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South Florida outdoors notebook
Sun-Sentinel
Outdoor Youth Day: The Florida Sportsmen's Conservation Association has its Outdoor Youth Day from 10 am-4 pm Feb. 4 at the Everglades Youth Camp in the JW Corbett Wildlife Management Area in western Palm Beach County. Activities include swamp buggy ...

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When noise annoys: How South Florida copes
Sun-Sentinel
But outdoors there's not much he can do. For those who live along South Florida's expressways, noise walls can help. But some wait decades for relief. When Interstate 75 was built in the 1980s, development was sparse in southwest Broward County.

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February is Florida Hiking Trails Month
Wakulla.com
TALLAHASSEE - Governor Rick Scott has proclaimed February as Florida Hiking Trails Month, recognizing the importance of this healthy, affordable outdoor activity and inviting Floridians and visitors to enjoy a hike along the state's extensive, ...



South Florida outdoors notebook
Sun-Sentinel
Outdoor Youth Day: The Florida Sportsmen's Conservation Association has its Outdoor Youth Day from 10 am-4 pm Feb. 4 at the Everglades Youth Camp in the JW Corbett Wildlife Management Area in western Palm Beach County. Activities include swamp buggy ...

and more »


Shows and Events
Trade Only Today
Tribune Outdoors Expo & Boat Show. An auction of boats, vehicles and watercraft is scheduled to take place Sunday at the third annual Palm Beach (Fla.) Marine Flea Market and Seafood Festival at the South Florida Fairgrounds. Internet and live bidding ...



In this mild winter, don't forget to get elders outside, too
GrossePointeToday.com
With the last few days being so mild – actually quite beautiful – I wondered about all the snowbirds who had left Michigan for Florida, Arizona and California for the winter. My mom included. “If we had known we were going to have a winter like this, ...



Outdoors notebook
MiamiHerald.com
By SUSAN COCKING • The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission meets Tuesday through Thursday in Midway, outside Tallahassee. The session Tuesday is a workshop for commissioners to discuss how state and federal marine fisheries stock ...



South Florida outdoors notebook
Sun-Sentinel
Bassmasters results: Bob Gallik caught 10.44 pounds Saturday to win the Everglades Bassmasters of South Florida club tournament on Lake Okeechobee out of Belle Glade. Joe Holland was second at 8.57, followed by Cary Wien at 7.53, Jon Farmer at 7.36 and ...

and more »


More schools turn to the outdoors for learning
The Daily Progress
Now, that hiking adventure has been expanded into additional excursions and a new, more comprehensive program that will evolve over the next five years to include outdoor educational opportunities for all Tandem students. “The outdoor experience ...



Wiley Dykes Sr.: Trailblazer created a path for those who follow
Orlando Sentinel
16, 1931, at a time when a kid could walk just about anywhere he wanted in the state of Florida. The woods, fields and swamps — the whole outdoors — seemed to belong to anyone and everyone. The state was wide open and untamed, the perfect training ...


Google News

Outdoors Featured Article

Tips on Buying a Boat: Seven Tips on What should you look for when investing in watercraft

02/06/12

 by: Keith Binnersley

I discovered sailing many years ago and found it to be a wonderful way to enjoy time with friends and family as well as a way to get away from the office and become totally entranced and absorbed with a world that I did not know existed. I love to sail, so much that I became a certified American Sailing Association Sailing Instructor.

It has been 30 years now that I've sailed the Chesapeake Bay, East Coast U.S.A. and the Caribbean Islands and I've been fortunate to have owned a number sailing vessels, currently two Beneteau sail boats.

I'm often asked by my students what to look for when making an investment in a sailing vessel. I often share the following seven tips and hope that you too may find some value in them.

  1. First carefully examine where you expect to use your boat, long term. Will it be on the Ocean, trans-Ocean, near the shore, in a Bay, on the Caribbean or all of the above. If you plan to sail Ocean or trans-Ocean then be sure that the construction is class "A" or rated for extended off shore passage making.

  2. Beware of the buying philosophy "I'll buy a smaller boat now and get a bigger one later." If you're buying new you will suffer two large depreciations. If buying used, the money you put into the first boat to bring it up to your own personal standards and needs will go a long way to paying a down payment or many monthly payments on the second boat. You will be upgrading the second boat anyway. Buy now what you expect to own for 5-10 years.

  3. Take into account the area where you will be sailing and who you will be sailing with. Decide on the type of berths that will be suitable for you, your family and your guests. For example, aft doubles aligned with the axis of the boat or an aft double that runs across the boat port to starboard. Although the latter tends to be larger and more comfortable in the slip it is definitely not a sea going berth. How easily does the main salon table convert into a berth and is it sturdy enough to do so repeatedly? In a pinch or in good weather can any one sleep in the cockpit?

  4. What is your likely cruising range? If just 2-4 days then water and diesel tankage can be respectively 20 and 80 gallons or less. If it is 5-10 days then a minimum would be 50 and 160. If you buy a boat with say 100 gallons diesel and 2-300 gallons water then the designer will have given up berth space to accommodate the tankage. Depending on the size of the boat the left over space may not be well utilized until you reach say a 50 ft. long boat. Look for living and storage space that is well utilized. Odd placement of the main salon settees, chart table and galley may indicate poor utilization of space and hence you may be paying good money for little advantage.

  5. Boats that are heavy displacement, say 28,000 lbs for say a 42 ft. boat rather than say 17,800 lbs for a medium displacement, 42 footer will need 10- 15 knots of wind to develop any kind of "feel" at the helm and in many locations such as the Chesapeake Bay with winds typically 5 - 15 knots in the summer you may have purchased a very nice well equipped power boat. However these heavy displacement cruisers are excellent for extended off shore passage making and live-aboard sailing either in the Caribbean or the U.S.A..

  6. One of the best tips, If you are a first time sailor and want to buy a boat in the 25 to 50 ft range, is to sail with someone who knows how to sail, take a sailing class and then charter a boat in the length range that interests you. Picking a boat with out sailing a boat of similar size is risky although many have done it successfully. Keep in mind that many of the modern designs of the last 10 years are designed specifically for two people to sail easily whether in the Bay or in the ocean.

  7. Lastly, do insist on a survey. If the boat has any of the defects listed below find out the cost to correct them if you are expecting the boat to pass the insurer's surveyor. Insurers have their own requirements. Your insurance agent and the surveyor should be working hand in hand. This is where a purchaser of a used watercraft can suddenly be faced with unexpected costs. Costly defects include but are not limited to:

    1. Soft or cracked gellcoat on the deck.

    2. Deck leaks around windows, masts, caprail, traveller or through deck fittings.

    3. If the engine that has stood idle for more than 6 months diesel may be contaminated with bacterial sludges, have pistons seized, injectors blocked and electrical system contaminated with water. Insist on at least a 2-4 hour run in the water at cruising speed. Check for undue vibration, overheating, proper charging of the batteries and that the engine can come up to its cruising rpm.

    4. If the boat is more than 6 years old have the surveyor check that the engine mounts are OK and particularly that all mounting bolts are intact. Two can be broken without any obvious signs or effects. When #3 breaks the engine is loose! This is a common problem on older boats that encounter rough waters while under power and can easily be overlooked by the surveyor.

    5. Obviously you will need an out of the water inspection. Check for blisters, gellcoat cracks, soft spots, shaft play in the cutlass bearing and loose rudder bearings, hull integrity around through hulls and the gap between the hull and the top of the keel which should be filled with sealant else corrosion of the keel may have caused the keel to separate from the hull.

    6. Rigging should be checked by a rigger and all running rigging must be overhauled end-to-end to detect hidden chafe.

Hope you find these tips helpful. Best wishes to you on your investment, maybe I'll see you on the Chesapeake Bay or near the British Virgin Islands sometime, I'll either be sailing on Majjik II or Majjik III.

About The Author

Keith Binnersley is owner of Upper Bay Sailing School, Inc. http://www.upperbaysailing.com. He is a Certified American Sailing Association Sailing Instructor and holds a 50 ton Masters USCG License. You can contact him at majjikll@msn.com.


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