2024 Financial Wrap Up – Key West, Florida, USA, January 20, 2025

2024 Financial Wrap Up – Key West, Florida, USA, January 20, 2025


It has been an eventful year, and I always like to do a review of the year to see what worked, what didn’t, and how to set us up moving forward. So here goes. This past year we had two daughters graduate from college (yeah!), sailed the southern Caribbean thru April, bought the RV in May, lost the boat in June (and nearly everything we owned on it), travelled to Grenada twice, Hawaii once, learned A LOT about insurance, and covered the rest of the US via camping. I don’t think we have to worry about being bored in retirement. Financially speaking, it was another good year for us too. Ron had a large consulting project he worked on between camping and Hawaii and it was a good year on the stock market (Thank You Biden!). Inflation has cooled, which is good but also lowers rates a bit. Now that Trump is coming into office, I expect rates to be steady or start increasing again like they did in his first term. We will see if I am correct or not as of today…inauguration day.


Let’s get into the specifics starting with income. We increased our income year over year by 17%! This is in part due to Ron’s consulting work but also our investments have grown well as the stock market continues to break records and the interest rates have remained high. The other piece of good news is our investment income is now the primary generator of our income and is currently not invested in any individual stock (except one) so when/if there is a down time in the market, it should not affect our income. This also helps in that as Ron’s consulting income fluctuates it should not affect our lifestyle that much. We also had an increase since we now have the cost of the boat invested, which has increased the investment output.


Ron and I like to live by the motto “Cash Flow Positive.” We monitor this very closely every month and there have only been 1-2 months over our entire retirement where we have spent more than we have made (even in retirement!). The Empower App has been a fantastic tool to track not only our cash flow but also our overall net worth.

2024 income

Moving on to our expenses for the year, which have increased but not as much as I would have expected. Overall, we only spent about $10K more than last year (not including the initial expense of the RV). Not too bad considering all that has happened with the hurricane etc. In addition, we have set ourselves up to live more leanly next year while still enjoying our travel lifestyle. We now have the RV which is much cheaper than an apartment or an Airbnb in our hurricane season. We have also identified a boat which is cheaper than land life for our Caribbean lifestyle.


Reviewing the expenses over prior years there wasn’t anything too surprising. We spent more on rent/camp sites because we were on land instead of the boat this fall. The other side of that is we spent less on boat dockage, insurance, storage, and maintenance, etc. We did have some deductions and travel expenses due to Ron having to travel to the boat several times due to the hurricane. We also spent less on auto expenses since we were driving the RV or motorcycle instead of a rental car for a good chunk of the year. Outfitting the RV was a chunk because we added lithium and solar to that, but it is a onetime expense. The everything else category also jumped a bit since we had to replace some of the items we lost in the hurricane like clothing etc. Overall, I think this year was a success because even though we had higher expenses we had a significantly higher income to compensate. Our cash flow positivity was double what it was last year, and this is a key indicator in how we are doing. Here are the details.

Are We Better Off Now Than 4 Years Ago? – Bequia, The Grenadines, March 26, 2024

Are We Better Off Now Than 4 Years Ago? – Bequia, The Grenadines, March 26, 2024

First off, Happy Anniversary to my beautiful husband!  We have now been married for 11 years and boy, have we covered a lot of ground in that time!  Raised 4 daughters, lived and worked in suburbia, retired, sold our house 3 times, travelled to at least 20 countries (many multiple times) together (with and without the children), moved countless times, become nomads and minimalists, and so much more.  You have been a gift and saved my soul!

A brief recap on where we were 4 years ago and how much has changed.  4 years ago, we were both working fulltime in corporate America, had 1 kid still in the house in high school, 3 kids in college, a house in suburbia and 6 cars, 2 motorcycles, and a house full of stuff.  Wow our lives look so much different now.  We now have 2 kids getting ready to graduate here in 6 weeks from college, two kids already graduated from college and adulting, no house, no car, 2 motorcycles, 1 boat, 1 parttime consulting gig, 1 blog, a storage unit full of stuff, and spend 6 months a year living in the Caribbean.  Quite a big difference I would say.  I think we are so much better off now than we were 4 years ago. 

A key part of the journey has been trying to arrange all of this and our strategic tools, finance all of this, and carry healthcare in the process of all of that in the states and internationally.   I did a post last year on our finances and I wanted to give a brief update there.  We still use the empower app to track our budget (which used to be personal capital) and I have the say I still love it.  Let’s look at last year vs. this year and I work best with a picture so here goes.  The blue is 2022 and the orange is 2023.

Now what does this say to me?  Well here goes:

  • Overall, we spent about 20% more in 2023 vs. 2022. However that is offset by also saving 20% of our income for 2023 as opposed to about 5% in 2022.
  • Boat Maintenance went down in 2023 quite a bit since not only did Ron do most of the work but any work we did hire out was done in Grenada (which is significantly cheaper than what we had done in the states). We felt like we worked a lot harder on the boat in 2023 (mainly because of the bottom job) even though we spent less.
  • Restaurants are still embarrassingly large in 2022, then actually went up in 2023!  Yikes.  I guess we still have some work to do.  It went up because we sat in Columbus for the whole off season, and it was our main form of entertainment.  I am hoping the new magic grill will chance this category significantly in 2024 since we have started to eat a lot more on the boat and plan to buy the same grill for the RV.
  • Travel went down significantly mainly because in 2022 we spent way more on hotels driving out west.  In 2023 we flew more but used points so there was not much cost.
  • If I add together the Housing and Travel categories, they are about the same for both years.  It doesn’t matter if we rent an apartment or stay in corporate housing/hotels.  At the end of the day, it really all equals out.  I am glad to know this as I think it gives us more flexibility during the off season.  It will be interesting to see how this changes when we get the RV and the costs there. 
  • Groceries didn’t change even though we are spending more on restaurants.  Not sure why this is but I think it is because we are giving/throwing away more groceries when we change locations for the season.  We are unable to store any uneaten food in the boat or storage unit and must rebuy when we get to our new location.  Maybe?
  • Boat Storage was cut nearly in half since we moved the boat from the USA to Grenada.  This was a large part of why we are storing the boat in Grenada again.  Hard to deny this.
  • Our Automotive cost was down significantly since we rode the motorcycle and did not rent a car for most of our off season. 
  • Our Gas/Diesel costs were about the same both years even though we have sailed much more this year and spent more time in a marina this year since we went home for Christmas.  This may be partially due to where we bought the diesel vs. how much though?  As you will notice our dockage doubled in 2023.
  • Telephone was the same.
  • Bike upgrades went down in 2023, mainly because this covers the cost of us adding the trunk for our trip out west in 2022.
  • Th Insurance category includes not only our motorcycle insurance but also insurance for the boat and daughter #4’s car.  Our insurance cost has gone down 4% in 2023, however the way the billing works out we pay for it in December so it is prepaid a year in advance.  I still don’t fully understand this one yet.
  • Our healthcare went up 1% since we changed daughter #4’s healthcare to the University plan which is more expensive than having her on our Obamacare plan this year.  Our insurance went down in 2023 and will drop again when she starts adulting post-graduation.
  • Electronics was up since Ron had to buy a new phone in 2023 because he threw his old one into the ocean.
  • We spent more in the Everything Else Category by far again as an entertainment mostly during our off season.  We certainly could get this back in check this coming off season.

Being a budget nerd and an early retiree, I think it is important we keep a pretty short leash on our budget.  Ron and I have reviewed this together and are looking at this coming off season with some major changes.  Initially we will have an investment in the RV but we should be able to get an ROI on this compared to our housing & travel costs in a maximum of 7 years.  Exploring the southern Caribbean the next few years will certainly pay off in the boat storage if nothing else.  With 2 more kids graduating college here soon they will drop off our support ticket which will reduce the healthcare, insurance, and everything else categories by a nice chunk.  I am excited to see what our 2024 comparison looks like in January!  More to come!

The Unraveling

Columbus, Ohio 2-15-21 – Ron’s View

We are close to a year into a pandemic that has changed the way life looks for many people.  I would like to say it has changed it from everyone, but the prolonging of this isolation is for the most part due to people not wanting to come together and take the steps needed to reduce the virus to manageable levels.  The question is what do we blame this on?  Polarizing politics?  Bad science/religion?  Does it come down to the selfishness of human nature? 

I guess that is the primer for the big unraveling Sally and I have undertaken.    In the middle of a pandemic, as we isolate more than 90 percent of the population, we have finished a 2000 sqft basement, prepared a home to sell and then sold that house.  That in itself is a huge accomplishment since the remodeling was 100 percent done by Sally and myself while both maintaining full-time jobs.   

The selling of the house however has cut deep wounds into our pride.  They say to not take things so seriously, but the selling process was brutal with several showings along with several low ball offers, followed by two contracts that fell through and then finally two solid offers both for above asking.   At times we were not sure our realtor worked for us.  Time after time she seemed to lobby in a way that made these deals potentially fall through.  Needless to say, when we got to the finish line of closing, we ran across that line as fast as we could.  Moving was an exercise of either FB market place or the trah bin   Many of the  possessions that we once deemed essential to our existence were now just a burden.    We did not hire movers,  I have the strong belief that if we can not move ourself you have too much stuff.    We finally realized that the stuff we owned actually owned us and it felt good to shed that feeling.   

We sit now in an apartment we rented on a four-month lease only to now figure out what do we do next?  Things become complicated at this point.  Sally works remote, and while I work remote now because of the pandemic it could change.  All of this is complicated by the fact that we purchased a Leopard L38 catamaran a week after moving into our apartment.  The boat came on the market much too soon but it was the perfect boat and we could not pass it up.    The dream of sailing to distance lands and explore is now within reach.  The only thing stopping us is the detachment from our life on land and real-world responsibility.  I never imagined this struggle would be as real as it feels.  In contrast I always dreamed of this day.  Sell it all, and then explore.  It seemed easy when it was a dream.  Much harder when you begin to walk down that road and make that dream happen.  All I know is that we are more terrified of not trying this, then we are of trying this.  Either way there is a significant amount of worry.  Maybe the unraveling is more in terms of our mental stability?  I am not sure a sane person would take on this challenge.  Leave the comforts of a rooted life to the unpredictability of a nomadic one.   

Not a bad looking house


The basement I never used
Not a bad covid project
Ready it not, it is ours

Did I just choose to be homeless?

Chapter 1 – Holy Shit we bought a boat! 

Columbus, OH, Feb 5, 2021

Ron has wanted a boat and to retire to this lifestyle for as long as I have known him.  He considers himself a bit of a beach bum.  So, after sitting on the dock in Australia looking at the boats, he bought one and taught himself how to sail.  He is just that kind of guy.  Can’t stand not to know how to do something.  Yet I only know of one thing he cannot do.  They guy cannot cook vegetables on the grill to save him life!!  Being a vegetarian and having asparagus ash for dinner is less fun that it sounds.  Trust me, I have tried it.

A dream was born

Blackened Veggies

Ron and I are good savers and have been our whole marriage.  it just happened to be something we were good at and for me that list was short.   Since we knew we were headed for sailing and travel, early retirement fits nicely.

But I digress, apparently, we are now homeless or at least houseless and I guess 4 children isn’t enough drama for us.  Ron and I have been bored during the pandemic and longing for some adventure for several years.   We closed on the boat a week ago and today, sold our house last November, and gave the apartment our 45 days move out notice.  We had decided to rent an Air BNB for a month near the beach.  And now, we are both terrified!  What have we done?  A blogger I follow always say – “How much is your comfort holding you back?”  I guess we are about to find out because this is clearly NOT in our comfort zone.  Especially since I have no clue how to sail other than I know the boat floats.  This will be interesting at the worst right?  I can row & swim.

So here is the plan.  We go down get the boat ready for the water.  We then come to Columbus and move our stuff to a storage unit.  We potentially could get the vaccine but debatable and see the kids.  Lastly, we go back to the boat and take off til Mid May for our test run.  We intend to stay in Columbus for the summer, get the kids all settled and then splash the boat again to take off to the Bahamas next winter.  Not a bad plan, right?  There are only a few hitches…Ron’s company is in the midst of being bought, the global pandemic, and how expensive Air BNB’s are?   We also have never spent more than 10 days on a catamaran so, will we even like the boat life?  Ya know – trivial things like that!

Security is an important thing, and we both just gave it up like dryer lint.  Don’t get me wrong, we have a plan B.   We could simply pull our stuff out of storage and set up shop in an apartment again.  We both could get a job (if we want) and we hope to be in line soon for a vaccine. 

On the flip side, it’s exciting to be so free.  Go where we want, when we want without the responsibility and burden.  We can always Air BNB in Columbus for heaven’s sake!  We don’t want to afford expensive rent + utilities for the next 6 months to a year.  It’s expensive to keep doing what we are doing and have security.  Splitting our time spending on the boat makes this very doable.  In fact, we end up saving monthly if we don’t have a “landing pad.”  This could work better than we ever planned, and next hurricane season we have the freedom to spend a month in California, Michigan by the lake, New England, wherever we dream up!  It’s exciting!

Well security or not, kids or not, we are together, and adventure is inevitable.  Be careful what we wish for…here it comes.