[10-Mar-2026 16:43:24 UTC] PHP Fatal error: Uncaught Error: Call to undefined function add_action() in /home/riveted/public_html/wp-content/themes/chosen/inc/customizer.php:4 Stack trace: #0 {main} thrown in /home/riveted/public_html/wp-content/themes/chosen/inc/customizer.php on line 4 [10-Mar-2026 16:43:37 UTC] PHP Fatal error: Uncaught Error: Call to undefined function add_action() in /home/riveted/public_html/wp-content/themes/chosen/inc/scripts.php:43 Stack trace: #0 {main} thrown in /home/riveted/public_html/wp-content/themes/chosen/inc/scripts.php on line 43 American Tug – Riveted http://www.riveted-blog.com Fri, 29 Sep 2017 16:53:45 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.8.13 https://i0.wp.com/www.riveted-blog.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/cropped-riveted_favicon.png?fit=32%2C32 American Tug – Riveted http://www.riveted-blog.com 32 32 112264036 A Tale of Two Tugs http://www.riveted-blog.com/2015/04/a-tale-of-two-tugs/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=a-tale-of-two-tugs Thu, 23 Apr 2015 16:33:54 +0000 http://www.riveted-blog.com/a-tale-of-two-tugs Continue ReadingA Tale of Two Tugs]]> We love our Nordic Tug. And we love boating way more than we thought we would. Since the end of September 2014 when we bought Airship, we’ve spent 118 nights onboard, traveled almost 1800 nautical miles, and run almost 300 engine hours, and we’re about to roughly double that with this trip up the Inside Passage to Alaska here in a few weeks. It’s pretty clear to us that this “phase” is not a phase.

In all the time spent on our Nordic 34, we’ve learned that there are two things we’d really like to have in the next boat: a bit more storage space, and an extra stateroom for guests.

A few weeks ago we went for another visit to the Nordic Tug factory over in Burlington, WA. They’ve got a new model coming out this year (the Nordic Tug 40…basically the Nordic 39 with some additional secret features). We weren’t able to actually see one of these (they’re still building the first one), but we’ve toured several Nordic 39s and while at the factory, we got to hear about a few of the NT40’s future features (which are very cool, but we can’t tell you about any of them yet).

The NT39, from the Nordic Tugs website:

Screen Shot 2015-04-23 at 10.49.09 AM

Here’s the plan/layout of the NT39/40, roughly:

Nt3940_floorplan

The NT39/40 still has the main stateroom in the bow, like ours, but the NT40 stateroom has quite a bit more room (and headroom). The head is on the port side (and has a larger, enclosed shower stall), and across from that there’s a small guest stateroom with a full-sized bed, nightstand, and closet space. The bed can be configured as a sofa that converts, or as an all-the-time bed.

The salon is larger and has a U-shaped settee and a spacious galley with larger fridge/freezer and generous counter space. The salon and galley feel really open and bright. Overall the NT40 is 40 ft long, and 12’11” wide. (Our 34 is 34′ long and 10’3″ wide, so that’s more than 2′ wider and 6′ longer than what we have now.) The NT39/40 holds 320 gallons of fuel (compared to our current 205 gallons) and 144 gallons of fresh water (compared to our current 100 gallons).

Yesterday, we went over to LaConner for another tour of the American Tug factory, and to look at some boats. Originally when looking to buy a boat, we’d narrowed it down to both Americans and Nordics, and we just happened to find a used Nordic that suited us best at the time. We’re not all “Oh, I’ll never shoot Canon, Nikon ’til the end!” or anything like that. Both boats are very well made and we know we’d probably be happy being in either camp.

The American Tug 395 is the closest to the NT40, so we started there. The AT395, from the American Tugs website:

Screen Shot 2015-04-23 at 11.29.17 AM

The layout is very similar to the NT40, but there was just something that felt a little bit…I dunno…”clunky” is the only word I can think of…in the transition from the salon up to the pilothouse. The space just feels odd (at least in the particular AT we looked at). It’s not symmetric, but it’s not just that…it feels like there’s a bit of wasted space and too much variety in the height of things…hard to explain.

At395

We decided to check out the next size up, the AT435. It’s 43’7″ long and 15’10” wide. That’s a LOT more space, and more boat than we thought we’d want….until we went inside. It’s gorgeous, and has none of the “non feng shui ness” that we were feeling in the 395.

There are a couple of good shots on the American Tugs blog “Steve’s American Tug News” that show the 395 and 435 side by side. That’s the 395 on the left, and the 435 on the right.

American Tug 395 vs 435-018

Here’s the plan/layout view. Main level with salon, galley, and pilothouse:

435planview

The salon has a U-shaped galley and an L-shaped settee, with some great custom options for what happens on the back of the galley counter (additional raised bar/counter with barstools, etc.). The fridge/freezer is huge, and the open feel of this area is great. The pilothouse has a central helm chair (which we didn’t think we wanted, since we like to pilot together) but on the port side of the pilothouse there’s another large seating area with a little table that would be a perfect place to be working while underway. The space on the right of the helm chair is customizable as well. We’ve seen it with a desk, or more seating, or with a closet and stairs that open out to the upper deck.

Here’s the lower level with master stateroom, guest stateroom, and master and guest heads:

435planview-lower

The AT435 has an extra stateroom that can be configured with a queen sized bed with bunk over (for an extra person or kid, or for a couple to store their luggage and stuff). There’s a guest head with shower, and a combination washer/dryer that comes standard with the boat.

The master stateroom is midship, has a queen walk around bed and plenty of closet space, as well as a spacious master head with separate (large) shower stall. It’s a pretty fabulous boat that feels great to be in. It feels MUCH larger than our NT34…but unlike when we were first looking, it doesn’t feel like anything we couldn’t handle. It holds 640 gallons of fuel and 210 gallons of fresh water. Compared to our 205 gallons of fuel and 100 gallons of fresh water, that’s a pretty significant increase in range.

So here we are right back where we started as we think about what our next boat will be. Pepsi or Coke? Canon or Nikon? Mac or Windows? Hatfields or McCoys? Nordic Tug or American Tug?

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Seattle Boat Show http://www.riveted-blog.com/2015/01/seattle-boat-show/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=seattle-boat-show Sun, 25 Jan 2015 03:59:54 +0000 http://www.riveted-blog.com/seattle-boat-show Continue ReadingSeattle Boat Show]]> Tonight, looking back toward downtown from Elliottt Bay Marina (Space Needle on the left):

Downtown_Seattle-3980

Our first night at the marina (Thursday) we ran into our friend Sam and hung out with him on his Nordic 37 and had some wine/beer, and then he came over for a late dinner…really a fun evening.

This boat show business is serious up here! We went to the boat show in Portland a few weeks back and it took us about an hour, max. Not so here at the Seattle Boat Show. This is just part of one of the halls:

Boatshow-misc-2874

We signed up for Car2Go before we left Portland, figuring it would be super helpful for us getting around Seattle while we're in town. So far, it's great!

Boatshow-misc-2880

That's the front of our first cute little Smart car. For those of you unfamiliar with Car2Go, you sign up online for something like a $35 initial fee. They check your driving record and give you the green light, and then with a simple iPhone app (from wherever you are in cities that have Car2Go) you can see where the cars are. You can click on one and reserve it for 30 minutes (that means no one else can come take it before you get there as long as it's within 30 minutes). You get to your car, start the rental from your smart phone, the car unlocks, welcomes you, and you start your rental. The cost is .41 cents per minute, with a hourly cap of $14.99 or something. When you're done, you just click "finish rental" and it charges your account. So far, our rides across town have ranged in the 9-11 dollar range. You can park them in all the city metered spots without paying the meter, so it's probably not that much more than paying for parking in the end. 

On Friday (the first day of the boat show) we headed over (via Car2Go) to Lake Union for the floating part of the show. We wanted to look at the new American Tugs (one of the contenders when we bought our Nordic Tug). They've done some really great things to the new Americans and they're beautiful. We saw a super cool handmade "Sockeye 45" made by the Devlin Boat Co. here in the PNW. Fantastic, and too hard to take good photos of, so here's its listing. There were some ENORMOUS (and expensive!!) boats over here that we peeked in…pretty cool, but not our thing. 

We had some lunch and then took the free shuttle from Lake Union to Century Link Field to the indoor part of the boat show (running through January 31) and, whoa. We hung out a bit with our buddies at the Nordic "booth" (which is really a giant wooden stairway and deck up to a brand new Nordic 39 with a flybridge). Gorgeous boat, and fun seeing and hearing about all the upgrades they're doing (while we think about our second boat wishlist, of course).

We wandered the halls looking at boaty stuff, and stayed for a bit of the opening event "Uncorked" which was basically a scavenger hunt for wine. You get a souvenir wine glass and 6 tokens and a map of where the winery tables are hidden in the maze of boats. We wandered a bit and tasted three wines and then headed back to the boat for some dinner.

The closest Car2Go was about a half mile away up in Chinatown, and it was raining…but we're seasoned northwesters and were dutifully wearing our GoreTex, so not a big deal and kind of a nice walk (after all that…walking).

Boatshow-misc-2873

This afternoon we attended two of four Boat University seminars we registered for: (1) Starting the Trek North through Southern BC: Nanaimo through Cape Caution (something we will probably do in the near future) and then (2) Getting on the Outside: Cruising the West Coast of Vancouver Island (something we'll wait a bit to do). Both talks were interesting and informative.

Tomorrow morning we've got (1) Cruising the Wild & Beautiful Northern BC, and then (2) Understanding the Weather and Cruise Decisiong Making. 

Tonight we picked up a Car2Go and headed over to the Taylor Shellfish Oyster Bar in Queen Anne for some oysters. SO. DELICIOUS. We had a dozen on the halfshell (two each of Virginica, Shigoku, Kumamoto, Pacific, Olympia, and Kusshi).

Boatshow-misc-2876

We shared a caesar salad, and then finished with two kinds of baked oysters: Oysters Marco (bacon, kale, shallot, cranberry, and parmesan) and Oysters Matsushima (mushrooms, shishito peppers, and miso butter). Also SO DELICIOUS. 

Baked_oysters-2882

Our same Car2Go was still outside when we were finished, so we re-rented it, stopped at Whole Foods for some groceries on the way home (not letting go of our rental yet) and then parked it at our secret (not really) spot at the marina. So far, we've always had a car there in the morning. 

On Monday we'll be moving over to the Bell Harbor Marina (much closer to downtown, as shown in this billboard right up the road from us):

Boatshow-misc-2879

That'll be fun! We picked up a local bourbon at Whole Foods to try (2bar Spirits bourbon), and are having a little sip now. It's yum!

Boatshow-misc-2878

Another full day tomorrow, so early to bed!

 

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Why a Nordic Tug? http://www.riveted-blog.com/2014/10/why-a-nordic-tug/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=why-a-nordic-tug http://www.riveted-blog.com/2014/10/why-a-nordic-tug/#comments Wed, 15 Oct 2014 17:57:14 +0000 http://www.riveted-blog.com/why-a-nordic-tug Continue ReadingWhy a Nordic Tug?]]> Nordic34

Some of you have asked us about our boat-buying decision, and specifically about how we ended up choosing a tug. (Note that these tugs are tugs in style only…they don't actually tug stuff.) We might have written about bits of this before, but here it is, all together!

You may remember when we first spotted the cute little Ranger Tugs up in Port Townsend, WA and then again up in Comox, BC when we were on our Airstream trip up to Vancouver Island back in July.

We were working at the dinette at Point Hudson Marina in Port Townsend, and we'd been eyeing these little boats for a couple days. There were four or five of them in the marina…same brand, different models and colors…and they were cute! This shot has three of them, on the left of the image:

Rangers_PT

One day we noticed they were all gearing up to leave and we decided we should run down there and find out what kind of boats they were before they were gone. We went back to the Airstream and started doing a little internet research. Ranger Tugs came in a variety of sizes (21, 25, 27, 29, and 31 foot) and hang on! They're made in Kent, WA, and they're trailerable! The more we learned, the more interested we became. We sent a note to the sales guy to find out if we could come by on our way back to Portland in a few weeks and get a factory tour to see some boats. 

Several days later we got a note from the sales guy that he wouldn't be back in the office for about a month, because he was on the yearly Ranger Rendezvous up to Desolation Sound (basically, a rally on the water). They were leaving Anacortes in the morning and would be in Ladysmith, BC tomorrow. By the time he wrote back to us, we were camped out in Nanaimo, BC — only 10 miles from Ladysmith, so he invited us to come by and see some boats! We did, and then we did again on their next stop in Comox where they had about 100 Ranger Tugs now all heading for Desolation Sound. The Ranger Tug owners LOVE their boats, and they love the company and its service. A lot.

The Ranger Tug 31 (the flybridge collapses down for trailering):

Ranger31

There was much to like about the Ranger Tugs. Compact, stylish, clever design…a lot like an Airstream. Hey! We could really get used to life on the water. We thought about how much we love the bustle and atmosphere of marina campgrounds…how we both grew up sailing and being around boats…and the more we thought about it, the more it made sense that we should see about owning a boat. We took the Ranger Tug factory tour, talked to other Ranger owners, spent a lot of time working out finances, mocking up what color we'd get if we got one, where we'd keep it, etc. 

And then we decided we should do our due diligence and actually look at a couple other kinds of boats. After all, it had only been a few weeks of Ranger-love and we'd never even considered anything else. We noticed that in a lot of reviews of Rangers (and the "pocket trawler" or "pocket yacht" category in general) the mention of American Tugs and Nordic Tugs (also built locally, in La Conner, WA and Burlington, WA, respectively). Since we seemed to be gravitating toward this tug/trawler style (it's so cute, and so livable), we made appointments to go up and see some boats! 

Both the Nordics and the Americans were wider than the Ranger (and therefore, not as easily trailerable). The Ranger has a beam (width) of 10', the Nordic is 11'4" and the American is 13'3". 

To be trailered/hauled the Nordics and the Americans would need a wide load permit AND a pilot car, which can get expensive. The Pacific Northwest is such a fantastic area for boating, but I doubt we'd want to keep a boat on the Columbia River all year and not take advantage of the whole Puget Sound and Gulf Islands (and, you know, Alaska!) But did we need trailerable? We decided we didn't. Twice a year (to and from) we could (1) have the boat hauled from Portland to Olympia (people do it all the time) or (2) once we had enough experience, we could take her ourselves via the Columbia River to Astoria, across the Columbia Bar, up the Washington Coast and into the Puget Sound for the summer. 

And so the comparison spreadsheets began. Ranger 31. Nordic 32/34. American 34/365. We even added a few more into the mix, just to be thorough…the Beneteau Swift 34 and the Helmsman 37/38.

After being aboard these other larger boats, we ultimately decided we wanted more room than the Ranger offered. The floor space in the Ranger is basically the "walkway" running from the aft cockpit door to the helm and front stateroom, with the dinette on one side and the kitchen on the other. It's efficient, but it's tight. In the Nordics and the Americans, there's room to move around a bit more in the salon (room to do yoga, even!) The Beneteau we looked at was a sexy boat, but suffered from the Ikea fit and finish of the interior materials. It looked good, but it really didn't seem like it would age well. The Helmsman was cool, but way too "nautically styled" for our taste…too much wood (even the blinds were wood). Hard to explain, but here's a pic:

Helmsman38

The Helmsman had something we totally loved though…another smaller dinette/settee up in the pilothouse. One person could be drivin' the boat, the other one could be publishing articles! 🙂

We pretty quickly found ourselves narrowing it down and comparing between a few used Nordic Tugs and a few used American Tugs (same size range), but kept coming back to the sleeker, lower-to-the-water hull shape of the Nordic Tug. We liked the straighter pilothouse windows (over the slanted slightly out windows on the American Tug). The Nordic Tug was more efficient. Its smaller hull lets it go faster with a 260hp engine than the American can with a 380hp engine. At sightseeing speeds, the Nordic uses about half the fuel than the American does. For us, having a boat is not about getting anywhere quickly. It's about being on the water, watching sea life, enjoying the the fresh air. If we only had weekends, I could see wanting something faster to go further in less time, but we plan to use this boat just like we use the Airstream (exploring, working, cooking, etc.)

Here's the American Tug 365 (previously called the 34) shown with and without flybridge option:

American365

American_nofly

The Nordic 34 (previously called the 32):

Nordic34

They are both fantastic, well-made boats and I'm sure we'd have been happy with any of them (even the Ranger). 

All of the previously owned American Tugs we found were older, all had carpet (which we'd definitely want to remove and replace with teak/holly or Amtico…not a minor expense), and the previously owned Nordic Tug we found had great floors, was a color we liked (both exterior and interior), and was much newer. The Nordics and the Americans both have a separate shower in the head, and not a wet bath like in the Ranger (also like we had in our first Airstream). 

When we moved from a 22' Airstream to a 27' Airstream (and have now spent almost 700 nights in our 27'), the two upgrades we REALLY appreciated in the 27' were a separate shower and a larger capacity fridge (well, and a couch). The Nordic has a fridge closer to the size we had in the 22' Airstream, and the American has a larger fridge and separate freezer like we have in the 27' Airstream. This was a little problematic (because produce takes a lot of room, and the freezer on the Nordic is tiny), but we solved the issue by adding a decktop fridge/freezer to the Nordic (which will double as a bench, with a padded seat top). 

Some Spec Comparison Between the Nordic 34 and the 27' Airstream

The fresh water capacity in the Airstream is 39 gallons. The Nordic 34 holds 100 gallons.

The black water tank in the Airstream is 39 gallons. The black water tank in the Nordic holds 30 gallons (but it's SO much easier to empty).

The gray water tank in the Airstream holds 37 gallons, and on the Nordic…26 gallons. Smaller, yes, but the thing that's different about gray water on the Nordic is that it automatically pumps out when it gets full enough to trip the pump. You use biodegradable products (as we normally do anyway) and you never have to fuss with it. The water from the sink drains directly overboard and never enters the tank. Sweet!

Water heater capacity on the Nordic is the same as in the Airstream: 6 gallons. The water heater in the Airstream is electric when you're on shore power, and propane when you're not. The water heater in the boat is electric when you're on shore power or running the generator, and is also heated by the engine when you're underway…no propane for the water heater on the boat.

The stove/oven on the Nordic works off of propane. There's only one propane bottle and it holds 5 gallons, but the only thing that uses that 5 gallons of propane on the boat is the stove/oven (not like in the Airstream, where it's the fridge, water heater, stove, and heater). Also, here's a pic of our new stove/oven that just went in yesterday:

Force10

The boat has three (!!!) built-in heaters. One is like a car heater that works off the engine heat when we're underway. Another is a built-in electric heater that works when we're plugged into shore power or running the generator. The third is a diesel heater that gets its diesel supply from the boat's main fuel tank (for use when we're anchored or moored somewhere without power and not running the generator).

Power

The Airstream gets its power from two places: (1) shore power when we're plugged in, and (2) solar power all the time (when there's sun), so we have a LOT of battery in the Airstream (900 amp hours total).

The boat (once the upgrades are finished) will only have about half that battery capacity (440 amp hours), but the boat batteries get charged four ways: (1) shore power when we're plugged in, (2) solar, like the Airstream (the boat will have two 140-watt solar panels on top of the pilothouse), (3) by the engine when we're under way (the Airstream does this a tiny bit too from the tow vehicle, but at such a trickle it really has no effect), and (4) the boat has a 5kw diesel generator that runs off the boat's main diesel tank that we can run pretty much any time we want. So power will not be an issue with the boat.

—————————

Overall, the living amenities in the Nordic Tug 34 are very comparable to what we know we enjoy and can live and work comfortably in over long periods of time in the Airstream. We wanted to take what we'd learned from our experience Airstreaming and apply it to how we shopped for a boat. 

The styling and design of the boat is something we thought about, as well as size. Our goal was to get the smallest boat we could live and work in for long periods of time. We wanted the boat equivalent of our Airstream, not the boat equivalent of a huge fifth wheel or motorhome with 5 slideouts…something comfortably livable yet stylish and efficient. I think we found it! 

 

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A Visit to the Nordic Tug Factory http://www.riveted-blog.com/2014/09/nordic-factory/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=nordic-factory Sun, 21 Sep 2014 13:33:00 +0000 http://www.riveted-blog.com/nordic-factory Continue ReadingA Visit to the Nordic Tug Factory]]> A couple months back while we were looking at boats and trying to zero in on which might be right for us, one of the things we did was get a tour of the Nordic Tug factory in Burlington, Washington. These are very well-made boats (as are the American Tugs, made in nearby LaConner, Washington — our runner up) and you couldn't go wrong with either boat. It was great to see the process, and we're very happy with our choice.

I didn't show you these earlier, because, well, it was a surprise (and we hadn't decided yet)!

Nordicfactory2

Nordicfactory3

Nordicfactory1

Early on Tuesday morning we'll be heading north to close on the sale of our boat, and then starting right in with a few days of on-the-water training. We want to learn as much as we can (while there's someone right there to answer questions) before we strike out on our own (where we have to look things up on the internet). 🙂

After the 29th, we'll be having a few upgrades done to the boat, and once those are finished we'll probably explore the San Juans a little bit (if the weather's still decent) before bringing Airship back to Portland for some Columbia River time.

Morning at Cap Sante Marina, Anacortes:

Capsante

I've already purchased a couple of the things from my Airship Decor post yesterday and I'm excited to see how they look on the boat. (I just want to be ON the boat already!) I'll wait to decide what else we want/need until after we've actually lived on the thing for a little bit. The boat is coming to us already outfitted with so many things we won't need to buy (fantastic!) but we know we're going to want to personalize the look and feel with our own bedding, throw pillows, towels, etc. 

That pillow with the woodblock print of the giant octopus attacking the boat? Yeah. I got two of those. 

 

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We Bought a Boat! http://www.riveted-blog.com/2014/09/a-boat/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=a-boat Sat, 13 Sep 2014 13:00:00 +0000 http://www.riveted-blog.com/a-boat Continue ReadingWe Bought a Boat!]]> Airship-1997

Back in July when we were staying at the Point Hudson Marina in Port Townsend. That's when we caught the bug. It's remarkable that we hadn't caught it before, honestly. We both grew up sailing and boating with our families, and as you've no doubt noticed, we LOVE the marina campgrounds when traveling by Airstream. And still, it never occurred to us until recently that we might want to own a boat. 

It started with the small fleet of Ranger Tugs we first saw in Port Townsend. Modern, compact, trailerable, and built in nearby Kent, Washington, the Ranger Tug seemed like it might be the one for us: a boat we could live comfortably in while exploring the waterways of the Pacific Northwest. It was like an Airstream on the water!

We researched every Ranger model online and studied all of the floor plans. We took the factory tour. We talked about options and colors and interior fabrics and everything. But after much more research and experience being on several different boats, we decided that the Ranger might be too much like our first Airstream: wonderful, but a little tight on space for the amount of time we know we'll end up spending in it. 

After quite a bit more research, we finally narrowed things down to two models: Nordic Tug 32/34 and the American Tug 34/365. Both builders are in Washington (Nordic in Burlington near Anacortes, and American in LaConner) so it was not too much trouble to make the trip up (several times) to look at boats, take the factory tours, and get out on the water in both models to get a feel for what we liked best. Both the American and the Nordic tugs are very well made and have the classic tug-trawler design we seemed to be gravitating toward. 

One of the very first boats we looked at was a used Nordic Tug 34 that had been part of a fractional ownership program. It was nicely outfitted, only a year and a half old, and most importantly, did not have carpet. (Kidding, but only kind of…because almost every single used boat we saw had carpet, and not the nice teak and holly floors that most of the new models were putting in). After being in this particular Nordic 34 (wood floors, "whiskey" Ultraleather interior), we couldn't help comparing every other boat we saw to that early favorite. You know how sometimes, something just FEELS right and you can already picture it in your life every day? It was like that when we bought our house in 1996. From the very beginning, it FELT like our home (even before it was). (It was actually like that for me from the first time I met Kevin, too, but I didn't need to go through all the comparison shopping.) It was the same with this Nordic 34. I've been calling it "our boat" since, well, since way too early to start summoning the jinxing powers that be. 

We made an offer, our offer was accepted, and on Friday we went back up to Anacortes for the boat's inspection (which went very well). We should be closing next week and then we'll go up and hang out on the boat, get a few days of training on it from a captain in the area who does on-the-water training (navigation, mechanical systems, boat handling, etc.). We're having the shop add a couple of 160watt solar panels to the top of the pilot house, a 2800watt inverter, a bigger stove/oven (it's got a two burner propane stove top with a small microwave/convection oven, and we're switching that out for an all-in-one Force 10 two burner stove with oven). We're also adding a deck-top fridge/freezer (one that also doubles as a bench seat with a cushion) because this boat has the small 4.3 liter fridge like our first Airstream had (which we already know is too small for the amount of produce and frozen seafood we typically like to be able to have with us). 

After all our training and a little toolin' around in the San Juans, we'll be bringing the boat down to Portland (on the water to Olympia, and then via truck/hauling to Portland). We'll do all of our initial cruising on the Columbia River. Then probably next spring/summer we'll take it back up to the Puget Sound and do some cruising in the San Juan Islands, up into Canada (and eventually, Alaska!) We're SO excited!

No, we won't be selling the Airstream…and yes, time on the boat will likely eat into our Airstream time, but we hope you'll still enjoy following along with ALL of our transportation-related adventures! 

Here's a funny story for you: If you've known us for a while, you'll know we're not namers (or numberers). We call our Airstream "the Airstream" and we don't have any red numbers on it. Never have, never will. We call it an "it" and not a "her" and we don't (very often) make fun of any of you who like to anthropomorphize your piece of Aluminum but it's just not for us. 

We were walking through the marina in Nanaimo, B.C., contemplating boat ownership, when we had this exchange:

Me: "If we get a boat, we're going to have to name it."

Kevin: "Crap. We can't get a boat then. I'm out."

We eventually decided on a name for our boat that seems to fit, is not a pun, and isn't too cutesy. We'll call "it" (still can't bring myself to call it "her" even though I know it's tradition for boats): Airship. It fits perfectly with our transportation them: Airplane, Airstream…Airship. Fleet complete!

Here is our Airship, in the air (for its hull inspection):

Airship-2038

In the front of the boat there's a nice stateroom (bedroom) with a queen-size walk around bunk (bed — a lot like the one in the Airstream, also a funky shape). There's a hanging locker (closet) on the port side (the left) and a shelf closet on the starboard side (the right), plus two drawers underneath the foot of the bed, as well as some open shelves on either side of the bed. There's also a hatch/skylight that opens up (no Fantastic Fan though) and a couple of porthole windows that open.

Adjacent to the stateroom, is the head (bathroom). The head's got a standard marine toilet, sink with mirror and storage cabinets, and a separate shower with its own porthole and a shower curtain. It's small, but it's not a wet bath like in our first Airstream.

Moving to the middle of the boat (up a few stairs from the front stateroom) is the pilot house (the place you drive from). There are two two-person "Whiskey" Ultraleather bench seats with tons of great visibility (notice how the pilothouse is raised from the rest of the boat), doors and plenty of windows that open on either side, and a great suite of navigation electronics (including radar, sonar, and autopilot).

Next (a few steps back down from the pilot house) is the salon (living/dining area) with a nice kitchen (lots of counter space), plenty of storage, an L-shaped settee (dinette) with more Whiskey Ultraleather that converts into a double bed, another hanging locker (closet) next to the aft (back) entrance, and a hidden tv inside a teak cabinet that pulls down from the ceiling. Outside the salon there's a small cockpit (the back deck, despite the fact that "cockpit" sounds like the place you'd drive from). It's big enough for a couple of deck chairs and a cocktail table for sure (or, to fish for salmon!), and has a propane grill attached to the port side rail. There's a ladder just to the left of the back door that leads to the top deck (also big enough for a few chairs and a cocktail table…you sense a theme here, don't you?)

The boat comes with a dinghy (an inflatable Zodiac with a hard bottom) and a 6HP outboard motor, for when we anchor or moor somewhere offshore and want to row/motor to land or go exploring in something smaller. It's attached to the swimstep on the back of the boat with a cool, Seawise davit system for easily raising and lowering the dinghy into the water.

One of the cool things about this boat is that it's coming to us fully equipped. PFDs, bedding, throw pillows, pots and pans, a coffee maker, toaster, silverware, plates, acrylic glassware, first aid kits, a couple of chairs, flares, the hoses we need, etc. We'll certainly replace a few of those things (pillows, plates) with versions that fit our style a bit better, but for now, it's fabulous not to have to turn around and immediately buy all that stuff. 

I'll add more interior photos next week after we close and are IN the boat.

A BOAT! 

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