Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Gordon Wedman
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Other folks have given you good advice.
I'd just like to suggest you immigrate to Vancouver. You will have a
fantastic time with your boat on the West coast. I suppose the East coast
is OK for short trips and perhaps better if you wish to do really long
trips, say to Florida, but the West coast has a lot to offer with just a
short cruise.

"Martin Woolwich" wrote in message
...
I am hoping to move permanently to Canada in 2007.

I have a 55ft Motor boat which I would like to bring with me. The boat
is approx 32 tons net weight and Part 1 UK Registered

I have RYA dayskipper Theory, Practical and RYA VHF DSC operators licence.

Where do I even begin to find out what I am required to do in order to
make this vessel OK in Canada and me to pilot it?

Forget any issue of transportation and power supplies etc, I have those
bits under control

Also I have identified a newsgroup called can.rec.boating which may be
helpful to me but this is the first time I have ever tried to work with
newsgroups and my news server does not find this. Any ideas (in layman's
terms) how I might be able to connect to this group?

Hope someone can help



  #2   Report Post  
Terry Spragg
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Martin Woolwich wrote:

I am hoping to move permanently to Canada in 2007.

I have a 55ft Motor boat which I would like to bring with me. The boat is
approx 32 tons net weight and Part 1 UK Registered

I have RYA dayskipper Theory, Practical and RYA VHF DSC operators licence.

Where do I even begin to find out what I am required to do in order to make
this vessel OK in Canada and me to pilot it?

Forget any issue of transportation and power supplies etc, I have those bits
under control

Also I have identified a newsgroup called can.rec.boating which may be
helpful to me but this is the first time I have ever tried to work with
newsgroups and my news server does not find this. Any ideas (in layman's
terms) how I might be able to connect to this group?

Hope someone can help




To find the group, you must connect to a newsgroup server that
subscribes to the group. The server is specified in news server
settings in your email account manager, somewhere. I don't know
where that is in M$ Outlook. Depends on which client software you
use. I use nntp.broadband.rogers.com and allnews.nbnet.nb.ca or,
you may request your ISP to subscribe to the group. Such begging
takes a while sometimes. If you just post to the group, it may go
through and subscribe for your service automatically.

Http newsgroups are a pain, but they are all available to any net
browser if you don't mind the shlawphy response. Use
http://groups-beta.google.com/group/can.rec.boating if you can stand it.

I have a mooring and camp on the St. John river in New Brunswick at
Evandale. I use can.rec.sailing regularly, but it's very quiet right
now, because of the season. If you need anything specific, please


Terry K

  #3   Report Post  
John Proctor
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On 2005-02-13 19:57:23 +1100, "Martin Woolwich" said:

I am hoping to move permanently to Canada in 2007.

I have a 55ft Motor boat which I would like to bring with me. The
boat is approx 32 tons net weight and Part 1 UK Registered

I have RYA dayskipper Theory, Practical and RYA VHF DSC operators licence.

Where do I even begin to find out what I am required to do in order to
make this vessel OK in Canada and me to pilot it?

Forget any issue of transportation and power supplies etc, I have those
bits under control

Also I have identified a newsgroup called can.rec.boating which may be
helpful to me but this is the first time I have ever tried to work with
newsgroups and my news server does not find this. Any ideas (in
layman's terms) how I might be able to connect to this group?

Hope someone can help


Slightly off topic but what the hell....

Martin, as a ex Canadian can I say that the best thing I did (and I am
a slow learner) is that after 31 years of living in a climate that was
9 months winter and 3 months bad sleding (only joking rhys) I moved to
Australia. I like my water in the liquid state and I can sail 365 days
a year providing the weather is reasonable. A bad winter's day in
Melbourne is 5-10 degrees C. Better in Sydney but more expensive berths
;-)

--
Regards,
John Proctor VK3JP, VKV6789
S/V Chagall

  #4   Report Post  
Martin Woolwich
 
Posts: n/a
Default

My real desire is actually to go to Perth.

But wife is Canadian and kids have Canadian nationality and won't hear of us
going anywhere else. At least we both agree that we have to get out of the
UK


"John Proctor" wrote in message
news:2005021822084175249%lost@nowhereorg...
On 2005-02-13 19:57:23 +1100, "Martin Woolwich"
said:

I am hoping to move permanently to Canada in 2007.

I have a 55ft Motor boat which I would like to bring with me. The boat
is approx 32 tons net weight and Part 1 UK Registered

I have RYA dayskipper Theory, Practical and RYA VHF DSC operators
licence.

Where do I even begin to find out what I am required to do in order to
make this vessel OK in Canada and me to pilot it?

Forget any issue of transportation and power supplies etc, I have those
bits under control

Also I have identified a newsgroup called can.rec.boating which may be
helpful to me but this is the first time I have ever tried to work with
newsgroups and my news server does not find this. Any ideas (in layman's
terms) how I might be able to connect to this group?

Hope someone can help


Slightly off topic but what the hell....

Martin, as a ex Canadian can I say that the best thing I did (and I am a
slow learner) is that after 31 years of living in a climate that was 9
months winter and 3 months bad sleding (only joking rhys) I moved to
Australia. I like my water in the liquid state and I can sail 365 days a
year providing the weather is reasonable. A bad winter's day in Melbourne
is 5-10 degrees C. Better in Sydney but more expensive berths ;-)

--
Regards,
John Proctor VK3JP, VKV6789
S/V Chagall



  #5   Report Post  
rhys
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Sat, 19 Feb 2005 08:18:06 GMT, "Martin Woolwich"
wrote:

But wife is Canadian and kids have Canadian nationality and won't hear of us
going anywhere else. At least we both agree that we have to get out of the
UK


B.C. is your best bet then, but facilities are either scarce or
overcrowded in many places. If you want less rain and no complicated
tidal patterns, I recommend the lower Great Lakes. You can have
challenging sailing in summer if you go out on stormy days, secure in
the knowledge that it never lasts long.

If you have heat in the cockpit and a steel hull, you can get
"bubbler" slips here in Toronto that stay ice-free and conceivably get
a nearly 12 month season. I know a steel ketch owner who logs New
Year's Day without fail, and I've had excellent sails on the lake in
March and November, when the wind will push even heavy displacement
full-keelers easily.

Ice is primarily inshore and the increasingly frequent warm spells
means only close inshore or in boat basins does it form any sort of
thickness...it's mostly "brash" ice.

My boat is put on a cradle at the end of October and dropped around
May 1st, but I take my Zodiac out most months excepting January and
February.

R.



  #6   Report Post  
Don White
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"rhys" wrote in message
...
On Sat, 19 Feb 2005 08:18:06 GMT, "Martin Woolwich"
wrote:

But wife is Canadian and kids have Canadian nationality and won't hear of

us
going anywhere else. At least we both agree that we have to get out of

the
UK


B.C. is your best bet then, but facilities are either scarce or
overcrowded in many places. If you want less rain and no complicated
tidal patterns, I recommend the lower Great Lakes. You can have
challenging sailing in summer if you go out on stormy days, secure in
the knowledge that it never lasts long.

snip

On the other hand, if you like a low key, down home life and are partial to
the Atlantic Ocean, the East Coast might be a good choice. Jobs are harder
to come by, but if you have skills that are in demand.....Nova Scotia in
particular is crying for more immigration. Our winters and spring can drag
out...but we're only 7 days sail north of Bermuda.


  #7   Report Post  
rhys
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Sun, 20 Feb 2005 00:41:47 GMT, "Don White"
wrote:

On the other hand, if you like a low key, down home life and are partial to
the Atlantic Ocean, the East Coast might be a good choice. Jobs are harder
to come by, but if you have skills that are in demand.....Nova Scotia in
particular is crying for more immigration. Our winters and spring can drag
out...but we're only 7 days sail north of Bermuda.


This is true, but the economy is very spotty down East. Certain
resource-based things are doable, and there's a Buddhist community in
Halifax of all places that's solvent after years of struggle, but I
believe there is still a net out-migration from the Maritimes to other
parts of Canada or to the States.

Ironically, I would imagine two of the most in-demand jobs would be
call-centre management in Moncton/Fredericton, and house construction
in Nova Scotia, as the Americans seem to be buying up large chunks of
the oceanfront and building big houses on the land.

R.

  #8   Report Post  
rhys
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Fri, 18 Feb 2005 11:08:41 GMT, John Proctor
wrote:

9 months winter and 3 months bad sleding (only joking rhys)


Hey, I must be getting a rep as a touchy nationalist G. Hey, outside
of B.C. it IS a short season practically everywhere (ever see a Star
go over in Lake Ontario in May? Brrrr....). There's no denying
reality, and Australia and New Zealand, too, are ideal sailing meccas.
Also, on the east side of either you've rarely got a lee shore and the
beer and ladies are constant companions. What's not to like?

R.
  #9   Report Post  
John Proctor
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On 2005-02-20 08:13:38 +1100, rhys said:

On Fri, 18 Feb 2005 11:08:41 GMT, John Proctor
wrote:

9 months winter and 3 months bad sleding (only joking rhys)


Hey, I must be getting a rep as a touchy nationalist G. Hey, outside
of B.C. it IS a short season practically everywhere (ever see a Star
go over in Lake Ontario in May? Brrrr....). There's no denying
reality, and Australia and New Zealand, too, are ideal sailing meccas.
Also, on the east side of either you've rarely got a lee shore and the
beer and ladies are constant companions. What's not to like?

R.


Rhys,

I grew up in Hamilton and did my EE in Kingston at Queen's U. Lived in
Ottawa after graduating and worked for BNR. I think it was the winter
of 1971 that got us thinking about warmer climates and losing the snow.
So with Wife and two kids in tow we went to Australia in 1977. Hell my
82 YO mother flys down here almost every year and loves the climate.

The beers good but the wines well they are simply supurb!;-)

--
Regards,
John Proctor VK3JP, VKV6789
S/V Chagall

  #10   Report Post  
rhys
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Sun, 20 Feb 2005 19:39:09 GMT, John Proctor
wrote:

Hell my
82 YO mother flys down here almost every year and loves the climate.


I can believe it. If you've got in-demand skills, Australia's a great
place to go. It's certainly in the top five sailing countries of the
world.

R.


Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is Off
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
( OT ) Canada busy sending back Bush-dodgers Jim General 22 November 30th 04 01:37 PM
Oh Canada! Bob Crantz ASA 0 July 17th 04 03:32 PM
rec.boats.paddle sea kayaking FAQ [email protected] General 0 March 18th 04 09:15 AM
rec.boats.paddle sea kayaking FAQ [email protected] General 0 January 16th 04 09:19 AM
rec.boats.paddle sea kayaking FAQ [email protected] General 0 December 15th 03 09:48 AM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 09:12 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 BoatBanter.com.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about Boats"

 

Copyright © 2017