This past July we did a 3D interactive video of the interior and deck of Astrid. The link can be found at the broker webpage:
Custom Yacht sales
The price has also been adjusted to $375,000CAD which is about $290, 000 USD at current exchange rate. You just need to add sails.
I did my summer varnishing at the anchor this year instead of at the dock. I little more work but way more pleasant. The work is easy to keep up as I use a lot of covers. Life has left me with little time for the boat right now, two young boys under two years old, living and work, I spend my "spare time" making sure Astrid is looked after with little left to actually use. I get asked so much about how it feels to sell her and that is a difficult question. One I am reluctant to actually answer but of course, it is not easy with mixed feelings. I first saw a 28ft Bristol Channel Cutter when I was 19 years old and right away it appealed to me as the perfect boat. I just loved it and in the following years I toted around a couple of dog eared Wooden Boat magazines, one that featured Lyle Hess and also an issue that featured the 30 ft Lyle Hess "Tenacity". I grew up with Wooden boat magazines as my Dad had bought them since day one and now I have them. I read all the Pardy books of course as well as the Hiscock's. Rebuilt my Stone Horse cutter always wanting it to be a Hess design! So it took until my mid-30's before I stared building Astrid and I dedicated almost a decade of time to building her, obsessing over every detail of construction. She turned out to be everything I hoped for and when I am aboard I seriously could just stay there, happy to be aboard and content to look after her and be in the beautiful BC coastal environment. But one thing I have learned in life is it is impossible to predict what will happen next. I plan for one thing and another happens and it is usually all good or will turn out that way in the end. Things just change and the quest for a simple life continues. There are new adventures, new projects, smaller boats, skiing, hiking and canoeing, things to discover and teach my two young boys. In the end I just can't afford to keep Astrid unless it alone is the way of life and that is a different life which is not right for our family right now. I feel good that I was able to achieve what I did, was able to finish her and even have a short while with her. So she waits for the right owner who can take her on the adventures she was built for.
Here are a few pictures of this summer.
Monday, September 16, 2019
Saturday, April 13, 2019
A few winter photos
It looks like summer in the pictures but it was close to freezing and had to break through thin ice getting out of the marina.
Cold days are cozy with the heater and hot tea.
The attentive reader will notice the scrub brush on the cabin roof above and wonder if I use it on the deck which is of course no! It is for the anchor and the deck gets a gentle clean with a 3m red scrub pad in a circular motion with salt water and a little bit of dish soap a couple of times a year.
A good no nonsense product in a day where there is a lot of nonsense, is worth giving a mention. The heavy Carhartt rain jacket with neoprene inner cuffs is pretty darn good for West Coast weather and a fraction of the cost of anything "marine". Hood could be a bit better but there it is.
Sewed a sunbrella cover for the varnished bulwark cap. Tricky to find a way to secure it but could use chainplates and other places and a few discrete brass pad eyes located on the inner bulwark and outboard under the rub rail.
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