Beachcruising by Magic
Carpet
Mild adventure; self reliance……
Looking over the gunwale at the shallows moving past –
so foreign and threatening, and yet so wholesome and familiar.
Approaching the shore of an island that only lifts above the
sea for half of the tide – the thrill of walking on its
surface during its brief exposure – what will swim above
it at high tide?
Shells rustling the wavelets – so mild and safe now that
their energy has been expended on the bar – twenty-five
meters between ferocious power and rippling familiarity –
maybe this ripple was born on the western seaboard of America?
My small vessel is the magic carpet which gives me access all
of this, and more. She is a capable seakeeper, yet she spends
most of her active life in benign surroundings – kids,
sun, shallow waters, fishing lines, esky.
I see the towering white, chrome and glass gas-guzzlers, but
do they see me? The grim and determined looks on the faces of
their owners – does their Nautical Appliance give more
than it takes? Does their vessel communicate with subtle and
ever-changing pressure on the tiller? Does their lifestyle allow
receipt of the messages from helm, hull and air? Perhaps, but
they don’t seem to have the relaxed posture of the man
sitting in his tinnie, at anchor just outside the channel. The
man’s face is lined, but breaks easily into a smile, and
my heart tells me that I’m seeing the real man –
not his self-proclaimed image. As I rock and pitch in the steep
wake of the polished fiberglass monster, a cormorant takes flight
from the beacon, and I follow its swoop to the mangrove………..
I stand beside my boat – we are between the Big Island
and the mainland – three miles one way and two miles the
other; yet she gently swims in knee-deep water over a sandy
bottom, undisturbed by the vehicular ferries and cabin cruisers
– protected by the very shallows which give so much pleasure…….
Night – the wind tugs at the boom tent and dodger, protecting
me from the squadrons of mozzies and sandflies which inhabit
the nearby shoreline. After my simple meal I read a favourite
book by the light of a battery lantern – the sounds of
partying from the boats down the bay compete with the lapping
of small waves against the plywood planking inches from my ear
– no competition……….. Much later I awake
and listen – the human noise has gone, but the wind and
waves remain.
Why do so few people know of this secret existence? Most of
them probably think of it as adversity – one man’s
meat is another man’s poison.
My boat is a teacher – she has taught me the folly of
setting out without adequate preparation; she patiently tolerated
my lack of attention to maintenance during those early days
when I knew that I was bulletproof, and hormones ruled my mind.
Now she rewards me when I scrape, sand, and then apply that
magical first coat of primer; when I drive home the silicon
bronze screw; when the resin oozes from the scarphed-in dutchman
as I tighten down on the bar clamp.
She teaches the kids as well, but they don’t realise
it yet. She gives and gives, and takes very little.
Is there any other possession in life which gives so much for
so little? Perhaps to the painter, his brush, pallet and canvas;
to the musician, his favourite instrument; to the woodworker,
his tools. But this boat can carry me over countless miles of
water, yet she came from my own hands and mind – a piece
of functional art.
You can build her too............