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slip or mooring costs
On 24 Feb 2004 18:17:37 -0600, Dave wrote:
On Tue, 24 Feb 2004 14:12:10 -0800, "Steve" said: I always wondered what boaters paid in and around the Big Apple. There are places for considerably less on City Island in the Bronx. Around $23 a foot with launch service. In Jersey City you pay a lot for quick access from the City. If I remember correctly, hauling in Jersey City runs about another $50 a foot. That is a mooring, not a slip. In any case, City Island is a long trip by public transportation. Taxis would easily eat up the difference in price, and take a lot longer than the PATH to NJ. I don't know what hauling in JC costs I take Gjo/a to Mamaroneck for haulout. Rodney Myrvaagnes NYC J36 Gjo/a "Never eat more in a single day than your head weighs." --Jim Harrison |
slip or mooring costs
In article ,
(Parallax) wrote: I am curious about slip or mooring costs around the country. Please reply telling the costs in your area and whether it is a slip or mooring and what that provides and if there are any other costs. Carrabelle, FL I pay $159/month for a slip at a fixed dock .5 miles from open water. I have access to power and water. No pump out facility. There are no other charges. Of course, my boat stays in the slip all year. I am certain that if I looked nearby I could find a private dock for less than $100/month but I like being right in Carrabelle. $1900/6 month season for 30+' slip. (actually 35' or so) Single full-length fixed finger pier Screened activities area on our dock (The Chicken Coop) Nice, clean, though aging, air conditioned heads. Restaurant Beach bar with perhaps the best sunset view on the Bay. Pool Beach Various picnic areas FULL service shops & excellent parts department. (I'm told it's THE place to get engine work done.) REALLY nice folks & the number 1 draw: Zero feet to the wide open Bay. -- Jere Lull Xan-a-Deux ('73 Tanzer 28 #4 out of Tolchester, MD) Xan's Pages: http://members.dca.net/jerelull/X-Main.html Our BVI FAQs (290+ pics) http://homepage.mac.com/jerelull/BVI/ |
slip or mooring costs
grandma Rosalie wrote:
|We are off the Potomac River in Maryland What is the name of the marina? I am looking for a place in that area but have no local knowledge. Any enlightenment will be appreciated TIA Vic -- __________________________________________________ ______ Victor Fraenckel - The Windman vfraenc1 ATSIGN nycap DOT rr DOTcom KC2GUI Home of the WindReader Electronic Theodolite Read the WIND "Victory at all costs, victory in spite of all terror, victory however long and hard the road may be; for without victory there is no survival." - Winston [Leonard Spencer] Churchill (1874 - 1965) Dost thou not know, my son, with how little wisdom the world is governed? -Count Oxenstierna (ca 1620) to the young King Gustavus Adolphus |
slip or mooring costs
grandma Rosalie wrote:
|We are off the Potomac River in Maryland What is the name of the marina? I am looking for a place in that area but have no local knowledge. Any enlightenment will be appreciated TIA Vic -- __________________________________________________ ______ Victor Fraenckel - The Windman vfraenc1 ATSIGN nycap DOT rr DOTcom KC2GUI Home of the WindReader Electronic Theodolite Read the WIND "Victory at all costs, victory in spite of all terror, victory however long and hard the road may be; for without victory there is no survival." - Winston [Leonard Spencer] Churchill (1874 - 1965) Dost thou not know, my son, with how little wisdom the world is governed? -Count Oxenstierna (ca 1620) to the young King Gustavus Adolphus |
slip or mooring costs
Here are fees/membership costs at our home club...
http://www.rnsys.com/Welcome.html see both page on membership fees and separate page for facilities. Parallax wrote in message om... I am curious about slip or mooring costs around the country. Please reply telling the costs in your area and whether it is a slip or mooring and what that provides and if there are any other costs. Carrabelle, FL I pay $159/month for a slip at a fixed dock .5 miles from open water. I have access to power and water. No pump out facility. There are no other charges. Of course, my boat stays in the slip all year. I am certain that if I looked nearby I could find a private dock for less than $100/month but I like being right in Carrabelle. |
slip or mooring costs
Here are fees/membership costs at our home club...
http://www.rnsys.com/Welcome.html see both page on membership fees and separate page for facilities. Parallax wrote in message om... I am curious about slip or mooring costs around the country. Please reply telling the costs in your area and whether it is a slip or mooring and what that provides and if there are any other costs. Carrabelle, FL I pay $159/month for a slip at a fixed dock .5 miles from open water. I have access to power and water. No pump out facility. There are no other charges. Of course, my boat stays in the slip all year. I am certain that if I looked nearby I could find a private dock for less than $100/month but I like being right in Carrabelle. |
slip or mooring costs
On Tue, 24 Feb 2004 17:11:30 GMT, Rosalie B.
wrote: OK forgot to say - fixed docks with short finger piers but our slip has a full length dock beside it. We have only about 2 foot tides there though so a fixed dock isn't so bad. Fixed docks with a 2-foot normal tide are usually OK but I had two incidents with them...once the tide was so low the boat had grounded in the slip and I couldn't get from the dock to the deck till the tide came in. Then in Mobile, the storm surge from TS Isidore was about three feet above normal high tide causing all sorts of line adjustment problems and the docks to go under water for a few hours. |
slip or mooring costs
On Tue, 24 Feb 2004 17:11:30 GMT, Rosalie B.
wrote: OK forgot to say - fixed docks with short finger piers but our slip has a full length dock beside it. We have only about 2 foot tides there though so a fixed dock isn't so bad. Fixed docks with a 2-foot normal tide are usually OK but I had two incidents with them...once the tide was so low the boat had grounded in the slip and I couldn't get from the dock to the deck till the tide came in. Then in Mobile, the storm surge from TS Isidore was about three feet above normal high tide causing all sorts of line adjustment problems and the docks to go under water for a few hours. |
Fixed docks was slip or mooring costs
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Dick Locke wrote: On Tue, 24 Feb 2004 17:11:30 GMT, Rosalie B. wrote: OK forgot to say - fixed docks with short finger piers but our slip has a full length dock beside it. We have only about 2 foot tides there though so a fixed dock isn't so bad. Fixed docks with a 2-foot normal tide are usually OK but I had two incidents with them...once the tide was so low the boat had grounded in the slip and I couldn't get from the dock to the deck till the tide came in. Well what did it hurt to wait? Or just use a gangplank. We've been on the ground in the slip (not at our home marina, but at Hilton Head in SC) and had to wait until high tide to leave because the boat wasn't floating. Then in Mobile, the storm surge from TS Isidore was about three feet above normal high tide causing all sorts of line adjustment problems and the docks to go under water for a few hours. Did you look at my picture of our boat in the dock after Isabel? http://photomail.photoworks.com/shar...s/KHX/At3xUbeV The marina pictures were at LOW tide the next day (Friday). [The first (1-4) pictures are of Bob on the roof of the porch roof sweeping the leaves and branches off. Then are some (5-9) pictures from the upstairs window of the house showing that there wasn't any damage except leaves and some branches on the ground at our house although we were without electricity for several days. We live up on a hill about 1/4 mile above the Potomac.] Low tide after Isabel off the Potomac River down near the Chesapeake Bay #10 - marina from the access road #11 - haulout slip (under water) #12 - covered slips #13 - boardwalk beside covered slips #14 - Spinnaker's restaurant #15 and #16 - high tide mark in the yard of the first house on the road next to the marina (the house is beside where #10 was taken) #17 and #18 - Gas dock and A dock #19 steps of marina office (which normally are next to the office) #20-21 our boat from the docks #22 - dinghy of next boat from beside our boat. I couldn't get on the boat because it was too high over the dock. The tidal surge went up to the top of the pilings - about 5 feet above the dock, which is normally one or two feet above the water. We had our boat tied with spring lines in the slip (as did the people that didn't go to anchor or have their boats hauled) with the lines to the pilings on the far side of the dock because we only have cleats on our side. I took the pictures from partway out the dock because Bob wanted to know how the boat fared, and he didn't want to wade out there and I didn't mind. It was difficult because the water was up to my knees and I had to get over or under all the lines from our side of the dock to the other side. When I got down there I sat on the steps next to the boat to rest. That's where the last picture was taken of the dinghy of our neighbor on top of the dock in the last picture. In any case - my point is - if you know how to secure a boat to a fixed dock (and IMHO you SHOULD know) it is perfectly possible to do so without a problem even with a high tide. All those shrimp boats in SC and GA and northern FL with 6 to 8 foot tides - most of them are at fixed docks. We are at a fixed concrete dock here in Marathon with about a 2 foot normal tide. (I think they have fixed docks here mostly because of the hurricane season.) So you should know how to have the boat safely in the slip even in an extra high or extra low tide. I think that's something that a sailor/boater should know. If you have a fixed dock and a tide that isn't too great - that's a good opportunity to practice so that if you go somewhere and they say - you can stay on the gas dock tonight (gas docks are often fixed docks), and BTW we have 6.5 foot tides and it's high tide now (and your boat is about even with the dock at that point) you have some clue as to how to proceed. It may be easier to have floating docks (although I always have to have a step stool on the dock to get off our boat if there are floating docks), but unless you never intend to go anywhere outside your own marina (and if that is so - why even have a boat), then you need to know stuff like how to tie the boat up in a variety of situations - face dock, or slip with a 4 point tie, floating dock or fixed dock, cleats or pilings. grandma Rosalie |
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