Nevertheless, to get back
to the original point, if we intend to live in a democracy that defends our
constitutional right to free speech and plentiful sex, then sex on small boats
needs to be discussed with openness, frankness, dignity, and as few blushes as
I can manage. If the kids are offended (as they should be if you brought them
up properly) just send them off in the dinghy to play on the beach somewhere
until we’re through.
It is perhaps not
irrelevant to this discussion to note that Lin and Larry Pardey’s long-running
book, The Capable Cruiser, shows Lin
topless on the dust-jacket cover. She is perched on the main boom at the mast,
pointing to something on the horizon, dressed only in a long wrap-around skirt,
the kind known as a Polynesian pareu.
It was all very well for
the Pardeys, of course. They don’t have any kids. How do couples with kids
manage on a small boat, I wonder, the kind that doesn’t have a double stateroom
aft. You can’t send them off in the dinghy every
time you feel the urge.
Traditionally, and in the
absence of passion-killing ankle-biters, the V-berth was the passion pit. But
most V-berths on small yachts are difficult to get into. You have to back in
and fold yourself in half like a pocket knife. By the time you’ve got your
limbs sorted out you’ve sprained two sacroiliac tendons, you’re exhausted, and
the last thing on your mind is a bit of nookies. When people who live on small
boats talk about safe sex, it’s not disease they’re thinking of, it’s broken
bones, pulled muscles, and strained backs.
I suppose that if you’ve
ever made love in the back of a car, you’ll probably find a V-berth roomy
enough. Maybe. I’m not sure. To tell you the truth, I grew up in a country
where the back seat of a car had room only for a large grocery bag, so I have
never had the pleasure, if it is a pleasure. I now do have a car with a large
back seat, but I’m not as flexible as I used to be and my bones are more
brittle. I can’t do the athletic contortions that I’m told are necessary. So I
guess I’ll never know.
When I was much younger
and more flexible I fantasized about those lascivious blonde Swedish girls who
(rumor had it) were always cunningly letting themselves be chased through the
woods by young men waving birch branches. Coincidentally, a male friend with
similar dreams bought a 17-foot dinghy in England. It had a small cabin on it.
So I met him over there, and we set sail for the woods of Sweden via the English
Channel and the continental canals.
But, alas, because of too
much non-sexual dallying on the way, it took us three months to get from France
to Holland, and the onset of winter drove us back to England, broke and very
frustrated. We never did pause to wonder where we would make love if we
actually did catch a couple of those lovely Swedish nymphs. There wasn’t room
on our boat for the birch branches, never mind the nymphs.
On really small boats you
may have to do it standing up with your head out of the hatch. In a crowded
anchorage, that means you have to assume a look of calm nonchalance while you
ostensibly scan the horizon for signs of storm clouds or something. In the
interests of maintaining this little deception, you should not scream or roll
your eyeballs too far back in your head. Other nearby sailors, the crafty
devils, are very quick to notice things like that and make their own
deductions.
In these modern times,
while the hoi polloi are concentrating on safer sex, small-boat sailors are
still searching for better sex. It’s a sad reflection on the state of yacht
design. The naval architects have failed us. Maybe WE should go ashore in the
dinghy, find some friendly bushes, and strand the kids on the boat while we
think about the solution.
Today’s
Thought
Sex,
a great and mysterious motive force in human life, has indisputably been a
subject of absorbing interest to mankind through the ages.
— William J. Brennan,
Associate Justice, U.S. Supreme Court, 24 Jun 57
Tailpiece
“Sorry lady, bad news. I
just ran over one of your roosters in the road out there. I feel real bad about
it and I’d like to replace him.”
“Well sure, just as you
wish, mister. You’ll find the henhouse next to the barn.”