Well, it's been over three years since I sold my Schnoodle Shack. I had a great time building it, as you can tell from my Build Journal, and I had a great time camping in it. It taught me that I could live for extended trips (up to one month at a time) in a confined space and still survive. One summer we spent a month going over 1000 miles through New England on a single trip...loved it!
So in August of 2017 my wife Laurie and I moved to Florida with the intention of buying a yacht and taking a lengthy cruise. We bought a Mainship Trawler, 39' overall length, 14.5 foot beam, air draft 19' and made it our home that fall, and set forth early next spring on Americas Great Loop. We cruise from southern FL, up the east coast, up the Erie Canal, through Lake Ontario and into Canada. Cruised west through Lake Ontario, Trent Severn Waterway, through Lake Huron, down the length of Lake Michigan to Chicago, and down through the inland waterways until be finally arrive back in Florida, 304 days and over 6000 miles later. We lived on the yacht for 2 years and finally sold it for more than we paid for it and bought a condo.
I swear the Schnoodle Shack convinced me this was all possible. The Shack was tight living conditions, but "enough." Moved to the yacht, still "tight" by "dirt standards", but "enough." Then bought the condo that is approximately the same size as our 3 bedroom home we had lived in for 35 years. Seems HUGE after living on a boat.
Don't know what the future holds, especially with the Coronavirus and what it's doing to our country, but I have visions of a bright future. Goodbye again to the friends I made in here. I will probably drop in now and then just to see some familiar faces who gave encouragement when I needed it most.
And goodbye to Tom (again)...glad to see you are still hanging around the file. Sorry to read the Silver Bullet is not registered under your name.





*When doing anything, if there exists no possibility of failure, then any feeling of success is diminished.
**The glass is neither half full nor half empty...it is simply twice as big as it needs to be.
***If at first you don't succeed, redefine success.
****When I die, I want to die like my grandfather, who died peacefully in his sleep. Not screaming like all the passengers in his car.