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Nova Scotia

Family of 5 heads home to Canada after 7-year ocean adventure

A Nova Scotia family is taking the long way to relocate to B.C., and has travelled to places including Mexico, Fiji and New Zealand. After seven years on a 14-metre boat, they're ready to once again call Canada home.

'Our wardrobe until recently has consisted of not much more than shorts and T-shirts,' says Max Shaw

The two oldest Shaw kids learned how to filet fish on the trips, part of their Pacific Oean adventure the family launched in 2012. (Submitted by the Shaw family)

After seven years sailing the Pacific Ocean on a 14-metre boat, the Shaw family is ready to settle down in Canada again and they'll have to make more than a few changes.

"Our wardrobe until recently has consisted of not much more than shorts and T-shirts," Max Shaw told CBC's Information Morning.

Shaw, his wife, Elizabeth, and their twochildren,left their home in Halifax behind to begin a Pacific Ocean adventure in 2012. Now, they're just about ready to make a permanent home in Victoria.

"We sailed down to Mexico, across through French Polynesia to New Zealand, up through the South Pacific, the Marshall Islands, and now we're headed up to Alaska and down the B.C. coast to Victoria," said Elizabeth Shaw.

A thirdchild, Benjamin, was born in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, during the family odyssey.

The Shaws have taken several breaks duringthe past seven years, but say the SV Fluenta, which has three bedrooms, has been their main home.

Max and Elizabeth Shaw doing repairs on the 14-metre boat. (Submitted by the Shaw family)

If five people in three bedrooms soundscrowded, it's important to point out that one of those rooms is for storage.

"I kind of forgot that all those belongings I said that we had to surround ourselves with would need to have a place to be stowed," saidElizabeth. "Somehow, I thought I would suddenly turn into Martha Stewart overnight in terms of how it would all get arranged aboard."

So, with space at a premium, for the past few years the couplehaveshared one room with Benjamin while 15-year-old Victoria and 13-year-old Johnathan shared the other cabin.

The boys play on a makeshift climbing gym on the SV Fluenta. (Submitted by the Shaw family)

"We enjoy the closeness, and sometimes there's too much closeness," saidElizabeth.

When things get too close for comfort, she said,it's usually time for a swim or a walk on the beach.

While everyone in the family emphasizes there's always work to be done, such as schoolwork or boat maintenance,it's still a slower pace of life than the one they used to live.

Max and Victoria Shaw work to replace the mast track insert. (Submitted by the Shaw family)

Elizabethsaid she and her husband's busy military careers meant the family members werehustling "all the time from one thing to the next.

"Now we're together as a family around the clock, and that's a pretty extraordinary gift," she said.

The Shaw teenagers say there are lots of reasons to like life on a boat. Johnathan saidhe hasbecome more independent and resourceful, and haslearned to make friends quickly and easily.

The family poses in a life-raft. (Submitted by the Shaw family)

Victoria Shawloves the freedom of life on the boat, the beautiful scenery of islands like Fiji and meeting "amazing" people. Recently, during their stop in the Marshall Islands, a local craftsperson took the time to teach her how to weave a traditional basket.

Even as they lament missing out on the fun of the SV Fluenta, the older Shaw kids are excited to have a permanent home, especially since they don't like leaving friends behind at ports.

"I'm looking forward to when we get to Canada and not needing to say goodbye to people every few weeks or months," said Johnathan.

Benjamin Shaw watches as Victoria Shaw begins to knit a hat. (Submitted by the Shaw family)

Benjamin is "quite fascinated" with socks, according to his dad. "Because, of course, he has never actually lived anywhere that's required them," said Max Shaw.