Cheap umbrella strollers with simple stroller connectors were a well-thought solution for twin travel |
I have more thinking (and research) to do.
Would something like this make sense? Hmmm.... |
Bringing three toddlers to live on a 44 foot sailboat requires a tremendous amount of forethought. It's not a matter of just packing up the kids aboard and winging it (though no matter what there will be a trial and error "learn as you go" aspect). With fewer or no kids perhaps you can be more cavalier (we can tell you emphatically that cruising as a couple and cruising with only one young child is infinitely easier than cruising with three) - but given our experience of being outnumbered by babies, I am here to say that it is totally do-able, but requires planning. I am 100% positive that the last eight months on the boat would not have gone nearly as well if we hadn't prepared as thoroughly as we did. But, like anything cruising and parenting, no matter how much you prepare - you're going to get caught with your pants down once and a while. Shit happens. Mother Nature takes no orders and children cannot be programmed. Things don't always go to plan.
But - and this is a big one - having a plan will greatly lessen your chances of bedlam in both babies and boating, that is for certain.
"I have to think like this," I explained to my mom. "A professional athlete doesn't win a game by hitting the field and simply trying their best" I told her. "The most successful athletes are strategists - they envision a game before it's played, work out their moves, and visualize different scenarios and their reactions ahead of time." I realize I am far from a professional athlete, but this visualization process is something I remember from my days as a varsity runner and has helped us tremendously in our cruising life. Sure, my nighttime sleep might be compromised (these scenarios often play out when I am lying in bed) but things like infant dinghy seats and awesome twin v-berth bunks result from these sessions.
This awesome and innovative dinghy seat (we're patenting it!) was the result of LOTS of visualizing and planning |
If you are dreaming of doing something, anything, I say: start visualizing. Read books, blogs and articles that can help shape the accuracy of your mental picture. It's this imaginative blueprint that is the first step in making things happen; from the great ("Let's cross the Pacific!") to the mundane ("Let's get a collapsible wagon!"). Hopefully, for us, we start leaning more toward the "great" again...when our kids are a little older, that is. Visualizing crossing an ocean with three toddlers looks a lot like hell in my mind!
To accomplish great things we must first dream, then visualize, then plan... believe... act!
- Alfred A. Montapert
I really get the over thinking bit of parenting! Anything new I try to visualize it every step of the way and thus be as prepared as I can be. Nothing is so frustrating as ending up in a tense situation where you keep thinking, this could easily have been prevented!! And I'd imagine visualization Must have a lot to do with successfully living the boat life with small kids. Good luck in finding the right transport solution!!
ReplyDeleteHi there,
ReplyDeleteWhile you are still based in Chicago, you could research ISR (Infant Swim Rescue). It teaches your children how to float on their back, swim, float to catch their breath, wait for rescue or get to the side in case they fall in the marina. My three year old started when she was 10 months old and is a fantastic swimmer due to this program. Good luck!
Amy T. (mommy of twin boys)
ReplyDelete-Thank you so much for all of your thoughtful and descriptive teaching moments! You truly are an inspiration to me! Me, my husband and my 14 month old twin boys are in the process of finding our perfect liveaboard boat in Florida. I just recently found your blog and it has opened my eyes and warmed my heart because I can definitely relate and look up to you and your family. #1 it is hard to find great liveaboard family bloggers #2 It is hard to find great twin mommy bloggers! As we are in the process of searching for the right boat and planning for what to carry aboard, your blogs have been such a big help to us! I was just thinking the other night that I have a big wagon for the boys right now that is not collapsible and so I was thinking..hmm..wonder what we can use on the boat? And now today you post this..wow. great timing- cant wait to see what you come up with! Sorry to ramble... thank you for sharing your life with us and I am very thankful and owe you big!
Maybe this will work-? It has seat belts and collapses but not sure how compact you need- check it out and let me know if you think it will work! We may get the same thing
ReplyDeletehttp://www.radioflyer.com/content/share/blog/only-folding-wagon-kids
The wagon looks similar to one we had for our boat (but just the bare bones wagon)and while it was useful and folded easily, it would fishtail like crazy when being pulled. It didn't matter if we had a lot of weight in it or none at all--that wagon was all over the dock. Because of that characteristic and a 5 second lapse in my attention while walking down the finger pier to our boat, our 6 month-old laptop (with all our navigation software)ended up in the Gulf of Mexico, along with my purse, my cellphone, and some clothes. As you know, salt water and electronics don't mix.
ReplyDeleteI think the fishtailing was a function of the wagon's "collapsability" which could only be possible with wheels that folded in, rather than ones that were fixed in position.
It is good to learn these things since game is very addicted. You may want to check out the case of CODHAX or something that matches the case.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyyed reading your post
ReplyDeleteCommunicating bitlife sharing responsibilities, and managing conflict in multiplayer games can translate into better interpersonal skills outside of gaming. It’s a fun way to learn how to collaborate with others.
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