|  In the mid  eighties, having relieved myself of the responsibility to sail around the  world, I was free to indulge in the absolutely wonderful pastime of small boat  sailing. The armchair sank. No longer was I burdened with the tasks of needing  to repair a diesel in three languages, determining latitude while striking a  whale or paying alimony to a boatyard. The partner I chose for my new adventure  was twenty-three feet long, displaced 2900# lbs and drew 18 inches with the  board up. She was a Rob Roy yawl built by Marine Concepts. I named her K.G.  Woozle after a beloved four-legged friend. When formalities were dropped she  answered to “the wooz”. I kept her shiny and strong. She took me places I’d  dreamed of. In style. Having met Love Bomb, the wooz offered herself up as a  courting platform. That relationship being successful, we three relocated to  the Chesapeake Bay, a known haven of shallow draft rogues offering more miles  around than the Atlantic from side to side. With the board up and the mud down  you could be a sloppy navigator and not be dashed upon the rocks. 
                
                  |  | Wooz with her namesake |   After 11  wonderful years with the wooz including a successful racing campaign in which  we garnished awards for the most moonlight finishes and most colorful sail  changes, I found myself still suffering with a lifelong disorder known as BFB.  BIGGER FASTER BOAT.  This disease  manifests itself thru impulsive decisions resulting in bad choices. Using my  newly hatched children, bum back and a lust for racing as excuses, I determined  we must make a change.  There should be a  disease named for this complete with it’s own inane commercials. If you suffer  from BFB for more than four hours go get plastered and dwell on your checkbook  or something. After having told the family to “never let me sell that boat” I  did the deed, buying a BFB. 
                
                  | Racing in the Miles river |  |  Answering my boat  for sale ad, Bob drove down from Michigan’s famed upper peninsula to take  possession of the wooz. He’d been looking for a well-built boat with style. See  this: he drives 15 hours in November. Age impossible to tell. Torn coveralls,  ancient Jeep pickup held together with rust and spit. Spends half an hour going  over the boat and says he’s gotta go before the snow hits the Pennsyltucky  mountains. That’s it. Gone. 
                
                  |  | A much younger me when I first bought her. |  After a year or  so my symptoms began to subside. I know I did wrong. I miss the wooz. Bob and I  chat once a year. A Christmas card. We talk of someday sailing together on his  lake, Huron. After about four or five years I tell Bob if he ever decides to  part with her I’d like the chance to buy her back. Bob’s in love. Wooz is the  queen of Georgian Bay and he is her knight. I’d sold the BFB  and tried a stint with a Carver. I could find no peace. My heart had broken by  my hand. I was always on the prowl but had no lust. After chasing hull for half  my life I was used up. Not even a sister ship would do. Eleven years  passed since she sailed. I got a call in September of ’08. A woman sobbing  hysterically. She says she is Bob’s daughter. Bob has passed away. As he was  dying he told his family to call me to come for the wooz. Bob knew. He was  handing her back to someone, as a father would see to his child. We did not  speak of money or shape. I simply put a hitch on the pickup and headed up  north. As I prepped the wooz for travel I saw projects Bob had done, changes he  had made. Oil lamps and heavy ground tackle. A life jacket for his cat. Bob was  belt and suspenders all the way. Everyone I met in that far away place had seen  Bob sailing the green yawl with the red sails. They were an item on the bay.  He’d not changed her name. 
                
                  | This sez it all, Bob and his wife on the wooz, Georgian   bay. Courtesy Bob's daughter |  |  The wooz is back  in Maryland, wrapped up and waiting for spring. She’s ready for new paint and  lines and stuff. This will be a good way for us to reacquaint. I do enjoy just  sitting on her, stroking the rail. Of course I look ahead to the places we’ll  go and the waters we’ll see. It’ll be different now because this time wooz and  I won’t be sailing alone. I just hope Bob lets me steer. |