively but literally, particularly when we're talking about boating. It's almost an epidemic with boaters, the so called “fourfootisis; 12 footers become 16 footers, 16 footers become 25 footers, 25 footers become 36 footers...We can't arrest the need to keep striving for more room, more power, more gadgets.  I have found an article from one of my favorite websites First Boat that discusses this topic in a most entertaining way.  I had to share this with you because I know it's a question in every boaters mind and it begs an answer.  I give you, First Boat and the top ten reasons to buy a bigger boat!   Click here to find out why: To 10 Reasons to Buy a Bigger Boat?   


William L. Gills aka Bos'n Bill is the author of the book, Lubber's Log published by Llumina Press; a boating primer and adventure story about a couples experiences in moving up to a bigger boat.  


Saturday, April 16, 2011

A Boating Video For All Ages

I’ve asked myself why I love boating so much?  I can answer that with words, but can do better with images and music.  We all have a lifetime full of memories, some better than others; some of my fondest were in a boat. Discover Boating has put together a video which portrays how most of us who call ourselves boaters feel about our pastime.  Try and explain this to a landlubber.

Introduction by William L. Gills aka Bos'n Bill








William L. Gills aka Bos'n Bill is the author of the book, Lubber's Log published by Llumina Press; a boating primer and adventure story about a couples experiences in moving up to a bigger boat.  You can visit his website here.


Saturday, April 9, 2011

Do You Love Your Boat?

by William L. Gills aka Bos'n Bill

Do you love your boat?  Stupid question, right?   Everyone chooses the particular boat they own for a good reason.  I’m sure your current boat meets your sense of marine purpose whether it’s fishing, cruising, water skiing, day tripping, camping, living.  And while it may not be your dream boat, it probably if not surely meets your budget.  The dream boat is usually somewhere in the future unless you already own it.  I have a future dream boat, but I love the one I have. Giving it up would cause separation anxiety and rueful malaise.   It fulfills all our needs quite well for now and I have to say quite unequivocally and unabashedly that… I love it in spite of some shortcomings.  Shortcomings, yes that’s it, the boat is too short.  I could use another six feet.

Every boat I’ve owned got the utmost care.  I kept everyone of them spit and polished, everything put away right where I found it, everything working and running like it should so we’d be ready for the next voyage without delay.  Didn’t always work out, I don’t have to tell you how temperamental boats can be and you already know why they’re referred to as “She”.

But, I’ve loved my girls, every one of them.  I took care of them because I knew how fragile they can be and I wanted to bring in the highest recreation and repose factor they could provide at each level of our boating lives.  They take on an air of being almost human, don’t they?  You want to be with them and care for them because they give back, don’t they?  They put you in your favorite body of water and massage your daily cares away, don’t they?  So, what’s not to love?



William L. Gills aka Bos'n Bill is the author of the book, Lubber's Log published by Llumina Press; a boating primer and adventure story about a couples experiences in moving up to a bigger boat.  You can visit his website here.