Pete
Legendary Member
- Joined
- Apr 12, 2005
- Messages
- 1,167
- Status
- OWNER - I own a Hatteras Yacht
- Hatteras Model
- 48' LRC (1976 - 1981)
Over in the Tech section, Pascal's thread on repowering has a couple of recent posts that got my attention on owner aging. Rather than continuing that discussion off topic in that thread I am starting one on the subject here.
My Admiral is fond of saying "life is what happens as you are making plans". Fully agreeing with her, as I always do, I accept that us humans are individual and each will get one of the remaining slots in the accrual tables. For now I would like to ignore who gets which slot and discuss the median expectation for those of us still here.
To set a base line, I am 74 and the Social Security statistics indicate about 68% of us who were born in 1943 are still alive in some state. I have found that stamina is my best indicator of my aging when it comes to the care and feeding of a classic Hatteras. 20 years back, when we acquired our current Hatteras, I was a six hour man, not what you are thinking, six hours of work activity on the boat before I was looking to call it a day. Today, that stamina number is more like 3 hours. And just for perspective, I consider my health to be about as good as one could expect at 74.
Which leads to my two areas of interest. First, for those going ahead of me, what is your view of the future I should anticipate on the stamina as I continue to age hoping for no unplanned health events. And second for those approaching or about the same vintage as I, what has been your experience.
One footnote on why this has suddenly become of interest to me. I am an admitted perfectionist, especially on the boat, and for the first time when I haul it for maintenance I will have others do much of what I have done to my exacting standards in the past. Reason being I just do not feel I can do it all myself any more.
Pete
My Admiral is fond of saying "life is what happens as you are making plans". Fully agreeing with her, as I always do, I accept that us humans are individual and each will get one of the remaining slots in the accrual tables. For now I would like to ignore who gets which slot and discuss the median expectation for those of us still here.
To set a base line, I am 74 and the Social Security statistics indicate about 68% of us who were born in 1943 are still alive in some state. I have found that stamina is my best indicator of my aging when it comes to the care and feeding of a classic Hatteras. 20 years back, when we acquired our current Hatteras, I was a six hour man, not what you are thinking, six hours of work activity on the boat before I was looking to call it a day. Today, that stamina number is more like 3 hours. And just for perspective, I consider my health to be about as good as one could expect at 74.
Which leads to my two areas of interest. First, for those going ahead of me, what is your view of the future I should anticipate on the stamina as I continue to age hoping for no unplanned health events. And second for those approaching or about the same vintage as I, what has been your experience.
One footnote on why this has suddenly become of interest to me. I am an admitted perfectionist, especially on the boat, and for the first time when I haul it for maintenance I will have others do much of what I have done to my exacting standards in the past. Reason being I just do not feel I can do it all myself any more.
Pete