In his retirement, my father took up boating and spend
endless hours, days, seemingly forever, on the Lancaster Canal in his cabin
cruiser, sailing up and down. His first boat was to see if he liked it. He soon
upgraded to something bigger and nicer, even though it needed constant care. He
was involved with the boat club, became Commodore then later, President. The
boat was moored at Forton, when it wasn’t in dry dock for repair, and
occasionally I would visit. Sitting aboard was lovely, until another boat sailed
past. Immediately, I would feel queasy. It wasn’t too bad if we were moving,
but apart from attending a couple of dinner dances with the boat club, I didn’t
grow to love his hobby. It was good for him, even when he became the subject of
some gentle ribbing for being very sea-sick sailing from Fleetwood to the Isle
of Man, and back.
My desire to visit the Outer Hebrides out-weighed any sailing worries and I booked ferry routes with short crossings. It worked very well. We had CalMac ‘island hopper’ tickets with the intention of seeing as much as possible. The longest crossing was Stornoway to Ullapool coming home. It was so good, it filled me with confidence to return the following year to see Barra and Vatersay, which we had to miss out. The ferry from Oban to Barra was over five hours. Four of those hours was enough to put me off all planned sailing trips round the small islands and I dreaded the journey back. We reached Vatersay driving on a causeway and keeping mindful of the times of the tide. It was worth it.
This summer, we sailed to Guernsey. A brave decision on my part, which I regretted shortly into the ferry journey. Those wrist bands did nothing for me. We needed our own car, not just to explore the island, but to continue our holiday along the south coast when we came back to the mainland.
I loved sailing the River Thames on a sight-seeing pleasure boat in London. I enjoyed the same thing in Shrewsbury, too, so not all is negative.
On our trips to the Ayrshire coast, we go to look at Ailsa Craig, an island that has fascinated me for years. It’s where the microgranite for curling stones is quarried from. I wonder if I could cope with a boat trip, just to sail round and back? I’ll see what next summer brings.
Meanwhile, next Tuesday, New Brighton beckons. Justin Hayward in concert. A first for me. The last member of the Moody Blues. It will be moving.
My Haiku style poem,
It’s such a gentle motion,
Roll from side to side.
Soothing? Not for me,
It’s torturous endurance
With nowhere to hide.
Too late to lie down.
These wristbands are not working
Are we nearly there?
It feels so awful,
I’m not doing this again.
(Until the next time.)
Thanks for reading, Pam x


2 comments:
I don't like to tell you this Pam but my sister went on one of those Moody Blues cruises about 10 years ago. She loved it.
Sorry to hear about your sea-sickness. You seem to be a natural to be a sailor.
Hope you enjoyed the JH concert.
Excellent haiku.
I've never been tempted by a holiday cruise of any description, with or without rock bands every night. I'm quite partial to both the Zombies and Renaissance, just not on the high seas. Not that I mind the high seas. It just seems incongruous and expensive. However, I can understand the appeal for you of consecutive nights in white satin. 😉
Sorry there only one Moody Blue left, but long may you continue to enjoy their music.
I liked your rolling haiku very much. A tip I was given about seasickness is to stick elastoplast behind your ears. I've no idea if it works.
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