As a general principle, the longer you spend at anchor and away from marinas and fancy restaurants, the cheaper cruising gets. Let's look at our expenses from November 2008 as an example. All expenses have been converted to US dollars where they weren't already US dollars.
Our out of pocket expenses were:
One day at Marina El Cid, Mazatlan: $24.29
Fuel: Diesel for The Fox, gasoline for the dinghy, propane for the stove: $182.04
Grocery and liquor (sweet, sweet liquor) (we live large): $529.78
Restaurant meals: $31.00
Transportation (bus, taxi, dinghy dock fees): $17.62
Laundry: $7.70
Internet cafe: $4.00
Fax from Mexico to US: $1.40
Monthly fee for storage pod in US: $48.98
Skymate satellite email/weather charts (varies from month to month): $34.99
Subtotal out of pocket expenses for the month = $881.80
Next up, just to make this analysis a little more accurate and complete, let's add prorated expenses for November 2008 that we typically pay as one annual fee:
US boat insurance: $221.33
MX boat insurance: $16.25
FM-III visas (2): $28.25
MX fishing license: $4.00
MX National Park passes (2): $4.00
US mail forwarder: $12.00
Subtotal prorated annual expenses = $285.83
Total expenses for November 2008 = $1,167.63
Of course, there are cruisers who live well at anchor on less than we spent. Many people save money by not insuring their boats; others aren't interested in FM-III visas, or storage pods — and many cruisers have grocery and liquor bills lower than ours. But then, they don't sail with The Propane Chef, so it sucks to be them. On the other hand, there are months where expenses can be much higher, with haulouts, boat repairs, trips to the US, etc. But the bottom line is this: November 2008 illustrates that by avoiding marinas you can still live well on $1167.63 for a whole month. Or, $14,011.56 per year.
Your turn: wherever you are, whatever you do, calculate all your expenses for one month. Mortgage or rent, utilities, cable, Internet, phone, groceries, restaurants, bus fare; gas & insurance for your car; car loan, credit card payments; and then on top of that prorate your property taxes, house & car insurance — Got a boat? Add your slip fees & if you haven't paid off the boat, add in the loan. Don't be in denial – include everything. And then see if you can afford NOT to sail away!
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