From St. John
Tradewinds, March 20 2000
Ruth and Ron Come
Ashore – And Really Spice Up Their Lives
By Bob Tis
Tradewinds,
http://www.stjohntradewindsnews.com/
Ruth and Ron have come ashore.
The affable new owners of the St. John Spice Company at
“I would never have believed it five years ago if someone would have even
suggested to me that I would be involved in a retail business on a tropical
island,” commented Ron at the couple’s aromatic shop this
week.
“The time has come to live on land. ” Added Ruth of their adventure, “It was a great experience and well
worth doing.”
The adventure started back in 1994 when the couple was vacationing on
And spend they did.
“We were staying at the Tamarind Inn, and it was December.” Ruth
recalled. “A winter storm was forecast for
Then it was five more days and five more…
“Pretty soon they would see us and just say, ‘five more days?’” Ruth said
with a laugh.
It was on one of those extra five days that Ron was sitting at Pusser’s Beach Bar and watching an old 36-foot
sloop that had sunk in the hurricane being hauled up in
After a few beers he decided it could be home.
“I had never even owned a canoe,” Ron said.
They went to Gary Moses of Noah’s Little Arks and asked him his
opinion of the salvaged wreck, which at the time had a giant hole in the stern
and thick mud in the cabin.
“He said “don’t buy it,’” Ruth remembered. “So we
did.”
The couple spent three solid weeks just taking mud out of the hull with
big plastic buckets they borrowed from the Beach Bar.
“We had no tools, we were on vacation,” said Ron.
In time the couple learned to love the boat life.
It didn’t take much arm-twisting to get Ruth to abandon the stress
associated with the high tech industry. And Ron figured he could build things
here just as easily as he could in the suburbs of
So the couple made an unlikely home in a boat nobody thought would ever
float again in the middle of
“The whole boating community is really a great community,” Ruth noted.
“Everybody really looks out for each other in
“There is great freedom to it as well,” noted Ron. “I loved falling
asleep under the stars and the moon and waking up with the
sunrise.”
Meanwhile back home the snow continued to fall. Ruth and Ron found
themselves spending all their time in Cruz Bay, fixing up their boat, which is
named Shoes Without Socks.
“It’s everyone’s dream,” Ruth notes. “People at home thought we were
crazy with some of the risks we were taking but sometimes that’s the way you
have to do it.”
Ron laughs when he remembers how many tourists at the beach bar would see the unlikely boat, floating without a mast, and ask, “Who owns that?”
When Ruth and Ron weren’t fixing up the interior of Shoes Without Socks they were making ends meet with Ron doing
construction and Ruth working at the Lime Inn.
Pretty soon they were working part time for
Now they own the
The added responsibility made it time to move on land, but the couple
says they wouldn’t have done it any differently and they still haven’t
completely grown up.
“The whole live-aboard lifestyle is a great way to go,” Ron noted. “We
learned a lot – and had a lot of fun.”
Still, running a year-round business will be a lot easier on terra
firma in
Now, the couple explains, it’s
someone else’s turn to get a new start on Shoes Without Socks.

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