BOAT TOUR: The Modern Interior of our 50 yr old DREAM YACHT — Sailing Uma [Step 225]

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hello world hi hey you hello there nice to finally meet you face-to-face let's make a movie if you know what that is from comment that down below when we were looking for a boat we weren't expecting to buy this boat we had a few things in mind one of which was definitely not going into debt for it which meant we had to buy it cash which also meant being fresh out of college it needed to be cheap and our plan from the beginning was to buy a cheap boat and we could slowly build up over time rather than just dumping a whole bunch of money into it upfront and we knew we always wanted to renovate whatever but we would get but one thing that caught our eye with uma was her general layout and so we knew we liked the boat even if we couldn't afford her at first so we obviously put her in the back of our minds and just kept coming back and looking at her and then we noticed that the price kept going down and down and down and then turns out in the end we bought her and we were able to afford her cash and she was $3,000 us cheap so yeah we didn't really have much to lose no it was an opportunity that we could not pass on and we did a whole other video about how and why we purchased uma so definitely check it out we'll leave a link to that in the description video uma is a 1972 Pearson 36 so when we bought the boat pretty much everything inside and out was original the color the gelcoat the paint the layout most of the plumbing and electrical was still original so we knew we had a lot of work to do but because we didn't have any sailing experience and I mean zero this was the first boat that we got on spent the first year just sort of working on the structural side of the boat and making sure she could float making sure the rig was okay we were lucky enough that she came with pretty good sails so once we had a good anchor and a prop that could spin we left the dock and we spent the first two years just sailing around the Caribbean learning what we needed what didn't what worked and what didn't and sort of upgrading as we went the more we sailed the more we learned and the better informed our decisions can be yea because starting cheap meant that we didn't have that much to lose we didn't feel bad about chopping it up we basically use our boat as our learning experience exactly we could rip things out put them back in it'll work the first time great if it didn't really work the way we were planning on it we just rip it back out again yep and slowly turned our 50 year old damaged beat-up old silver into what is now our dream home [Music] if you haven't already definitely check out the above deck tour video that we made a little while ago going over everything we did on the outside of the boat this video is going to specifically focus on just a general layout and the projects we did on the inside of the boat and keep in mind that this tour is not going to be chronologically associated with our projects we're going to start from the companionway and work our way forward and we're definitely going to leave all the details to those projects in the description video if you want to know more but without further ado let's get started well starting with a companionway this is basically our front door and the main entrance to inside the cabin this lexan hatch came with the boat but it was very inconvenient because we have to remove the entire thing in order to get out and if there's a little bit of spare you have to either have it all in I'll have it all out so we decided to cut it in half which makes it much much easier to just step out into the cockpit or step in into the cabin without having to remove the entire thing and it's also much much easier to store as well now we can go inside so originally there was a step right here in order to come from the companionway down to the cabin but we never really used it and it was always in the way when you step in if there's any drip on your feet you would just scatter all over the counter it was very inconvenient because it was too narrow to sit on and we always hang out in this area when we're sailing and behind the step was a useless space to store anything so we decided to remove it entirely and instead we installed an outdoor carpet so that any bit of sand or dirt that is still under feet when we step in just gets caught in the carpet and then we can just vacuum it out and now that we're inside we're gonna go through a quick overview of the layout and then we'll head into the details [Music] all right so one of the first things we noticed when we surveyed this boat was the Headroom this board has six foot four headroom and for a 36 foot boat that's quite a lot for me it's important I'm 5 foot 10 and I definitely wanted to be able to stand up and not have to duck there any of the boat for Kika it's a little bit less important because she's only 5 foot so she can actually stand on the neck and her head still doesn't hit the ceiling not having to duck my head or kind of live sideways is kind of a big deal for us because we live on the boat full-time our boat is 36 feet long and about 12 feet wide but that doesn't include the chain Locker and the cockpit so our actual cabin space is only about 23 feet long and the interior you know - some of this stuff is only about 8 or 9 feet wide so it's actually a pretty small space so we had to use every trick in the book to make this space feel bigger when we started renovating the boat we tried to get rid of as many visual barriers as possible so the table that was in the middle we got rid of that we made the aisle way through to the v-berth a little bit wider we pushed everything back to pilot berths on either side we push those back so we could see the hull and then creating light space at far ends of the boat and also out to the hull was important to make it feel bigger so you can see the hull on either side so long horizontal lines and then we even illuminated the backsplash day so it makes it look a lot wider than it actually is because it's only about 10 feet wide there are also two bulkheads right here in front of the galley and right here in front of nav desk that we cut back and cut down a little bit sort of the non structural parts of those bulkheads just to eliminate even more of those visual barriers so overall the space is as minimal as it can be as open as it can be and as multifunctional as it can be because everything in that boat needs to have multiple purposes and it's our home so it still needs to be comfortable so the very first project that we did on this boat before we did anything else was removing the non-working diesel motor underneath this countertop and we eventually replaced it with an electric motor but we'll get into all of that in a different video what it allowed us though was to have a huge amount of storage space underneath here which when it came time to renovate the galley we took advantage of that and utilized it to its fullest [Music] first drawer up here is going to be all of our utensils and it goes all the way back to this bulkhead we don't have much because we don't need much but that's where all very tense let's go and then underneath the companionway steps we installed our refrigerator on sliders so that it can come out we can open that up get access to anything that we need and it's toes nicely underneath there as well tuck in and out of the way it also allowed us to have a massive sink if you've ever owned a boat you realize when you're out sailing pretty much everything ends up in the sink and this one's about as big as we could possibly fit in here it's actually a normal residential sink that we rotated sideways because it has this really nice feature in the back which is sort of a drying rack and we can wash all of our dishes and stack them in there and not really need to put anything out on counter which is really nice especially when we're sailing nothing really slides around we also built this cutting board on top of it which slides back and forth and it allows us to have a little bit more counter space it's also very convenient cutting boards we can flip over if it gets dirty and it substitutes as a serving platter so if we've got some cheese and crackers or some hors d'oeuvres we can use it as a serving platter out in the cockpit the sink itself is made out of a quartz composite which is super super durable it doesn't weigh a whole lot it's never gonna rust it's heat-resistant it's kind of the ideal material to build a sink out of but one of the problems that we had was because this thing was so long we couldn't really find a good way to put a normal faucet a normal galley faucet anywhere in the countertop space so what we ended up using was a pot fill which is normally meant to go over top of your stove we can just bring it out and use it wherever we need to including over here if we want to fill something up if we're running out of countertop space and that just tucks away nicely in the back underneath the sink on the other half of the motor compartment we have two more drawers this is all cups and bowls and wine glasses and then all our frying pans and pots and everything heavy we kind of keep down a lower drawer so it stays nicely tucked away so this composite sink is under mounted to our Corian countertop we decided to go with corinne because it's relatively easy to work with and eventually we can sort of polish it back and buff out any scratches or chips if we need to we went with white again to make the space feel bigger brighter we'd actually never done any Corian work before but what could go wrong right we also cut in some drainage grooves in the back corner so if you ever wash more dishes then we'll fit in the drain to track on the back we can put them over here maybe on the silicon pad and they all drain back into the sink we built this little fruit hammock in the back to keep most of our fresh fruits and vegetables it works okay but because we have it mounted on three points instead of just 2 it doesn't swing while we're sailing and so sometimes fruit goes for a spill it was sort of a prototype when we built it and it works ok so we haven't really bothered doing anything differently with it yet but it's definitely something that we're looking to improve the last thing up here on this countertop is this pizza shaped cutting board and underneath it is our pantry originally there was a really large icebox here in fact it was so large that Kiva could fit inside of it but because it was sort of the shape of the side of our hull it was incredibly inconvenient to store anything in there whatever you put in just kind of got stacked up on top of each other and you couldn't really get anything back out it worked great as an icebox you could put almost 200 pounds of ice in there and it would last for a week but once we installed our refrigerator we didn't really need it as an icebox anymore so we removed that and calculated the best way to get the most amount of storage in there we sort of had to two requirements one it had to be easy for Kika short harms to reach she can't really reach all the way in the back corner and two it had to maximize that storage and have an efficient way of getting access to all of it so it meant something that wasn't too deep but also utilized all of this space underneath the countertop efficiently while I was trying to figure out how to have sliding drawer box milk crate things that could all get stacked in here and sort of Tetris in and out Kega went well what if we just made a big thing that that rotates and I kind of thought circles don't have the same volume as squares but once you leave the space for all the cubes to slide this big giant circle actually has about 20 to 25 percent more storage volumes so we ended up building a giant lazy susan it's about three and a half feet in diameter and about eighteen inches deep we aptly named it hefty Susan because when this thing's loaded up probably as two or three hundred pounds of food in it and it solved the reach ability issue because it rotates each compartment has its own sort of dedicated food category and you can just spin through and get whatever you need it's all stored relatively easily and so far once we fill this thing up the food lasts quite a long time so we haven't actually needed to store food and any other nooks and crannies on our boat except on our Atlantic crossing when we first built it we had a lot of people concerned that it was just gonna be spinning around like a washing machine while we were offshore but that hasn't really been the case once we load it up and everything's sort of balanced each compartment is full of food it doesn't really swing around too much if we're heavy on one tack or the other sometimes it'll sort of settle like the heaviest compartment will settle down obviously but it just sort of drifts just a little bit while we're sailing and it's never been an issue to spin it around and get what we need so we haven't bothered putting any kind of latching mechanism on it yet if it does become an issue we can build one but we just haven't needed to one of the only downsides with corian is that because it's a plastic material it can scratch relatively easily so one of the ways that we've solved this was building these cutting boards on all the sort of major work surfaces so that we could put all of our pots and pans do all of our chopping plates and bowls and everything on these and then we would avoid scratching tacorian so our third and final cutting board we have over here is actually the lid to our freezer we built this icebox a couple of years ago we had a different sort of Peltier device in there for a while that didn't work out very well what we have in there now is a normal compressor unit from Dometic the same company that makes our refrigerator and the nice part is that either one of these can be either a freezer or a fridge so if we wanted to have two refrigerators we could if one of them failed we could put all of our food in the other one or if we're going on a really long passage we can convert both of them to a freezer and keep fresh fruit even longer this space used to be where the gimballed oven was mounted in the boat but in land life neither of us really use an oven very often and so it seemed like a huge waste of space for something that we'd only use maybe once a year so instead we built our freezer here and we built our cooktop back here so our two burner alcohol stove slides out on this little drawer and we also gimballed it so while we're offshore our pots actually stay nice and level this definitely isn't something we installed at the beginning to start with we had a little Coleman propane camp stove that we just sort of wedged up on some books while we're offshore that started to leak so while we're in Haiti we installed a much larger four burner propane stove that will become like 20 bucks I think that lasted us for another couple of years until we made it back to the US and decided to get rid of propane altogether this stove is actually an alcohol stove it has little canisters underneath the pillow alcohol and so far we can salute Lee love it it only uses about one liter of fuel a week which is the same size as about but one pound propane tank and that used to last us about a week as well and it gets really hot and there's no smell it does a great job and it's super easy and simple to use if we accidentally spill a little bit of alcohol you can just use it to clean up the stove or clean up the countertop [Music] we had to add a little bit of weight to the bottom of it because the gimbal system that came from the factory was a little bit weird and we didn't really like it so we built our own gimbal system with some pillow block bangs and then we just had to add a little bit of extra weight underneath to keep that gimbal system smooth and what we liked about it some we're done with it it just rolls away I love that we have a microwave we actually use this quite often the cool part about this microwave is that because it's an inverter microwave when you change the power settings down it actually uses less power a lot of microwaves just take the same amount of power but they just cycle on and off but this one actually uses less power so if we're just defrosting something or heating something up it hardly uses any and we're only using it for two or three minutes at a time so overall it's really efficient and we like having it on board you still like heat up leftovers or heat something up while we're offshore like a baked potato or even make popcorn one of kikis favorite snacks opposite of our galley is our knife desk this is where we do most of our computer work or online work this is where we do the video editing for our YouTube videos and this is also where we do a lot of our route planning we also hang out here when we're not in the cockpit on the long passage technically there is a pilot berth that keeps going further but we haven't really been using that space much so instead as where we keep our extra cockpit cushions and also our grab bag the original layout had a lot of problems and we always knew we wanted to change it up just we didn't know what we needed so we kept the original table for the past five years and this is actually the last big renovation we did on the interior of the boat the major thing we wanted to do is open this space up because originally you had the book and that came down and over and so it created kind of a visual block and so we pushed a bulkhead back and make the table bigger so that both Dan and I can work in the same table at the same time another thing that we wanted to face with the initial design was the storage issue this boat had a huge amount of wasted space when we first got it the table in order to access the stories you had to lift it up which created all sorts of complications and underneath the table there were also a couple drawers but they were so short and we knew there was a lot of wasted space behind them so we decided to remove the storage that was underneath the table top and make the storage bigger by creating some massive drawers we made these two drawers to reach all the way to the end of the hall and also curved into the same shape so that we can use all possible storage space and here we have our camera equipment and the top drawer we have all the little desk stuff that we use on a daily basis like our pens and our million amount of hard drives and headphones and all that kind of stuff this table is actually walnut and we wanted to match what we already had as cutting board in the galley and we didn't want to varnish it so instead we oiled it because this is basically our work desk we don't mind having some scratches and there's gonna be some Nicks and bumps along the way but that's okay because in a way it gives it character and if we need to we can always set it all back down Andrea lit also find really useful to have a chopper later inside as well because not only it's good to be able to keep an eye on things when we're on a passage but also in pairs sometimes we use it for an inker alarm and overall is just nice to have a screen down below that we can see from anywhere in the cabin just to have an eye on everything the cool thing is behind that char plotter we have our storage for our laptops so they can so they can stay nice and organized in there when we don't need them and behind this rolling door we have what we call it the unknown and if you're part of the Ummah nation then you already know what's in to the unknown wanky face so we won't get into that but there is one last secret feature that we haven't told anybody else before we have a wireless charging pad for our phones [Music] on the fourth side of the nav desk we actually built a bench so as said we could both sit and work at the table at the same time and gaze romantically into each other's eyes it's also wide enough that if we need to we can also both sit here if we're both working on the same project on the same screen or if we're chatting with you guys on camera we both can sit here and we can still see the rest of the boat the cushion on this bench is actually one of our cockpit cushions so we made the bench to be the same size so while we're not out sailing we can use that cushioning here on the bench since usually those two things don't happen at the same time this bench also slides back and forth so if we want to sit down here and use it as a work surface or set our laptops on it if we're watching a movie on the other side and we can also flip it up out of the way which turns this whole space into a very large open space [Music] save it sad this space definitely didn't look like this when we caught the boat our boat originally could sleep eight people which is kind of ridiculous since it's just the two of us on board and it still feels kind of small so where I'm sitting now we recall the Nook was actually one of the first renovations that we ever did on the boat it used to be just a settee and then behind it was a whole nother berth so we removed that berth pushed all this back turned it into this big flat surface got rid of the table in between that made going back and forth very very crowded and small and now it's just this big giant space that we can do just about whatever we want with and if we have guests on board we actually have an air mattress that blows up here and it's almost the size of a queen-size mattress so two people can comfortably sleep here we can also do yoga here we can stretch we can work out if it's raining outside if we have a bunch of people on board they can be sitting over here while watching a movie and while we're in boat renovation mode this whole flat surface we put a drop cloth on and it kind of just turns into a workstation it's really nice to have this big open space where we can lay out all the projects without sort of affecting any of the rest of the parts of the boat so we can kind of be in boat construction mode and still have a functional livable boat at the same time underneath all of these storage compartments are tools and when the projects are over all the tools go away and everything's nice and clean and organized and the boat looks empty again the first massive renovation project that we had to do was repairing all the internal structure that holds our keel on it had a lot of damage which we didn't know about when we bought the boat and we spent about three or four months cutting this whole cabin soul out grinding down the interior of the boat and then fiberglassing in all-new structural supports the cabin sole in our boat was just the rod gel coated textured fiberglass from 50 years ago someone had put some sort of plywood stuff down on top which we had to rip out cuz it was all rotten and we were placed with this this is a like a click lock vinyl flooring we got from just a normal home flooring store as you can see it's it's pretty thin and it just sort of clicked all together and put a little bit of liquid nails to kind of hold it in place and it's held up really really well it's not exactly marine grade but a lot of things on our boat aren't we just kind of look at the intended use look at the material and then sort of decide if it's going to hold up to the salty wet environment this doesn't have any wood in it so it's really really durable and the best part is if we put any scratches in it we can fix it with a sharpie [Music] one of my absolute favorite things that we added to this boat is actually this chalkboard it started off as an idea board where we would just draw sketches and ideas and to-do lists and rot planning turned out to actually be our guest book when people come and visit us inevitably everyone ends up writing on the board or drawing on the board so by the time that we leave the country we have a beautiful canvas of memories so we snap a picture up when it's in a vault and you raise the board so that when we get to the next country we have space for new memories so opposite of the Nook is our starboard side set C which is basically the fancy sailing term for a couch but it's a useful couch because we're we're out sailing this is actually where we sleep when we're off off watch we have a leak lock that comes up and then it basically becomes like a crib for us to sleep in underneath the set C is one of our water tanks and the other one is underneath the Nook we have a total of 60 gallons so 30 each which is for two of us is just enough for two weeks comfortably using water behind the settee used to be another pile of Earth but because we're not the Brady Bunch we don't need extra places to sleep so instead we have more storage on one side we have our bigger camera equipment like our tripods at our drone and on the other side we have some backpacks our blankets and our sleeping bags because we've been sailing into northern climates for the past year and the sleeping bags have been really really helpful keeping us warm and dry another thing that we did to keep us warm in these northern latitudes was install a wood stove on our boat now this part of the boat definitely didn't look like this when we got it it started out as sort of just a hole that we stored stuff in we quickly realized it was kind of a useless space and so we cut it open and used it more as a bookshelf and then Kika turned it into a botanical garden for a while where she had a bunch of plants and orchids growing in there but they weren't going to survive the northern latitudes and so we chopped all of that out one more time and last year we installed this wood stove it's helped out a lot when we're out on anchor keeping the boat dry and warm on those really cold rainy sort of miserable days another thing we've done to help keep our boat dry on the inside was insulate the hull from the water line up throughout the entire cabin we added about three-quarters of an inch of EBA foam to the inside of the hull and that just sort of helped keep the condensation down we didn't insulate below the waterline or in the bilges because the water still needs a place to condensate and so it cools down in condensates there and then drains in the build where we can pump it out but between those two things the inside of our boat doesn't have any kind of mildew issue at all and it's super dry even up here in the winter and right behind the wood stove is where we keep all of our offshore wet weather gear it shares a wall with the wood stove so when the wood stoves fired up the back of that wall actually gets pretty warm and all of in here dries out really really well so when we come in here with all of our wet weather gear we can hang it up in the locker fire up the wood stove and it all dries out [Music] in the beginning we were first starting to look into sailboats we didn't know much about sailing but there were some key features that we knew we definitely wanted to have like a private bathroom so this door is the door to our bathroom or head is the only door we have on the boat and it's the only door we need welcome to our master bathroom as you can tell it's tiny this is a three foot by three foot space or just about a square meter and it took the most designing when it comes to maximizing the space but it has absolutely everything we need the original toilet that we had on the boat was installed where I'm sitting now it was in pretty bad shape and it smelled really bad so one of the first thing we did was removing this whole system and replaced it with a composting toilet which basically it was a free bucket from Home Depot and we made it work and it worked okay for the first couple of years being on the boat but it was very hands-on because we had to literally carry it across the cabin while we're heeled over while offshore in order to dump it which basically was an accident waiting to happen and we would have a whole boat covered in bad stuff I don't a problem we had with our older toilet was that when we had people come over it was very difficult to explain how to use our composting toilet so when it was time to renovate this bathroom we decided to go with a much simpler system [Music] we also decided to rotate the whole toilet from facing sideways to facing forward and we installed this beauty right here which is a dramatic electric toilet and all you have to do is press a giant green button and it flushes when we were renovating the head one thing that we kept in mind in order to maximize the space was to create a shower system that happened to have a toilet in it so our entire design was based on pushing as much storage as we could back and opening to have as much elbow room as we could and we installed a panel with our showerheads and all our buttons for the hot and cold water switch and also installed a track all around the head in order to use this entire space as a shower and we can close it up with a shower curtain we also installed a foot switch on the floor which is basically a windlass button so that when we're showering we can press it with our feet in order to have both of our hands free and also to control the amount of water that we use not because we wanted to open this space as much as possible we pushed all of our storage back and we created this hidden sink that folds out when we need it we haven't finished a plumbing system for it yet but the idea is that while we're out on inker we can pull it out use it and when we are getting ready to sail we can fold it back and it's nicely tucked out of the way and this is our fever this is the most forward section of the boat right off of our chain Locker which is all the way in front and this is basically our master bedroom we keep all of our clothes on each side and also in those two lockers that I built myself and underneath the bed is also some more storage so we have the hot water tank on one side some tools on the other side and some extra sales and other stuff underneath the V berth this mattress is not the original matches that came with the boat the original ones were 50 years old and they were split in the middle which we found very inconvenient when it comes to sleeping and cuddling because we like to cuddle so what one thing that we did was buying a king-size mattress from Amazon and cutting it to the shape of the hole ourselves so that we can comfortably sleep and this has been a dream unattended when it comes to sleeping just like been said earlier on the side of the hall is a safe installation foam that we have on the rest of the boat and I need the mattress we also added a layer of ventilation mesh which helps keeping everything dry and now there is also where I store my lira underneath our zebra is where we keep our laundry basket and above it is where we have our 4 - this is our giant skylight we like to just lay out here at night and watch the stars and when we're at anchor we can open it up and it creates a really nice ventilation for we need to sleep because our boats only 36 feet long we don't have a whole lot of storage space so everything needs to serve at least 2 different purposes or we don't have space to keep it on board and we like the interior of our boat to look nice and clean and everything put away it helps relieve our stress and anxiety and just makes living on board that much more comfortable we tried to keep a very minimal lifestyle of the time that we spent on the boat 90% is at anchor and inside and the 10% is out sailing yep and yes so because we do live on it it needs to be comfortable it needs to be functional the galley the space moving around and it needs to feel comfortable for the two of us it also does need to perform its functions offshore and be relatively safe and comfortable for us to take on long passages in the thing about making our boat to be an offshore boat it also depends on where we're going right because when we were in when we knew we were sailing in the Caribbean and in the Bahamas our list of the things that we needed for the boat was very very much lower than the lives that we knew we were going to have to add an upgrade for a crossing the crossing the Atlantic and it's definitely a different list as well as if we were to cross the Pacific Ocean exactly though we weren't trying to get our boat ready for a circumnavigation non-stop as a race around the globe we were just trying to get to the next horizon exactly and getting to the next horizon we figured out what we needed to get to the next horizon and then so on and so forth a great example of that would be like a water maker we still don't have a water maker on board so we still can't convert sea water into fresh water but everywhere that we've been sailing water is either free or incredibly inexpensive like 25 cents for one of those five gallon big Ballu jug so we've never needed to make our own water because we're always within a week or two of a port where we can get water for free so until we go to a place like maybe the South Pacific or the Indian Ocean or something then maybe we'll consider getting a water maker but yeah I mean we prep our boat for the place that we're sailing and then upgrade to the place we're sailing next and it's just sort of a constantly evolving platform yeah and what we've found over the years is that there's plenty of aspects of old boats that work there's plenty of things the hull shape the design the sail area a lot of the layout seems to work okay but there's also a lot in old boats and even new boats that's there just purely because of tradition things like all wood interiors for instance where it's just kind of the way that boats have always been made and so it's just tradition and to us those aspects of the boat were the parts we looked to renovate first because it didn't actually provide any safety or any better sail handling and it was mostly just aesthetics and so we did all of those first and then we've slowly been upgrading other aspects the system's more expensive upgrades as we've gone yep and we're definitely gonna go through our rigging and sails and all the systems that we have on board in a separate video so definitely stay tuned for that but again I know we said it a million times like in past videos in this video as well we didn't make any of the changes all at once so we definitely wanted to learn and figure out what the problems were along the way and then finding the right solutions or even creating the right solutions for them over time I hope you guys enjoyed this interior tour of our boat and if you liked it give us a nice big thumbs up and subscribe if you haven't already ring the bell if you want to get notified next time we upload a video and we'll see you guys next time yep Cheers hi and it is a wireless contact less phone charger for anything about the which is someone that [Applause]
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Channel: Sailing Uma
Views: 2,425,918
Rating: 4.9329295 out of 5
Keywords: steps, one step at a time, travel vlog, minimalism, tiny house, tiny living, travel, off grid, Sailing Uma, sailing around the world, electric motor, solar powered, delos, how to travel, travel cheap, sailing, dan and kika, sv uma, vagabonde, blue water cruising, sailing vlog, living on a small boat, sailboat, living on a sailboat, boat work, cheap sailboat, architecture, boat tour, boat interior, dream boat, dream yacht interior, interior sailboat, interior design, pearson
Id: 8qtMHgXM-7I
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 35min 23sec (2123 seconds)
Published: Thu Jul 09 2020
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