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Harry Krause
 
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Default Boating In Boston

Eisboch wrote:

"Harry Krause" wrote in message
...

Capt Lou wrote:


Just started and ran my boat's engines for the first time this season. I


am

lucky because I keep my boat in the water year round. The weather has


been so

lousy around here that most of the boats stored on land still have their


covers

on. Going for a shakedown cruise today while the temperature gets close


to 55

degrees F.
Sea temperature still in the high 30s.




Hmmm. I think the worse thing you can do is keep a small boat "in the
water" year-around. Other than abuse, nothing ages a small boat faster.
Small boats last longer and look better when they're trailered or kept
on a shore cradle or rack.

I grew up in New England, and my daddy was a boat dealer. I can't
recall anyone who kept a small boat "in the water" year around. Even the
fire and rescue guys hauled their boat and kept it on a trailer at my
dad's place during the winter months.

Just a different opinion on this.



I don't think Capt Lou's boat is *that* small, but I am curious as to why
you think a boat is better stored on a rack or trailer. Seems to me the
hull structure would be better supported in the water as it is designed to
be supported.

Eisboch




A rack, bunk trailer or cradle fully supports the boat's bottom. Our
Parker trailer, for example, supports the bottom from the transom to
just a few feet short of the bow, with two carpeted 2x12" bunks and two
2x8" bunks. The transom bracket and outboard are not supported, but they
wouldn't be if the boat were in the water, either, although I suppose
the leveraged stress might be less.

A boat on a trailer is easier to maintain...to wash, to check over, to
make sure there are no dings in the gelcoat below the waterline, et
cetera. There's no galvanic action problems. There's no osmosis problem.
You don't have to worry about bottom paint.

Hey, I like the convenience of a boat in the water at the marina...it's
great...but to keep a boat looking new, you're better off keeping it on
a trailer.

One of the marinas I frequent has covered slips with boat lifts...an
interesting possibility for boat maintenance fanatics like me. The roof
keeps the UV and bird crap off the boat, the lift keeps it out of the
water...