The Borealis

A True Story Year About Living Aboard While Restoring A 90 Year Old Wood Boat

Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book The Borealis by Lonnie Dee Robertson, BookBaby
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Lonnie Dee Robertson ISBN: 9781620956793
Publisher: BookBaby Publication: March 30, 2012
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Lonnie Dee Robertson
ISBN: 9781620956793
Publisher: BookBaby
Publication: March 30, 2012
Imprint:
Language: English
The Borealis recounts the humorous but richly informative true story of the restoration of a recalcitrant and irascible antique Alden sailboat known as the Borealis. The narrative follows (at a discrete distance, of course) Jinna, Lonnie and the Borealis throughout the three decade “Battle of the Borealis.” Written in the vein of “The Boat Who Wouldn’t Float” by one of Jinna’s and Lonnie’s favourite authors, Farley Mowat, the tale documents the precipitously steep but nevertheless agonizingly long learning curve “travelled” by these two first time boat owners. As the young (but rapidly aging) couple grapples (sort of) with the day to day tragedies dealt to them courtesy of the Borealis, they metamorphose from neophytes incapable of nailing two boards together to expert boatbuilders. Necessity is, as they say, definitely the mother of invention. The Borey was a mother of a boat. Beginning with Lonnie’s purchase of the obscenely overpriced, decrepit and totally unsound vessel in Fort Lauderdale, the narrative follows the two aspiring world circumnavigators as they fight to finance their folly working as musicians in south Florida, the Keys and anywhere else they could find a cruise ship, nightclub, bar or restaurant to hire them. Finally they end up… still living aboard their squalid old tub… on the furthest fringes of the Indiantown Marina in Indiantown Fl. There, hidden securely in the maiden cane under an appropriately ancient live oak tree to avoid offending the public, they squander over three years rebuilding and cold moulding their rickety, repugnant hulk of a vessel. With no electricity, no running water and no real hope of success… unless arriving at their graves could somehow be construed as success… Lonnie and Jinna finally hammer out a cease fire with the boat. The Borey is re-launched… sort of like The Prisoner of Chillon regaining his freedom. It is said that pathos begets humour and this story certainly proves the claim. The story also demonstrates one can live out one’s dream. Let’s face it… if these two can successfully restore a boat which should have become an artificial reef… you can too.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
The Borealis recounts the humorous but richly informative true story of the restoration of a recalcitrant and irascible antique Alden sailboat known as the Borealis. The narrative follows (at a discrete distance, of course) Jinna, Lonnie and the Borealis throughout the three decade “Battle of the Borealis.” Written in the vein of “The Boat Who Wouldn’t Float” by one of Jinna’s and Lonnie’s favourite authors, Farley Mowat, the tale documents the precipitously steep but nevertheless agonizingly long learning curve “travelled” by these two first time boat owners. As the young (but rapidly aging) couple grapples (sort of) with the day to day tragedies dealt to them courtesy of the Borealis, they metamorphose from neophytes incapable of nailing two boards together to expert boatbuilders. Necessity is, as they say, definitely the mother of invention. The Borey was a mother of a boat. Beginning with Lonnie’s purchase of the obscenely overpriced, decrepit and totally unsound vessel in Fort Lauderdale, the narrative follows the two aspiring world circumnavigators as they fight to finance their folly working as musicians in south Florida, the Keys and anywhere else they could find a cruise ship, nightclub, bar or restaurant to hire them. Finally they end up… still living aboard their squalid old tub… on the furthest fringes of the Indiantown Marina in Indiantown Fl. There, hidden securely in the maiden cane under an appropriately ancient live oak tree to avoid offending the public, they squander over three years rebuilding and cold moulding their rickety, repugnant hulk of a vessel. With no electricity, no running water and no real hope of success… unless arriving at their graves could somehow be construed as success… Lonnie and Jinna finally hammer out a cease fire with the boat. The Borey is re-launched… sort of like The Prisoner of Chillon regaining his freedom. It is said that pathos begets humour and this story certainly proves the claim. The story also demonstrates one can live out one’s dream. Let’s face it… if these two can successfully restore a boat which should have become an artificial reef… you can too.

More books from BookBaby

Cover of the book The Lost Ones by Lonnie Dee Robertson
Cover of the book Philip Reid After Slavery by Lonnie Dee Robertson
Cover of the book The Truth Chronicles Book 1: Secrets of the Soul by Lonnie Dee Robertson
Cover of the book You got photos? You got prints? You ain't got S.H.I.T.* *Some Heavy Intellectual Testimony by Lonnie Dee Robertson
Cover of the book Lady of the Wye by Lonnie Dee Robertson
Cover of the book Emotions as Energy by Lonnie Dee Robertson
Cover of the book An Artist's Guide to Becoming More Creative by Lonnie Dee Robertson
Cover of the book Spirit Mountain by Lonnie Dee Robertson
Cover of the book Who Is Jesus? by Lonnie Dee Robertson
Cover of the book Deadly Pleasures by Lonnie Dee Robertson
Cover of the book Gangsta by Lonnie Dee Robertson
Cover of the book Why Less Is More by Lonnie Dee Robertson
Cover of the book Trickster's Many Roles in Myth, Dream, & the Evolution of Consciousness by Lonnie Dee Robertson
Cover of the book Learning to See by Lonnie Dee Robertson
Cover of the book If Animals Could Speak by Lonnie Dee Robertson
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy