I’m not a loner but I can spend time on my own, and look forward to that. These include a stay in a hotel (boat allowing), book a massage, head to the beach, grab a haircut, a private space with good internet connection so you can have a decent Skype/FaceTime call, food off the boat (somebody else's cooking)etc.
You’ve got to take your rewards where you can, even if they are purely to fix yourself up again after the work and time you just spent in everyone’s company before the next round. If you are super lucky, you might even be able to fly someone out to see you, say your girl, guy, parents. The big buzz I am really talking about is the one at the end of the season. This is the real Saturday night clean down. The reason it is not the same as the ones mid-season, is that you get a chance to go away or home. Have you ever been stuck in a car for too long, a long bus trip, even stuck on the tarmac on a plane? Well when you arrive at your destination or take off, you breathe that sigh of relief. Freedom!
Only then do you get the ‘brigade’ feeling. From the Captain right through the boat. Guests were happy, nothing major happened and everyone got through. Sure you’re tired, and that first sip of champagne (or stick to beer - whatever blows your whistle) still goes to your head. That euphoria does come now. It’s a big clean down, the galley is going to drop a gear and you can start looking forward to getting ‘away from it all’ - in reverse. So where would you go, who do you see, what do you do, where in the world are you, how do you divide up your typical six weeks off, who needs to see you first?! Isn’t that a great question? Who cares, it’s your chance to taste normality again, it's "Saturday night".
Paul Airey is a British Chef who has been working in the yachting industry for 9 years. After working in the UK within many restaurants for chefs including Jeff Galvin and Garry Hollihead, an opportunity came along to try his hand onboard the 50m M/Y Thundergulch. His next step took him to 60m M/Y Phoenix (now Aurora) until after five and a half years later he took his first solo chef position on the 55m M/Y Kahalani. Outside of work he is a keen runner and counts himself fortunate to be able to take his R1200GS around the roads of France and Italy! See Paul's first blog here. Pushing the boat out: our guide to becoming a yacht chef See our interview with super yacht chef Sam Boland here