Monday, December 9, 2013

Greetings!

Hello all! And thanks for reading. 

This is my first attempt to keep a written log of any kind, so my apologies in advance. But, I figured there have been enough people who have asked me if I will be keeping a blog during my upcoming travels that it was worth a shot. 

For those of you that know me, this next part might be a bit boring so feel free to check back on another day when I am not introducing myself. For those of you that don't, I'm Heather, a 25-yr old trying to make my way through the world. Currently, I'm writing from cold, cold, cold NYC, but a week ago, I would have been in sunny Key West, FL working on the schooner America 2.0, a 150-foot sailboat owned and operated by Classic Harbor Line. 
Here she is in all her glory (plus a little Photoshop- not my credit)!


For the past two years, I've worked on her in NYC as a mate while simultaneously attending graduate school at Columbia University. This past May, however, I received my M.A. in African-American Studies, a goal that freed up my winters (hence traveling down to KW) and also helped me realize that...well, sailing is really the only thing that makes me truly happy in life. Until recently, I was 100% certain that I would immediately move from my M.A. to my Ph.D. and would pursue a life of academia, drown myself in research and books, and change young minds. While I was writing my Master's thesis, however, I finally realized that my career on the water made me so much happier than any of the work that I was doing at school. It was difficult to cope with at first because the decision felt a bit selfish. But I've made an agreement with myself to pursue sailing for a couple years, and if the academic bug comes back, that I won't ignore it. I'm still struggling with that decision, but I've thrown myself fully into developing my career as a mariner, and I couldn't really be happier. Ok, enough of the heavy stuff...

Just a sneak preview of what's to come! My boyfriend, Yuri, and I just bought a boat, a 41' CT cutter-rigged ketch sailboat, to be specific. It is a fixer-upper for sure. Right now, it's in Martha's Vineyard where it will stay until I get back to the States in April and we can deliver it down to NYC where will will being doing the whole "liveaboard" thing after a month or two of intense work on the hard! Many blogs, I'm sure, will detail the escapades of trying to fix up Thalassa and get her ready for to be our nest. Also, we are leaving on Sunday for New Zealand, the first of many stops for me in the next few months. I will try to update as often as I can, but no promises! Stay tuned!

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