Yo ho ho a smugglers life for me.
I'm with you all the way on that one Borry. When are you setting up in business? Will you be building the boats or smuggling the stuff in?
Where I live they rely on Ford transits to do the work as well as the cross channel ferry. Not much romance in that. Although it's still a profitable enterprise from what I've heard. Most people buy their baccy and cigs from gentlemen sitting quietly in the corners of pubs.
Speaking of which someone's reposted the Brandy for the Parson video. It's worth watching as a bit of nostalgia with Kenneth More etc but also for the use of the 'Roman' roads and pack horses. And the collaboration of the local gentry who can't get enough of the strong stuff. I've downloaded, sorry, smuggled it on to my computer before it disappears again.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D1jJ2iRGypUI suggest the establishment of a nautical historical re-enactment society as cover for the operation. If they can redo Waterloo there's no reason why other aspects of the period shouldn't be revived.
I was surprised at the mention of steamboats. In my ignorance I assumed they came later on in the nineteenth century but good ol' wiki came to the rescue.
'The first steam-powered ship Pyroscaphe was a paddle steamer powered by a Newcomen steam engine; it was built in France in 1783 by Marquis Claude de Jouffroy and his colleagues as an improvement of an earlier attempt, the 1776 Palmipède. At its first demonstration on 15 July 1783, Pyroscaphe travelled upstream on the river Saône for some fifteen minutes before the engine failed. Presumably this was easily repaired as the boat is said to have made several such journeys.[2] The idea was not developed any further.'
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SteamboatThis wasn't the first attempt either at making a steam ship. I'll drink to that.
And by the way it puts the sailing exploits of the neolithic and bronze ages into perspective. Getting about in boats would be very easy for experienced sailors.