Greetings and salutations from Serenity! Serenity is our 1985 37′ Tayana sailboat, designed by Bob Perry and built by Ta Yang shipyard. Our hailing port is THE Austin, Texas but Serenity is currently splashed in Bradenton, Florida. We like to think we own Serenity, but the truth is, we own each other.
First off, thank you for reading our blog. We appreciate the time you’ve taken to partake in our wee effort to string some words together in what we hope will enlighten and entertain. Let’s get the boring stuff out of the way….
This blog reflects our opinions and is in no way the opinions of others. We are not experts. Far from it. The directions and choices we make may not work for you. We may love something, you may not. Our choices may turn out to be huge ass mistakes. If that is the case we hope to never repeat them. You must do your due diligence when making decisions about your boat. It is your responsibility to do the necessary research to ensure you are safe and your boat fully functional. All pictures, images, content, and text belong to either Tim Mueting or Christine Pettit, or the proper attributes have been given. Please do not copy anything contained within this blog without obtaining permission and using attributes. Thank you, and now on to our regularly scheduled program.
About us: Tim Mueting is the Captain and heart of the operation. With over 15 years sailing experience Tim is The Dude <insert your favorite Big Lebowski quote here>. Christine Pettit is First Mate, blogger, and eager student of All Things Sailing. To pay the bills Tim is a Product Marketing Manager and I’m an Event Manager. Right now Tim is in Bradenton living aboard Serenity while I’m still in Austin. My job does not allow me to work remotely and I gotta help feed the sailing piggy bank, so stuck in Austin I am. Please note I’m not complaining. Austin is one of the best places on this big blue marble, but being separated from Tim and Serenity, in a nutshell, it SUCKS. I badly want to be there, sharing the trials and tribulations, learning, and of course working on her. I’m a grease monkey at heart and not being able to help, see what’s going on, be armpit deep fixing stuff, I’m not the happiest of campers. I’ll get there early 2014 but for the time being, allow me to re-iterate, it SUCKS. Enough of the boo hoo’ing, let’s move on…
How we got here: Over 2 years ago we started the journey of finding a sailboat. We wanted a blue water boat. Tayana, Morgan, Cabo Rico, Allied, Camper Nicolson, Crealock, and a few others made our list. (If your boat didn’t make this list I don’t want to hear about it. Thanks!) Many weekends were spent poring over sailboat listings, watching boats come and go, noting the boats with price drops, goggling over some of the absurd asking prices, lurking in forums, and on and on and on. We knew a fixer upper was probably our best bet – price wise, doing some the work ourselves, allowing us to really get to know the boat; all that jazz. We’re both pretty handy people, not afraid to dive in and get shit done, but we also didn’t want to spend all our time working on the boat and never getting to sail it. Our own version of Goldilocks and the Three Boats.
Over many, many months we made a dozen trips to look at boats. A boat that looked promising on paper, in reality not so much so. Also in play is my approach versus Tim’s approach when assessing a boat. My thought process was “we’ll know if the boat is for us once we meet it. We’ll feel if we’re supposed to be its owner”. Of course I was also assessing hardware stuff like rigging, engine hours, condition of the deck and topsides, sails, layout, extras such as GPS, solar, wind, etc… But the “touchy feelie” type if thinking/gut feeling is next to impossible to explain and that’s what I was tuning in to, more than the hardware oriented stuff. (I’m betting the women reading this will be nodding in agreement). Now, Tim’s approach was very focused on the condition of hardware, this is nice, this is jacked up, why is this like it is, great boat but way overpriced, etc… Neither approach is right or wrong, they’re just different. Sharing our thoughts and all the pros and cons of a boat, many times the drive home would be in a contemplative silence. On top of all these reindeer games Tim was trying to sell his house. Living in Austin the market was/is better than in many places, but it was still a struggle, stressful, heartbreaking, annoying, and sometimes just out and out bullshit. On a side note, our realtor Dianne is AWESOME so if you need a realtor lemme know. Back to “The Search”.
Remember when I was telling you about poring over the listings? One boat kept popping up on my radar, but initially it was waaaayy out of our price range. I told Tim about it and we needed to keep our eyes open for a price drop. Sure enough that happened, with a note “make an offer”! Interesting. Very interesting. Another weekend of poring over the listings. Saw the boat again. This time I told Tim, “we need to SERIOUSLY LOOK AT THIS BOAT. They really want to sell. Maybe our budget of $xx,xxx isn’t out of line”. We go onto one of our favorite user forums to see if there’s more scoop. Boom. Right there is the dude, talking about the boat. An email is sent, phone calls are made, questions asked and answered. A plane ticket is purchased. Tim misses my birthday weekend but I could give a rats ass. The boat has been found. Tim makes an offer, writes a deposit check on the spot.
Fast forward: The house is sold. Tim moves to Bradenton. The boat is hauled out for some desperately needed work. Sticker shock when we get the bill. Sleepless nights are had (and will continue to be had) thinking about all the work Serenity needs. Lists are compiled. The world continues to spin.
I bet many of you are thinking, man, what a HUGE gamble, risk, dumbass move <insert your favorite noun here>. You would be incorrect.
See, the thing is I trust Tim and myself IMPLICITELY. He knows what I like, don’t like, what I can tolerate, and what I will not abide. I know the same about him. We are utterly on the same page when it comes to the “must be” in a boat. So I told him if he thinks this is the boat than I’m on board (pun intended) and we need to go for it. You cannot sail to your dreams if you do not have the boat. Most importantly I know, without a doubt, Serenity is a BAD ASS boat. I know all that is lacking is knowledge and experience and time. Those things are not out of reach and can be obtained. I understand systems. These particular systems, no, but they are systems nonetheless and I know we can figure them out. I know EVERYTHING is fixable. For every problem there is a solution. One thing at a time and before you know it, we’re a leaf on the wind.
In conclusion: Do I regret this decision? Not for a moment because when I tell people about Serenity, and share the tales of our first forays getting her seaworthy, I’m still stoked about owning her. I’m looking forward to coaxing the diamond out of the rough. I’m so looking forward to that first sail. The chugging engine, the feeling of movement, the kinship when we pass other boats, the ocean, the air, the light, the sound of water hissing over the hull, the use of the body to hoist the sails, the look on Tim’s face when the sail curves to catch the wind. The adventure….
I love that you’re starting this! I miss you guys so much! I hope you update frequently. 😀