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Out with the old mattresses. Aren't dock carts great? |
Remember “The Princess and
the Pea” childhood fable? The
royal family secretly tested their son’s beloved's pedigree by seeing if
she noticed the pea inserted under her 20-high stack of mattresses. She did, and thus was considered
suitable princess material for their heir to the throne after all.
While good pure peasant
blood flows through my veins, I, too would pass that princess test. Despite my relatively Bohemian
lifestyle, I’ve been known to hump along a queen-sized (inflatable) mattress on
long backpacking trips. Not to
mention my pickiness about my be-it-ever-so-humble-there’s-no-place-like-home
mattress.
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Looking more like "home." |
Thus, I gave perhaps unduly
high priority to replacing the stinky, shredded, piece-mealed cushions which
passed for our “master” (and only) “bedroom” mattress in our v-berth. After
all, unless we’re significantly more gainfully employed next hurricane season
or while cruising, we blew through a year’s worth of our cruising budget in
primarily safety replacements and upgrades.
When our newfound Ortega
Landing Marina friends Lena and Larry of Hobo raved about their new
mattress from Vickie at Blue Wave, I called.
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This comforter from Jack and Diane warms our hearts and our souls on chilly Jacksonville winter nights aboard. |
No “princess,” Wayne misses
the easier access to the under-mattress v-berth tools when they were cushions. While the new mattress is designed to
fold back vertically down the middle, it’s bulky and designed more for sleeping
on than moving). But Wayne wisely
decided a less cranky, no longer sleep deprived and stiff-backed wife was in
his best interest after all.
As Jacksonville’s
temperatures shifted from sweaty to chilly (click
here for that), and even icy (click
here for that), a few days before another forecasted cold snap, another
marina friend stepped up to our recumbent rescue. “Going through my cabinets, I
realized we don’t use this quilt any more. Do you want it?” offered Diane of Moonglow. “Yes, please!” I gratefully responded,
in the hopes that asking forgiveness rather than permission of my darling
minimalist husband was my best bet for fending off another case of the shivers.
Indeed, not only did the
quilt provide much needed warmth above and beyond our summer-weight blankets,
our v-berth looks and feels much more like home.
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Diane and Jack, comforter benefactors. Photo pilfered from www.facebook.com/pages/The-Marina-at-Ortega-Landing |
Thank you (Jack and)
Diane! Every night as we slide
into our v-berth, we appreciate your generosity, as we click our heels together
(hard not to do as the foot of our v-berth bed is only 18” wide) and sigh, “There’s no place like home”
(even though we do still dream of sleeping on a queen-sized mattress in a
bedroom with a ceiling with more than 3 feet of headroom).
Sweet dreams to all, and to
all a good night!
Nothing like a good mattress. I too cringed at the idea that I would lose easy access to storage, but my back and especially Debra's mood is so much better come morning.
ReplyDeleteSorry we missed you in St Aug. We were busy up north (Rochester NY) with family. We have a grandson about to meet the world anytime soon. He's already screwing up our schedule :) We will be about 2 months behind everyone this year. See you in the Bahamas?
Paul
Paul
ReplyDeleteA grandbaby is a nice "problem" to have. Congrats!
Yes, we'll all be more relaxed in the Bahamas post holidaze! Look forward to seeing you then.
Meanwhile, best wishes on the new tyke to be.
With out a doubt our forepeak mattress was the single best purchase we made aboard Satori. No regret what so ever.
ReplyDelete