The New Zealand Herald

Can’t afford a house? Buy a boat

Couple see living on board only way to get on Auckland property ladder

- Kristin Edge

Engaged couple Jade Pumford and Reuben Mackey are about to become boat people — not as refugees, but to get into the Auckland housing market.

They want to buy a home but say the Auckland market is just “so damn crazy” and question why they should pay rent to finance someone else’s retirement fund.

So Pumford, 31, originally from Liverpool in England, and Mackey, who was raised in Whangarei, are ditching their landlubber lifestyle on Auckland’s North Shore and going to live at sea — well, moored on the water in a boat at Westpark Marina at Hobsonvill­e.

“We can halve our rent cost each year by moving on to the boat and that way a house deposit is not so out of reach,” Pumford said.

The landlord’s decision to raise their rent to $440 a week prompted them to start looking for a new home early this year.

Mackey, 32, a monitoring response engineer for Spark, started searching the internet and came across a boat

It allows us to save up to save up for our imminent wedding and invest in our future. Jade Pumford

moored in Whangarei Harbour and made the journey north to check it out.

A “boatie” friend recommende­d a launch if they were preparing to live aboard.

So when Mackey clapped eyes on Dorina he knew he had found his boat and they paid $5000 for it. “When I saw it I saw the potential. “It was a great opportunit­y.” After getting the tick of approval from Pumford, a beautician with her own business, they launched into preparing the 10.4-metre long Dorina to become their home.

For the past eight weekends the couple have travelled to Riverside Marina where the boat has been on the hard during the renovation project.

They did the calculatio­ns and it was much cheaper to have the boat out of the water in Whangarei compared with costly Auckland boat yards.

They have sanded and sanded and sanded some more, before painting on antifoul.

Neither of them had any DIY skills and didn’t know where to start.

But the boating community at the Riverside Marina rallied and gave the young couple advice, which they appreciate­d very much.

Dorina was built in 1927 and had significan­t work done in 1990.

The interior and the wiring is fine but already they have plans for developing the “outdoor living area” at the rear.

Neither of them have any seafaring experience and laugh at the question.

But they are both looking forward to stepping on deck and celebratin­g their new abode.

“It’s been a journey so far and it means we can achieve our dream,” Pumford said.

“It allows us to save up for our imminent wedding and invest in our future.”

Dorina was transporte­d to Auckland on the back of a truck yesterday.

The couple hope to move in within the next two weeks.

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