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![]() "Scott Vernon" wrote in message Does 'A' dock mean something special at your marina? At mine, it seems the bigger ($$$$) boats are on A dock and get smaller as the letter gets higher. Is this the norm. Our marina, Crosswinds, at Whitehall, MI, has three docks: A, B, and C. We are a nice marina with modest boats and very regular folks. No big gold-plated yachts, at least not during the season. A few stop in for haulout (Crosswind's service work is second to none in the Great Lakes) etc. but we apparently appear too proletarian a group for them to soil their hands in our presence. A-dock is the reputed party dock. The term is somewhat deserved, but mostly we are a group of weekenders that are almost more like family than friends. We stay close throughout the winter months as well. B-dock is similar to A-dock but much quieter. While A-dock is still partying into the wee hours, B-dock has been dead for hours. The B-dockers like it that way. C-dock slips mostly charter fishing boats and a few of the larger sailboats being prepared for the time when their owners shuck their landlocked ways and go cruising for an extended period. All in all its a great marina with more camaraderie than one typically finds elsewhere. The marina owners are like family to us as well, and they treat us extremely equitably. Some of the folks in this marina have been slip holders for decades. One other aspect is that we have floating docks, which renders the low water levels in the GLs irrelevant. We don't need ladders to get aboard our boats, not to mention that the docks act as breakwaters for the ubiquitous waves that have the entire fetch of White Lake to build during a sou'wester. A-dock 101; there will be a test. My wife asked me one time if A dock meant something. Seems this woman, wearing tons of jewelry (powerboater?) struck up a conversation with her and repeatedly mentioned , with emphasis, that they were on A dock. Nothing like that here. The people in our marina, while often of substantial means, find no value in pretension. Occasionally a transient gold-plater makes an overnight stay, but generally finds us to be too unwashed for their tastes. There is a marina at the end of the narrows, Ellenwood Landing, where the big boats (floating condos) and the big egos roost. We politely suggest that they might be more comfortable there on their next visit. Of course we never see them again. But every now and then one of them takes a transient slip, gets caught up in the friendliness, the general joviality, and the night life on A-dock, and becomes an annual visitor and a close friend. I won't say that A-dock is unique, but what we have is rare. I haven't found anything else quite like it, and I've been in every port on the sunset coast and in the straits of Lake Michigan. Max |