When I was planning my
transition, your magazine was a great source of comfort
to me that even though I might be insane, I wasnt
the only one in the asylum.
Jillian Simensky
About Us
Living
Aboard magazine is about making dreams come true. Its
about leaving the confines of daily life and looking at the
world from a new perspective and its about living
aboard a boat. If thats a crazy idea, then this is also
a magazine about crazy people. Here you meet folks who rearranged
their daily lives to live and travel on their boats. You read,
in their own words, how they fulfilled a dream many share.
For anyone who hopes to someday do Something Else, their stories
are interesting, informative and inspiring.
For nearly 30 years, Living Aboard
magazine has been a community forum for liveaboards
a place where people who are living their dream on the water
can exchange information, share experiences and work together
to preserve the right to live aboard.
The newsletter that grew into Living
Aboard was founded in 1973 by Roland and Janice Smith.
In 1982, Janice and Roland turned the publication over to
George and Maureen Breen followed by Linda Grover and Tom
Daughtery in 1985. Michael and Raf Frankel guided development
of Living Aboard from 1987 to 1990 when Craig and Lynn
Wanous took over. Tim Murray was at the helm from 1993 to
1997 before handing it to Fred Walters, our current publisher.
It is a tribute to each of these people that Living Aboard
has grown from a newsletter inspired by the desire
of a small group of cruisers to keep in touch with one another
to a magazine that serves liveaboards on four continents
and in all 50 states of the U.S. It is still the only magazine
dedicated to the liveaboard way of life.
Living Aboard is a reader-written
magazine, and the information is truly the voice of experience.
Advances in telecommunications made the liveaboard lifestyle
more accessible to greater numbers of people it is
now possible for many to work at home wherever
that may be. With the growth of the Internet homeschooling
became an attractive option for parents who may otherwise
have waited until the kids were out of school to move aboard.
And cruisers have new ways to communicate with the folks back
home or, happily, with us here at the magazine. More information,
new ways to share it, and more people participating in this
unique lifestyle have helped the magazine grow in scope and
content.
When the Smiths started Living Aboard
magazine in 1973 (then the newsletter of the Homaflote Association)
they stated that it was for mutual benefit through shared
experience. Now, a generation later, that statement
still goes to the heart of Living Aboard magazine and
is central to its vision and purpose. We are grateful to all
who have, over the years, so generously supported the liveaboard
community by contributing their knowledge and their experience
to the pages of the magazine. We hope that the stories we
publish will inspire you to escape from your landlocked mindset
and maybe even help convince your relatives that you
arent so crazy after all.
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