Bob wrote:Slightly off topic, but a pal of mine saved for years to buy a large motor home on retirement.
£120,000 More than 10 years ago with 3 fixed double beds, we asked why since it was just the two of them... For when the grandchildren come on holiday with us.
Guess how many times that has happened... Yep - zero, and it hardly ever gets used due to size, thirst, many sites won't take it, difficult to get in and out of storage...
It would have been cheaper and more practical to book a hotel with the family once a year and have a 2 berth camper which got used.

I'd long suspected many motorhomes were the result of a pension age crisis running into snares set by the dream sellers. I suppose economies turn on trade like this, and for some that motorhome was exactly the right thing to do, but i'll bet the most happy purchasers had tried it before and/or given it a lot of thought before jumping in. A hasty pension-potter and his money are soon parted, to adapt the old adage. Sometimes however, i think you have to try something and accept that only time will tell if it was a mistake (marriage for example ha ha). When that happens, you dust yourself down and remind yourself it was better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all. As Mark Twain wrote (and Bob has similar as his strapline):
"Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn't do than by the things you did. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbour. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover."
Seems appropriate for this thread. Then again, some of the things some people do risk foreshortening their lives. Acting in haste is one of them. So there's a conundrum for you.
I do love a good ramble. We were talking about narrowboats weren't we? Oh and don't leave the safe harbour in a narrowboat when the trade winds blow as it will quickly sink.
