What does it really cost to own a boat, to buy it, to maintain it, and to use it for coastal cruising? Ask this question of 1,000 boat owners, and you’ll probably get 1,000 different answers. But here are the real-world actual costs of a 58-foot motoryacht, put together by Ed and Lyn of Bucks County, Pennsylvania. He’s a tax accountant, who works from Jan. 1 to April 15 and she’s retired, so they have a lot of time to spend enjoying their boat. Here’s what it costs them. They previously had owned a 35-foot Carver for two years to…
Browsing: Cruising Life
Here’s a story about a collision between a tanker and a ferry in Sweden that didn’t have to happen; it basically was the result of a total miscommunication (or lack of communication) between the captains of the two ships. And the lessons learned, a result of an official investigation, apply to recreational boats as well as to larger commercial vessels. This is what happened: At 2 am the tanker was outbound from a port at nine knots; its captain realized that an inbound ferry only 0.7 nm away was closing at about 20 knots. He called the ferry on VHF…
For a real cruise next summer, think about Norway, the high-latitude Scandinavian country with prehistoric glaciers, deep fjords, thousands of islands and about 20 hours of sunlight a day. It’s not particularly easy to get to for a recreational powerboat – you have to go across the North Sea from the UK, the Netherlands or Denmark – but once you’re there, the rewards are immense. As one captain quoted in this story from Superyacht Times says, you’ll find “silky smooth cruising grounds within the endless network of fjords, each with their own set of snow-capped mountains melting in the summer…
Nothing is more vital to the integrity of your boat than its seacocks. Have a problem with one of them, and you literally could be sunk. Depending on the size and type of your boat, you could have a few, or quite a few, down in your bilge, but you’ll certainly have them for your engine(s), genset, head(s) and other equipment. It’s also a good idea to have a mallet and tapered plugs, sized to fit, ready to go in case one of them totally fails. Here’s a good story from Sea about how to care for seacocks and how…
The Arctic is getting warmer each year, according to NOAA, and 2017 is the second warmest year in history (just behind the record-setting year of 2016). Not only is the air temperature heating up, but so is the average ocean temperature, resulting in an increasing loss of sea ice. Indeed, a new NOAA report said the current rate of decline of sea ice and the rise in temperature are higher than any time in the past 1,500 years. All of this is in NOAA’s Arctic Report Card, now in its 12th year, that is reviewed by 85 scientists form 12…
It would be hard to find a better, or more experienced, seaman than Dag Pike, a salty Brit with a great sense of humor but who’s all business when he’s behind the wheel of a sailboat, a powerboat or a RIB. Pike first went to sea in 1950 as an apprentice in the Merchant Navy when he was a teenager. In the years since he’s made more trans-Atlantic record attempts, power and sail, than anyone else (six, if anyone’s counting); he’s won the Offshore World Championship once and the Round Britain Powerboat Race twice, the last time when he was…
Here’s an absolutely bone-chilling video (below) from the National Transportation Safety Board, recreating the sinking of the container ship El Faro in a hurricane off the Bahamas in October, 2015, with the loss of all 33 people on board. It shows the drama of the ship’s last 26 hours, with the hurricane’s track, the ship’s track and the real-time decisions by the captain who overruled his mates who asked him several times to change course. In releasing the video, NTSB chairman Robert Sumwalt said the captain failed to change course “despite three calls to his quarters indicating that the El Faro…
There’s more good news about the post-hurricane comeback in the British Virgin Islands. The Moorings and Sunsail, the power and sail charter powerhouses, just reopened their base in Road Town, Tortola, with a combined fleet of more than 100 yachts ready to go (see the picture above). In addition, the companies have invested $66.5 million to bring in more than 130 new boats that will arrive in early 2018. The people throughout the BVI have been resilient and working hard to build back after the devastating hurricanes just three months ago. Pirate’s Bight, Soggy Dollar Bar and Foxy’s are all…
Arcadia Yachts, the Italian builder, will introduce its new, and unique-looking, Arcadia Sherpa 60 to the United States at the Miami Yacht Show in February. With its unique tall forward section for the helm, staterooms and galley, the Sherpa 60 has a profile that sets it apart from most other boats in the harbor. Meanwhile, the low aft half of the boat has an unusual amount of useable sunning and socializing space in a design where form definitely follows function. The boat’s distinguishing convertible sky lounge forward is an all-weather space; the sides can be open to the fresh air,…
Killer whales are harassing and hunting down fishing boats in Alaska, often tracking them for days before attacking their nets full of fish. The whales are smart and can distinguish between different kinds of boats, even recognizing the drone of the fishing boats’ hydraulic systems as they lower their nets into the water. And they’ve learned to ignore the electronic horns that were designed to drive them away; instead, the sound of the horn, one captain told the National Post, “became a dinner bell.” The problem is widespread, covering the Gulf of Alaska, the Aleutians and up to the Bering…