Hi. I'm Craig McPheeters. I'm an early 50's single man who was raised
on the prairies far away from the ocean. I moved to Seattle from
Toronto in 1996 and started enjoying the ocean in various ways. After
Sea Kayaking for a number of years, I started sailing in 2006 and still
remember approaching a sailboat for the first time and being a little
overwhelmed by all the lines, wires and apparent complexity that there
was to figure out. I figured it out, going through the Windworks
sailing program pretty quickly. I bought my Pacific Seacraft 37, Luckness, in 2009. Luckness arrived
without a lot of equipment and I started outfitting her for coastal
cruising in the PNW. In 2010 I started outfitting her for offshore
cruising. In early 2011 I retired from my job as a software developer
which I had held for 20 years, sold my house and moved onboard. On
September 1st 2011 I left to go cruising, single handed. I had a one
year plan which I thought of as an initial trial. I had a lot to test
out in this year. My plan was to sail a triangle: Seattle down the
coast to Mexico, Mexico to Hawaii and finally Hawaii back to Seattle. I
thought that if all that went well, I would continue the cruising
lifestyle with an open ended trip. That brings my story up to date with
where I am now, in Seattle, working on the odd boat project, waiting
for summer to arrive so I can leave and head south again.
Why did you decide to cruise?
Luckness in Neah Bay after returning from Hawaii |
I had reached a point in my life where I was asking myself the question:
are you working to live or living to work? I needed a change and this
change seemed to be about as dramatic as I could imagine. Cruising also
seemed to be a sustainable new lifestyle, something that if I enjoyed
it I could spent years and years doing. I was attracted to the
possibilities, the freedom each day could bring, the variety, the people
I would meet along the way and the adventure of traveling around by
sailboat.
Is there a place you visited you wish you could have stayed longer? I was only out for 12 months, split pretty evenly between the west coast of the USA, Mexico and Hawaii. If I could rearrange those 12 months I would spent more time in Mexico. From my experience so far, Mexico is a cruisers paradise. You are welcomed where you go, the country I saw (the Southern Baja Peninsula) was absolutely beautiful, its warm, sunny. Hawaii was not nearly as cruiser friendly in comparison, although I met great people there and had some good times.
Tell me your favorite thing about your boat
Is there a place you visited you wish you could have stayed longer? I was only out for 12 months, split pretty evenly between the west coast of the USA, Mexico and Hawaii. If I could rearrange those 12 months I would spent more time in Mexico. From my experience so far, Mexico is a cruisers paradise. You are welcomed where you go, the country I saw (the Southern Baja Peninsula) was absolutely beautiful, its warm, sunny. Hawaii was not nearly as cruiser friendly in comparison, although I met great people there and had some good times.
Tell me your favorite thing about your boat
Tell me your least favorite thing about your boat
What are some of your favorite pieces of gear on your boat and why?
How often have you faced bad weather in your cruising? How bad?
What type of watch schedule do you normally use while offshore?
This depends on where I am and how long the trip is. As I am single
handing, I was always on watch...however, I wasn't always awake. I was
normally never close to shore (less than 30 miles) for more than a day.
That is, on my hops down the coast to Mexico, if I was going any
distance I would arrange to be farther offshore so I could sleep more
easily at night. My sleep schedule is to never sleep more than 20
minutes, and I have an alarm (a Watch Commander) which enforces this. I
kept to this sleep schedule for all of my passages, the longest of
which was 21 days from Hawaii to Neah Bay. I was able to put up with
this schedule, although I was always very happy to arrive at anchor and
be able to sleep soundly through a night. If the trip I'm on is not too
long (no more than roughly 30 hours) or close to potential traffic,
I'll won't sleep at all - but obviously this only works for shorter
trips. If the trip was long enough, I would plan it in a way that I
could sleep in 20 minute intervals somewhere along the way.
Finish this sentence. "Generally when I am provisioning..."
Finish this sentence. "Generally when I am provisioning..."
...I buy too much. So far all my trips have started from a port which
had lots of provisions available to me, and I would find myself loading
up on goods to ridiculous amounts. I would be going through 'what
if...' scenarios constantly and find myself walking by a grocery store
and stop in and load up, again and again.
What is your biggest lesson learned?
What is your biggest lesson learned?
That a prairie boy can do this! You don't need to have been born on the
water into a family which has sailing in its blood back for
generations. That might help, but if you dedicate yourself to learning
everything that is required, you too can go cruising. Buy lots of
books, take lots of classes, listen to smart experienced people every
chance you get, get out and gain your own experience. Its working for
me, which is still a little surprising sometimes.
What do you find the most exciting about your cruising life?
What do you find the most exciting about your cruising life?
Its not all "beautiful sunsets and cocktails in the cockpit" - this life
can be a lot of work at times, from what I've seen of it so far. But
the rewards so far outweigh the other loses and costs.
I'm looking forward to starting my cruising adventure again this summer
as I leave Seattle heading toward New Zealand via Mexico.