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A sea trial, hauling, survey and re-launch is scheduled for Wednesday on the
Navigator "weather permitting". I haven't been down to the marina for a week due to two snowstorms up here. I suspect the back basin (which is brackish water) is iced over, although probably just on the surface. I am not sure about the inner harbor, although it has frozen enough to walk on in past winters. Forecast is for rain/snow on Wednesday although it may just be showers. I am leaning towards canceling the event and, assuming the buyer is still interested in the boat closer to spring, doing it then. He wants to leave the boat at it's current slip at my marina for the remainder of the winter anyway. I've been debating this in my head all morning. Obviously both brokers involved want to forge ahead, influenced by commissions. The buyer doesn't want to move the boat until spring anyway and, if the sale is consummated, the closing won't be until the first week of January at the earliest. Since I've never used the boat as an ice breaker I don't know the risks involved. Frankly I don't have any experience of, or have even heard of doing sea trials and surveys in the middle of winter, especially if it's snowing/raining/icy. It dawned on me that if something happens due to weather or ice, the risk is totally on us. The buyer can say, "Gee, that's too bad", and head for home. Anybody do this before? Eisboch |
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