Alpaca raft as a dinghy for our sailboat on Flathead Lake.

Boating With Kamikaze Toddlers

When sailing with young kids, get off the boat often. (Seriously.)

This spring we bought a sailboat. It’s a half-century old, 22 feet long, and arrived in our driveway with “some assembly required.” Since sailing is my favorite hobby, I was ecstatic, envisioning lazy sunny days spent cruising over green lakes beneath blue mountains, followed by calm starry nights with the four of us nestled cozily in sleeping bags as we bobbed atop the water. After all, the boat’s name was Tranquilidad, which means ‘peace’ or ‘calm’ in Spanish.

Then — after some complicated assembly and many hours of repairs — we took her out for the first time. It was neither peaceful nor calm. In fact, after 24 hours aboard with two kids under five, I was half-tempted to leave our little sailboat at the boat ramp, too exhausted to deal with de-masting, unpacking, and re-trailering the damn thing. Spoiler alert: boating with babies is hard.

Let’s start with the one-year-old. Now fully mobile, Lyra was pretty miffed to be corralled in a tiny space. And restrained in a bulky life jacket. She made her dismay known with constant piercing screams and loud, grating cries.

Unfortunately, she figured out how to climb up on the narrow cockpit bench where she enjoyed jumping, surfing, running, reaching over the side, and otherwise attempting to kill herself. Reason, as you know, does not work on toddlers.

So we we tried to distract her from kamikaze behavior by offering toys down in the cabin. But she was more interested in dad’s shiny fishing lures, narrowly avoiding impaling herself on the hook. I tried food next, but she squeezed applesauce all over the bed and stomped the goldfish into orange dust on the floor.

Finally, I strapped her to my back with a sun hat atop her head, hoping she would nap so we could sail for a measly half-hour. She threw the hat overboard.

Now on to the five-year-old. Talon is a seasoned sailor, and no longer tries to hurl himself overboard. He also understands rational instructions and wears his life jacket happily. Whew. However, his enthusiasm for the sailboat was nearly as intense as the one-year-old’s frustration with it.

He wanted to fish, then snorkel, then swing from the boom, then paddle the inflatable dinghy … all within the first four minutes aboard. Helping him bounce safely between activities required one adult while the other parent dealt with sails, rudders, ropes and his screaming sister.

Finally, we anchored, nosing into a nook bordered by willows where the river flowed into the lake. The sunset was splendid, the peaks of the Swan Mountains spectacular, the still water a mirror of both. Rob and I took deep breaths (and maybe a shot of whiskey). Talon pointed out beavers and loons and herons as we ate dinner. Lyra smeared most of the noodles on her shirt, but babbled happily at the birds.

Once both kids were asleep, Rob and I settled on the cockpit benches in our own sleeping bags, watching nighthawks eat moths as the moon rose. I drifted off to sleep.

Until it started to rain on my face.

We scrambled to move bags and dishes, setting up a makeshift bed on the sofa/dining table. Somehow, we wedged both our bodies into the small space and actually fell asleep again.

Until Lyra woke crying.

We jigsawed ourselves so I could nurse her. Then, again, fell back asleep.

Until Rob had to pee. Until Talon thunked his head against the hull. Until the loon calls woke me in a panic, sounding like a wounded baby.

And so it went, until morning mercifully came and we started the fun-filled day of “sailing” all over again.

On the bright side, we learned a lot from our first sailboat outing this summer, which made subsequent trips with young kids (a little) easier:

  1. Get off the boat often. We now make sure to paddle to shore to swim, pick huckleberries, climb trees, and otherwise get everyone’s wiggles out. Tight spaces tend to get claustrophobic for everyone, especially toddlers.
  2. Spend more than one night. It’s a lot of work just to get the boat off the trailer and ready to sail, so more time on the water makes the effort worth it. Plus, the kids can get accustomed to the rhythm of the boat and find their own groove by day three.
  3. Factor in alone time. Even 20 minutes of child-free time helps each parent reset. We leave one adult to read quietly on the boat while the other paddles the kids to the beach, or send one parent off to hike or swim while the other reads stories at anchor.

Boating will continue to get easier, I know, just like most things we do with tots in tow. Meanwhile, I might rename our sailboat to something that more aptly describes the vibe aboard: Desorden, maybe, or Ruidoso. 

on the horizon line - sailing and traveling blog in mexico

Yoga Boat-Style: Root Through Your Feet.

sailing south pacific travel blog brianna randall

Imagine doing yoga without ever finding stillness in a pose. Imagine your downward dog is always walking, rocking, swaying to and fro. Imagine that your greatest accomplishment during practice is holding chair pose without doing an accidental somersault. Imagine going back to the beginning after you’d been advancing through a practice for 15 years.

Practicing yoga while sailing the big blue sea probably feels similar to doing yoga in a dryer set on “tumble.” It requires a whole new level of zen. Even though attempting yoga on a bouncing boat can be extremely frustrating in itself, the alternative would be even more frustrating: I would be a horrible crew member and unhappy human without my practice onboard. Yoga helps me breathe through the ocean’s endless time. It centers me within an incomprehensibly vast space.

Continuing to practice at sea unveiled new wells of patience with myself, and forces me to accept the limits imposed by the watery world around my floating home. The worst sacrifice: no headstands. Bridge and downward dog are about the only safe inversion in 15-foot seas. Forward bends and child’s pose round out the blood-to-the-head poses. Second saddest sacrifice: no balancing poses … at least in the traditional sense.

on the horizon line - sailing and traveling blog in mexico

In reality, every movement all day long on passage is its own balancing pose. Even the simplest yoga asanas requires 100 times more forcus on balance than they do on land. The rolling swells require at least 3 points of contact at all times, but often 4 points is mandatory. Triangle becomes a tangle as the stern dips 20 degrees left, then right, then flings left again. Warrior series are possible only if one hand maintains a death grip on a nearby lifeline, which limits their fluidity and mobility. A simple sun salutation is an ab-busting, shoulder-wrenching, mind-over-matter exercise as my ass becomes a pendulum threatening to overtake my anchor points on deck. I’ll never roll my eyes again when an instructor says to “root through my feet” or “feel grounded in the pose.”

Luckily, yoga at sea provides plenty of benefits, once I was ready to receive them. Even as a moving boat drastically narrows the diversity of available asanas, it doubles the amount of time I practice. Each morning I move through sun salutes to energize and elongate. Long, comforting stretches settle my mind and bones during the 12:00 to 2:00am night watch each evening. I have a newfound affection for the hatha and yin yoga poses I used to shun in favor of faster-paced flow. The rocking space lets me connect truly and deeply to each asana.

I still long for the day when I can cement my feet — and my head! — to a substrate that stays still. Meanwhile, yoga reminds me that my body is still my own, though it feels lighter and smaller beneath the uncontrollable wind and waves. It keeps me saner, calmer, quieter, and more real during the surreal journeys across the sea.

sailing the south pacific on the horizon line travel blog brianna randall

Off To See The Wizard

sailing the south pacific on the horizon line travel blog brianna randall

The blue-green waters surrounding French Polynesia just turned into a yellow brick road. Rob gets to be the Scarecrow, and I’m gonna try my hand at Dorothy. We’ve nominated a blacktip shark to be Toto, and the thousands of coral heads lurking just beneath the surface play the Wicked Witches and flying monkey things.

I know. You’re asking if I’m writing this while on some weird island mushroom, right? Or assuming I got a tad too much sun, maybe? Nope. I’m just letting you know that Rob and I have joined a new sailboat. It’s motto? “Off to see the Wizard.” Check out the boat’s blog if you don’t believe me. John and Sue Campbell, a semi-retired couple from Sonoma County, California, have generously offered to share their floating home with us for a bit.

sailing the south pacific on the horizon line travel blog brianna randall

Wizard is a Choate 40 racer-cruiser, very similar in layout (and speed!) to Kayanos, our last ride. We like her, and we really like John and Sue. The four of us all have a similar sense of humor, which is basically the most important ingredient for successfully sailing around in the largest ocean on earth. Sue’s learning to play the ukelele, and doesn’t mind that Rob and I belt out tunes at all hours. John is a laid-back, mostly-Buddhist captain (unless someone tries to anchor too close) who misses microbrews as much as I do.

We met Wizard and her crew our first day on land in Nuku Hiva after the big passage, and hit it off immediately. A month later, John and Sue offered to take us on a day sail to north Fakarava so we could “look for another ride” when Kayanos sailed to Tahiti. Well, we didn’t look very long … the day sail turned into many days as we sailed north to Toau. We’ll likely make the 2-day passage to Tahiti aboard Wizard, as well. In fact, John keeps mentioning that we should just go ahead and buy Wizard when they finish their sailing adventure this November.

Guess we’ll see where our yellow brick road ends up. Meanwhile, Rob and I will make sure to keep our bare feet from clicking together, since we’re not definitely not ready to go home.

sailing the south pacific on the horizon line travel blog brianna randall

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