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    • CURRENT LOCAL NOTICES TO MARINERS

      Here are the latest Local Notices to Mariners and NAV ALERTS that are relevant to ICW cruising in Districts 5, 7 and 8, the OBX, AICW, OWW, Keys, GIWW and adjacent waters. Open each LNM link for the USCG notice and a chart for each location. Listed north to south to north. NAV ALERTS will also be posted on our Homepage.

      For previous Local Notices, go to the Specific State or Region on our Homepage

       

      Week 44/25

      LNM: Off GIWW-East MM:104.3, Horn Island Pass Lighted Buoy 18 Offstation

      LNM: AIWW MM:329.2, Cape Fear River – Little River Daybeacon 73 Set TRUB

      LNM: Off GIWW-East MM:80.2, Biloxi Channel Light 8 Extinguished

      LNM: Off AIWW, Oregon Inlet Lighted Buoy 12 Offstation

      LNM: Off AIWW, Oregon Inlet Lighted Buoy 13 Offstation

      LNM: Off AIWW, Oregon Inlet Lighted Buoy 10 Offstation

      LNM: Off AIWW, Oregon Inlet Buoy 14 Offstation

      LNM: Off AIWW MM:666.1, Hampton River Daybeacon 12 Missing

      LNM: AIWW MM:329.2, Cape Fear River – Little River Daybeacon 73 Missing

      LNM: AIWW MM:303.6, Lower Midnight Channel South Range Rear Light Extinguished

      LNM: AIWW MM:526.6, Coosaw River Light 200 Missing

      LNM: Off GIWW MM 104.9, Between Pass-A-Grill Channel DBN 3 to 7 EXTREME Shoaling

      LNM: Off AIWW MM:565.1, Bloody Point Range Front Light Extinguished

      LNM: Off WW, Tampa Bay Cut C Channel Inbound Range Rear Light Extinguished

      LNM: Off AIWW, South River Entrance Buoy 2 Changed

      LNM: Off WW, Gadsden Point Cut Range Front Light Very Dim

      LNM: Off GIWW-East MM:103.0, Horn Island Pass Lighted Buoy 7 Offstation

      LNM: AIWW MM:293.3, Carolina Beach Inlet Buoy 7 Missing

      LNM: AIWW MM:293.2, Carolina Beach Inlet Buoy 4 Missing

      LNM: Off AIWW MM:1,091.3, Miami Main Channel Entrance Range Front Light Extinguished

      LNM: Off GIWW-East MM:127.2, Bayou Aloe Daybeacon 6 Destroyed

      LNM: Off GIWW-East MM:124.5, Dauphin Island Wreck Light WR1 Destroyed

      LNM: St. Johns River MM:13.4, Brills Cut Range Rear Light Extinguished

      LNM: AIWW MM:688.3, St Andrew Sound Lighted Buoy 30 Sinking

       

      Week 43/25

      LNM: AIWW MM:787.4, Matanzas River Light 50 Damaged

      LNM: St. Johns River MM:13.4, Brills Cut Range Rear Light Extinguished

      LNM: St. Johns River MM:13.3, Brills Cut Range Front Light Extinguished

      LNM: AIWW MM:399.7, Little River-Winyah Bay Light 90 Destroyed and Adrift

      LNM: AIWW MM:458.7, Winyah Bay-Charleston Harbor Daybeacon 117 Off Station

      LNM: AIWW MM:1,013.6, Lake Worth North Daybeacon 28 Delaminated

      LNM: AIWW MM:677.2, Mackay River Light 250 Missing

      LNM: GIWW MM 204.8, Santa Rosa Sound Daybeacon 106 Destroyed

      LNM: Off WW, Big Bayou Point Channel Daybeacon 1 Broken

      LNM: Off WW, Big Bayou Point Channel Daybeacon 5 Broken

      LNM: GIWW-West MM:633.1, Land Cut-Arroyo Colorado Light 88 Missing

      LNM: Off , Cape Lookout Lighted Buoy 14 Extinguished

      LNM: Off AIWW, Oregon Inlet Lighted Buoy 13 Extinguished

      LNM: AIWW MM:259.8, New River – Cape Fear River Daybeacon 69 Missing

      LNM: AIWW MM:246.0, New River Channel Buoy 11 Offstation

      LNM: AIWW MM:796.9, Matanzas River Light 90 Missing

      LNM: AIWW MM:796.8, Matanzas River Daybeacon 89 Missing

      LNM: Off WW, Hampton River Channel Daybeacon 18 Missing

      LNM: Off AIWW MM:676.8, Cedar Hammock Range Front Light Destroyed

      LNM: Off AIWW MM:676.3, Plantation Creek Range Rear Light Destroyed

      LNM: Off AIWW MM 675.2 Turtle River Lower Range Rear Light Destroyed

      LNM: Off GIWW, Gordon Pass Channel Buoy 1 Temporarily Disestablished

      LNM: Off GIWW, Gordon Pass Channel Light 3 Temporarily Disestablished

      LNM: AIWW MM 740.2, Pablo Creen Buoy 4 Offstation

      LNM: AIWW MM342.1 Calabash Creen Daybeacon 6 Changed

      LNM: AIWW MM:651.9, Rockdedundy River Light 183 Destroyed

      LNM: AIWW MM:677.2, Mackay River Light 250 Missing

      LNM: AIWW MM:303.4, Snows Marsh Channel Range Front Light Extinguished

      LNM: Off AIWW, Oregon Inlet Lighted Buoy 10 Relocated

      LNM: Off AIWW, Oregon Inlet Buoy 23 Relocated

      LNM: OWW MM 94 Ortona Lock FULLY OPERATIONAL, Caloosahatchee River, FL

      LNM: AIWW MM:312.0, Cape Fear River – Little River Light 11 Extinguished

      LNM: GIWW-East MM:210.0, Santa Rosa Sound Light 81 Extinguished

      LNM: Off WW, Hampton River Channel Daybeacon 18 Destroyed

      LNM: GIWW-East MM:216.2, Santa Rosa Sound Light 60 Extinguished

      LNM: AIWW MM:796.9, Matanzas River Light 90 Missing

      LNM: AIWW MM:796.8, Matanzas River Daybeacon 89 Missing

      LNM: Off AIWW, Oregon Inlet Lighted Buoy 8 Relocated

      LNM: GIWW MM:98.5, Mullet Key Channel Range Front Light Leaning

      LNM: Off AIWW, Oregon Inlet Buoy 14 Relocated

      LNM: GIWW MM:98.5, Mullet Key Channel Range Front Light Destroyed

      LNM: GIWW-West MM:633.6, Land Cut-Arroyo Colorado Daybeacon 89 Set TRUB

      LNM: GIWW-West MM:635.3, Land Cut-Arroyo Colorado Daybeacon 97 Missing

      LNM: GIWW-West MM:634.5, Land Cut-Arroyo Colorado Daybeacon 93 Destroyed

      LNM: GIWW-West MM:632.6, Land Cut-Arroyo Colorado Daybeacon 85 Set TRUB

      LNM: GIWW-West MM:644.0, Arroyo Colorado Cutoff Channel Junction Buoy N Missing

      LNM: Off AIWW MM:1,091.3, Miami Main Channel Entrance Range Front Light Extinguished

      LNM: Off WW, VA Power Cable Crossing Middle Tower Light B (2)

      LNM: Off , Laguna Madre Channel Light 26 Temporarily Disestablished

      LNM: GIWW-West MM:667.8, Laguna Madre Channel Light 27 Temporarily Disestablished

      LNM: GIWW-West MM:664.3, Harlingen-Port Isabel Light 73 Offstation

       

      Week 42/25

      LNM: AIWW MM:742.3, Queens Harbour Channel Daybeacon 4 Offstation

      LNM: GIWW-West MM:664.3, Harlingen-Port Isabel Light 73 Offstation

      LNM: Off GIWW MM:95.5, Mullet Key Channel Lighted Buoy 20 Extinguished

      LNM: Off GIWW MM:1.0, Sword Point Channel Daybeacon 19 Destroyed

      LNM: Off WW, Wachapreague Channel Light 6 Missing

      LNM: Off AIWW-DismalSwamp, Naval Ordnance Lighted Buoy P Unlit

       

      Week 09/25

      FWC Commissioners approve new rule establishing boating restricted area in Jupiter Narrows

       

      Week 39/23

      LNM: Alt ICW MM 7, Long Term Deep Creek Bridge Replacement, Dismal Swamp Canal, NC

      For previous Local Notices, go to the Specific State or Region on our Homepage

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    • LTM Additions So Far Today: Today (Thu, Oct 30)

      0 New LTM\’s Added Today. Note this post is updated hourly so check back as the day progresses for the lastest and updated information.

      SELECT LTM Area:

      SELECT Format:
       

      0 ALL Areas LTM\’s Added on 2025-10-30

      ALL Areas List for 2025-10-30 (0 Found)

      No LTM on 2025-10-30

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    • Southeast Marine Fuel Best Prices as of Oct 29

      This week’s lowest current marina fuel prices as of Oct 29
              Diesel Range: $2.92 to $4.70 Lowest @ Port Consolidated in (Eastern Florida)
              Gas Range: $2.98 to $2.98 Lowest @ Galveston Yacht Marina in (Texas)
      Remember to always call the marina to verify the current price since prices may change at any time. Also please let us know if you find a marina’s fuel price has changed via the Submit News link.

      SELECT Fuel Type:
      SELECT Format:
      Lowest Diesel Price in Each Region

      Fuel Price Report Brought to you by:

      Ft. Pierce City Marina
      Ft. Pierce City Marina specializes in overnight dockage and 22 hour fueling.

      Lowest Diesel Prices Anywhere

      All Regions (Price Range $2.92 to $6.00)

      $2.92 Port Consolidated (10/27)
      $2.96 Wacca Wache Marina (10/28)
      $3.13 Osprey Marina (10/27)

      Lowest By Region

      Virginia to North Carolina (Price Range $3.39 to $4.25)

       

      North Carolina (Price Range $3.32 to $5.60)

      $3.32 Albemarle Plantation Marina (10/27)
      $3.35 Dowry Creek Marina (10/28)
      $3.54 Belhaven Marina (10/21)

       

      South Carolina (Price Range $2.96 to $4.85)

      $2.96 Wacca Wache Marina (10/28)
      $3.13 Osprey Marina (10/27)
      $3.20 Grande Dunes Marina (10/27)

       

      Georgia (Price Range $3.40 to $5.30)

       

      Eastern Florida (Price Range $2.92 to $4.70)

      $2.92 Port Consolidated (10/27)
      $3.40 Pelican Yacht Club (10/27)
      $3.47 Fort Pierce City Marina (10/27)

       

      St Johns River (Price Range $3.79 to $6.00)

       

      Florida Keys (Price Range $3.69 to $5.49)

       

      Western Florida (Price Range $3.21 to $5.65)

      $3.21 Shields Marina (10/28)
      $3.47 Sea Hag Marina (10/28)
      $3.50 Safe Harbor Burnt Store Marina (10/27)

       

      Okeechobee (Price Range $3.73 to $4.12)

      $3.73 Gulf Harbour Marina (10/27)
      $4.12 Sunset Bay Marina (10/27)

       

      Northern Gulf (Price Range $3.35 to $3.73)

       

      Texas (Price Range $3.18 to $3.18)

       

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    • NHC: TROPICAL STORM CHARTS AND UPDATES

      The National Hurricane Center chart below updates automatically and shows the latest storm positions. Click the chart for the full NHC report. While port conditions are primarily for commercial mariners, they give a strong indication of the Coast Guard’s appraisal of the storm’s severity.

      Categories:
      • Category 1: winds between 74 m.p.h. and 95 m.p.h.
      • Category 2: winds between 96 m.p.h. and 110. m.p.h.
      • Category 3: winds between 111 m.p.h. and 129 m.p.h.
      • Category 4: winds between 130 m.p.h. and 156 m.p.h.
      • Category 5: winds of 157 m.p.h. or greater.
      Hurricane Season Port Condition Definitions 
      
      
      
      

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    • Uncrewed Vessels Will Use AI To Interpret Nav Data – Loose Cannon

      Cruisers Net publishes Loose Cannon articles with Captain Swanson’s permission in hopes that mariners with saltwater in their veins will subscribe. $7 per month or $56 for the year; you may cancel at any time.

       
       
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      Uncrewed Vessels Will Use AI To Interpret Nav Data

      U.K. Researchers Teaching Control Systems How To Understand Sailing Directions

       
       
       
       
       

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      The autonomous ZeroUSVs Oceanus12 is designed to support extended maritime operations, allowing for deployments of up to 7,500 nautical miles, or approximately 60 days, without the need for external assistance.

      The author is a regular contributor to Marine Industry News of the U.K., which published this story on October 16. It is reprinted here with permission.


      By GEMMA HARRIS

      A research project has been launched in Plymouth to teach autonomous vessels to read and act on official navigation data.

      The eight-month initiative, led jointly by the United Kingdom Hydrographic Office in Taunton and Plymouth-based Marine AI, aims to develop AI that is capable of interpreting Admiralty sailing directions and radio navigation warnings.

      The Admiralty is the British government agency historically responsible for its Navy. Now, it is also in charge of hydrography, charting, marine data and advice on maritime matters.

      “This is the first time anyone has attempted to process Admiralty Sailing Directions and Radio Navigation Warnings in a way that an autonomous control system can act upon,” said Oliver Thompson, technical director at Marine AI. “By proving this capability on the water, we are closing one of the biggest gaps in (uncrewed vessel) autonomy and taking a major step toward safe, fully automated operations.”

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      Such a project represents a world first in applying Large Language Models (LLMs) to process maritime navigation information for autonomous control systems.

      The maritime autonomy software firm, Marine AI, will retrain its baseline LLM to translate unstructured, text-based navigational data into formats usable by its GuardianAI autonomy software suite. The goal is to enable Maritime Autonomous Surface Ships to make safe, real-time operational decisions using the same authoritative information relied upon by professional mariners.

      Currently, uncrewed vessels depend on humans to interpret navigation warnings and sailing guidance, much of which is distributed through legacy systems and written in natural nautical language. The project will address these challenges by using AI to convert this into structured data that can be integrated into autonomous decision-making systems.

      In spring 2026, there is a planned on-water demonstration, when the ZeroUSVs Oceanus12 vessel, fitted with Marine AI’s GuardianAI suite, will navigate Plymouth’s waters using the newly developed capability. The trials will run alongside advanced simulation exercises and are expected to inform the International Hydrographic Organisation’s S-100 data framework—one that is underpinning the next generation of digital navigation standards.

      Mark Casey, head of Research, Design and Innovation at the Hydrographic Office, said: “Working with Marine AI allows us to push the boundaries of how autonomous systems can use official hydrographic information. The outcomes will not only support the safety of lives at sea but also feed directly into the development of the International Hydrographic Office’s S-100 framework, ensuring that Hydrographic Office data continues to set the global benchmark for safe navigation in both crewed and uncrewed vessels.”

      Plymouth, on the south coast of Southwest England, has become a national hub for autonomous maritime research, and this new project presents an opportunity to further strengthen its role as a testbed for uncrewed vessel technology.

      Read more stories like this one in the Marine Industry News.

      LOOSE CANNON covers hard news, technical issues and nautical history. Every so often he tries to be funny. Subscribe for free to support the work. If you’ve been reading for a while—and you like it—consider upgrading to paid.


       
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      411 Walnut St. No. 1944, Green Cove Springs, FL 32043
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    • LTM Additions: Yesterday (Wed, Oct 29)

      8 New LTM\’s Added Yesterday

      SELECT LTM Area:

      SELECT Format:

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    • Two Iconic Coral Specials Are Now ‘Functionionally Extinct’ Off Florida – Loose Cannon

      Cruisers Net publishes Loose Cannon articles with Captain Swanson’s permission in hopes that mariners with saltwater in their veins will subscribe. $7 per month or $56 for the year; you may cancel at any time.

         
       
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      Two Iconic Coral Specials Are Now ‘Functionionally Extinct’ Off Florida

      Authors Witness Reef’s Bleaching and Devastation

       
       
       
       
       

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      About the authors: Carly Kenkel is associate professor of Biological Sciences, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences; Jenna Dilworth is a Ph.D. candidate in Marine Sciences, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences, and Maya Gomez is a Ph.D. student in Marine Sciences, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences.

      This story first appeared in The Conversation on October 23, 2025 and is reprinted here with permission.


      By CARLY D. KENKEL, JENNA DILWORTH & MAYA GOMEZ

      In early June 2023, the coral reefs in the lower Florida Keys and the Dry Tortugas were stunning. We were in diving gear, checking up on hundreds of corals we had transplanted as part of our experiments. The corals’ classic orange-brown colors showed they were thriving.

      Just three weeks later, we got a call—a marine heat wave was building, and water temperatures on the reef were dangerously high. Our transplanted corals were bleaching under the heat stress, turning bone white. Some were already dead.

       Two photos show staghorn coral before after bleaching of a few weeks. The live coral is a mustard color. The bleached corals are a ghostly bone white. 
      Staghorn corals in a lower Florida Keys transplant experiment that were healthy in June 2023 had bleached white in July. Erich Bartels, Joe Kuehl/Mote Marine Laboratory

      That was the start of a global mass bleaching event. As ocean temperatures rose, rescuers scrambled to relocate surviving corals to land-based tanks, but the heat wave, extending over 2023 and 2024, was lethal.

      In a study published Oct. 23, 2025, in the journal Science, we and colleagues from NOAA, the Shedd Aquarium and other institutions found that two of Florida’s most important and iconic reef-building coral species had become functionally extinct across Florida’s coral reef, meaning too few of them remain to serve their previous ecological role.

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      No Chance To Recover

      In summer 2023, the average sea-surface temperature across Florida’s reef was above 87 degrees Fahrenheit (31 degrees Celsius) for weeks. We found that the accumulated heat stress on the corals was 2.2 to 4 times higher than it had ever been since modern satellite sea-surface temperature recordings began in the 1980s, a time when those two species—branching staghorn and elkhorn corals—were the dominant reef-builders in the region.

       A map showing Florida Keys sea surface temperature more than 7 degrees Fahrenheit (4 degree Celsius) warmer than average 
      A sea-surface temperature map from mid-July 2023 shows the extraordinary heat around the Florida Keys. NOAA Coral Reef Watch

      The temperatures were so high in the middle and lower Florida Keys that some corals died within days from acute heat shock.

      Everywhere on the reef, corals were bleaching. That occurs when temperatures rise high enough that the coral expels its symbiotic algae, turning stark white. The corals rely on these algae for food, a solar-powered energy supply that allows them to build their massive calcium carbonate skeletons, which we know as coral reefs.

      These reefs are valuable. They help protect coastal areas during storms, provide safety for young fish and provide habitat for thousands of species. They generate millions of dollars in tourism revenue in places like the Florida Keys. However, the symbiotic relationship between the coral animal and the algae that supports these incredible ecosystems can be disrupted when temperatures rise about 2 to 3 degrees Fahrenheit (1 to 2 degrees Celsius) above the normal summer maximum.

      By the end of summer 2023, only three of the 200 corals we had transplanted in the Lower Keys to study how corals grow survived.

      In the Dry Tortugas, corals’ bone-white skeletons were already being grown over by seaweed. That’s a warning sign of a potential phase shift, where reefs change from coral-dominated to macroalgae-dominated systems.

      Our colleagues observed similar patterns across the Florida Keys: Acroporid corals – staghorn and elkhorn – suffered staggering levels of bleaching and death.

      Of the more than 50,000 acroporid corals surveyed across nearly 400 individual reefs before and after the heat wave, 97.8 to 100 percent ultimately died. Those farther north and offshore in cooler water fared somewhat better.

      But this pattern of bleaching extended to the rest of the Caribbean and the world, leading NOAA to declare 2023-2024 the fourth global bleaching event. This type of mass bleaching, in which stress and mortality occur almost simultaneously across locations around the world, points to a common environmental driver.

       Ghost-white coral branches among darker ones with fish swimming above. 
      A bleached and dead staghorn coral thicket in the Dry Tortugas, already being overgrown by seaweed in September 2023. The corals had been healthy a few months earlier. Maya Gomez

      In the summer of 2023, that environmental driver was clearly soaring water temperatures caused by climate change.

      Functionally Extinct

      Even before the 2023 marine heat wave, staghorn and elkhorn numbers had been dwindling, with punctuated declines accelerated by a diverse array of stressors – hurricane damage, loss of supporting herbivore species, disease and repeated bleaching.

      The 2023-2024 event was effectively the final nail in the coffin: The data from our new study shows that these species are now functionally extinct on Florida’s coral reef.

      Caribbean acroporids have not entirely disappeared in Florida, but those left are not enough to fulfill their ecological role. When populations become too small, they lose their capacity to rebound – in conservation biology this is known as the “extinction vortex.” With so few individuals, it becomes harder to find a mate, and even when one is found, it’s more likely to be a relative, which has negative genetic consequences.

       Golden colored corals shaped like an elk's antlers  
      Live elkhorn coral, Acropora palmata, off Florida before the marine heat wave. NOAA Fisheries
       A side view of bleached-white elkhorn coral 
      A bleached colony of elkhorn coral in Dry Tortugas National Park off Florida on Sept. 11, 2023. Shedd Aquarium/Ross Cunning

      For an ecosystem-builder like coral, many individuals are required to build an effective reef. Even if the remaining corals were the healthiest and most thermally tolerant of the bunch – they did survive, after all – there are simply not enough of them left to recover on their own.

      Can Corals Be Saved?

      Florida’s acroporids have joined the ranks of the California condor – they cannot recover without help. But unlike the condor, there are still pockets of healthy corals scattered throughout their broader range that could be used to help restore areas with localized extinctions.

      The surviving corals in Florida could be bred with other Caribbean populations to boost their numbers and increase genetic diversity, an approach known as assisted gene flow.

       A diver with a camera and a box around a small coral branch. 
      Maya Gomez, one of the authors of this article and the study, takes photos of transplanted corals off Florida. Jenna Dilworth

      Advancements in microfragmentation, a way to speed up coral propagation by cutting them into smaller pieces, and cryopreservation, which involves deep-freezing coral sperm to preserve their genetic diversity, have made it possible to mass produce, archive and exchange genetic diversity at a scale that would not have been possible just 10 years ago.

      Restoration isn’t easy, though. From a policy perspective, coordinating international exchange of endangered species is complex. There is still disagreement about the capacity to scale up reef restoration to recover entire ecosystems. And the question remains: Even if we could succeed in restoring these reefs, would we be planting corals just in time for the next heat wave to knock them down again?

      This is a real risk, because ocean temperatures are rising. There is broad consensus that the world must curb the carbon emissions contributing to increased ocean temperatures for restoration to succeed.

      Climate change poses an existential threat to coral reefs, but these advancements, in concert with effective and timely action to curb greenhouse gas emissions, could give them a fighting chance.

      LOOSE CANNON covers hard news, technical issues and nautical history. Sometimes he tries to be funny. Subscribe for free to support the work. If you’ve been reading for a while—and you like it—consider upgrading to paid.

        
        
      This newsroom runs on tequila. Please support the distiller that supports Loose Cannon.

       

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    • New Mooring Field: Loggerhead Park & Mooring Field at AIWW MM 1070.6


      New mooring fields are always welcome, especially with the growing restrictions on anchoring.  The Loggerhead Park  Mooring field is located in Hollywood FL off the AIWW at mile marker 1070.6.

      Cruisers Net Listing: https://cruisersnet.net/228196
      Loggerhead Park Mooring Field Website: WestLakePark@Broward.org
       
      The Loggerhead Park Mooring Field opened on Friday, October 10, 2025. The first mooring field in the Broward County Parks and Recreation system was developed to provide overnight stays for the owner/operator and crew/guests in vessels 40 feet or less in length. The mooring field is adjacent to the Intracoastal Waterway in the Hollywood North Beach area attached to a barrier island to allow access to local restaurants and entertainment.​ It’s coordinates are latitude: 26.035699751, longitude: -80.11610654.
       
      The mooring field has 28 slips available to rent (22 spots in the North Cove and six in the South Cove), which provide fore-and-aft anchoring systems for each boat. Mooring slips will be assigned by staff based upon availability and size of vessel. Vessels check in and out between 9:30AM to 6PM. Check-in time 1PM or later on the day of arrival. Checkout time is no later than 11AM on the day of departure.
       
      There is a $30/nightly fee and a facility permit is required. Maximum length of stay is 90 days followed by a minimum off-site stay of five days to be allowed back in for an additional 90 days (no more than 180 cumulative days in any rolling twelve-month period).
       
      Office is onsite. Renters have use of laundry facilities, showers/ restrooms, pump-out station, freshwater service and picnic shelter.
      For additional details about mooring rentals, call West Lake Park at 954-357-5282.​​​

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    • Investor Balked at Saving Catalina, Company President Told Workers (Video) – Loose Cannon

      Cruisers Net publishes Loose Cannon articles with Captain Swanson’s permission in hopes that mariners with saltwater in their veins will subscribe. $7 per month or $56 for the year; you may cancel at any time.

       
         
       
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      This is an unfinished Catalina sailboat from a happier times.

      Catalina Yachts President Patrick Turner stood before a couple dozen employees, explaining to them that the company needed an infusion of capital to stay in business. Catalina’s new owner, Michael Reardon, had been wooing a potential investor who ultimately refused to commit, Turner said, before announcing that they were all being laid off.

      “Michael, our owner, has done his part in getting someone involved, the investor.” Turner told workers at Catalina’s Largo, Florida, facility. “The investor was asking questions, and we’d keep answering, and he keeps asking more questions.”

      Reardon was owner of Daedulus Composites, a boatbuilder in Edenton, North Carolina. He purchased the assets of Catalina and True North powercraft from Catalina’s corporate ownership in California (California Catalina) in May. In August, he bought Tartan Yachts and two other brands.

      Soon after Turner closed down the Florida Catalina facility earlier this month, his LinkedIn page began listing him as president of Tartan Yachts, which is in Ohio.

      Layoff Video, October 14, 2025

      On September 18, California Catalina filed a lawsuit against Reardon for non-payment of rent for the Florida Catalina factory and, by default, the $1 million promised for purchase of company assets. The suit listed the following boats as collateral; nine of the 11 are in various stages of construction, some near completion.

        

      As reported earlier, Florida Catalina employees were working without pay for the last five weeks before the shutdown. As it happens, the company was also “out of trust” with its suppliers, too. No more materials or gear on credit. Catalina’s parts people began sourcing supplies from Amazon in an effort to finish boats.

      Unlike other builders who employ a series of “draws,” collecting a percentage of the purchase price at specified construction milestones, Catalina Florida took a single down payment with the balance due at delivery. For example, a C-446 goes out the door for more than $600,000, so revenue generated at delivery of even a single boat is substantial.

      Meanwhile, the workforce (many of them who were making just $16 an hour) are hoping someone reopens the factory so Sail Annapolis and others can get their boats.

      Michael Reardon has lost control of the building, having been evicted as a consequence of California Catalina’s lawsuit against him. So, some employees now hope that the people behind California Catalina—the family of the late Frank Butler—will get the resin flowing again and push those nine boats out the door.

      LOOSE CANNON covers hard news, technical issues and nautical history. Sometimes he tries to be funny. Subscribe for free to support the work. If you’ve been reading for a while—and you like it—consider upgrading to paid.

       
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    • RESILIENT – Janice Anne Wheeler

       
         
       
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      Another week of SPARRING flies by! Your support is priceless. Thank you. ~J

      If you’ve just joined our engaging little community, please read SPARS & SPARRING, my introductory piece.…. ~J


      RESILIENT

      Getting back out there.

       
       
       
       
       

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      It was one of those mornings when, in our part of the northern hemisphere, there is an inherent change afoot; a crispness that is felt as the leaves turn and rustle on their branches, refusing to give up just yet. The sun is at the perfect angle for other-worldly reflections on the bottoms of the clouds, and even though castoff was imminent, I wandered, knowing it would be a while before we felt any peace. It was race week.

      Mother Nature’s brilliance reflects the John Alden designed schooner RESILIENT.

      None of us had ever really sailed RESILIENT, much less raced her, and we all hoped she was aptly christened. The remaining sections of Baltimore’s Frances Scott Key Bridge, which shockingly collapsed like so many legos after a container ship struck a support tower in March 2024, were a powerful reminder of what happens when things go wrong on seagoing ships, large and small. Systems fail, forecasts are wrong.

      Eastern and Western (under rebuild) spans. Below, also looking southbound, prior to collapse.
        
      STEADFAST approaches the Frances Scott Key Bridge at dawn 2022.

      Before we left for the 118-mile Great Chesapeake Bay Schooner Race, studying wind and wave forecasts, I declared, more to myself than to Steve, that I must be either brave or crazy to keep signing up and living a life that sometimes clashes with my bodily functions so strongly as to cause debilitation. I’m what is referred to as a seasick sailor…some folks are lucky enough to never experience that nasty affliction; and now you know for certain that our ability to explore (among other things) must make all the complexities of living aboard a wooden sailing yacht worthwhile. I can control my malady most of the time and recover quickly, life’s full of tradeoffs.

      The race began at noon and when, during the moonless night, the forecasted 20 knots turned to 32 (near gale force) ‘on the tail’ with a huge following sea, well, I couldn’t quite control that or the wintery wind chill. In such circumstances boats ‘surf’ down the front side of the six-to-eight foot waves and a vessel such as ours, which averages seven knots of speed, was able to hit over eleven. The sensation is hard to describe when your stomach drops like a roller coaster and the waves crest like an angry ocean.

      You can see the results and details here. We crossed both finished lines with just four vessels ahead of us despite their far greater size and experience. We are proud although the corrected times took us down a notch or two in the final standings. “Line Honors” it is called in the complicated, competitive world of sailboat racing. I have an expensive vine-draped education and knack for numbers, but those calculations remain a mystery to me.

        

      After celebrating with fresh local seafood donated and served by the men who harvested them we were prudent enough to know that if we stayed for breakfast we’d have a rough return trip for certain; the latest forecast had wind and rain whipping up hard in less time than the passage would take us.

      Eighty hours after our odyssey began, I half-knelt, half-stood in the cockpit of the striking little schooner for the best possible vantage point, one hand guiding the helm in an irregular back-and-forth rhythm as the vessel turns into the wind and needs to be corrected to her course, and the other resting easily on another spoke, our responsibilities over, for the most part, except to get the vessel safely back to her marina a hundred miles or so to the north. That task sounds simpler than it would turn out to be, as things so often are when SPARRING WITH MOTHER NATURE.

        
      My unusual helm stance & Captain Mick Price, checking conditions.

      The first eighteen hours northbound was a reward, the reason we tolerate the whims, the moods, the watch of Mother Nature; our propulsion was southeast blowing fourteen to seventeen knots; the last six hours built right back to the near-gale, on-tail we had sailed in the race. We were more prepared, more knowledgable, but worn a tad thin.

      Just after true dark, the fifth-of-a-mile-long Baltimore-based Carnival PRIDE cruise ship overtook us in the channel with its propellers churning, contrasting significantly with our peaceful passage using only the wind.

        
      Photographer David Sites captured CARNIVAL PRIDE under the Chesapeake Bay Bridge.

      When underway sailing, a vessel shows just three lights; a rear white, red port side and green starboard side. This brilliant, simple system tells other vessels whether you are coming or going. The cruise ship glowed with what looked like a light for each of the 3,000 or so souls on board. In comparison, this is the view from our open cockpit navigating at night. While admittedly those folks have more creature comforts, it’s our perspective that I prefer.

        
      Hard to distinguish? The green starboard light is reflected on the sails.

      We’ve spent fifteen long months working on STEADFAST. The Great Chesapeake Bay Schooner Race, while we didn’t get much rest, reinvigorated and further inspired me to get back out there. RESILIENT was appropriately named, after all. ~J

      To read more about following seas, take a look at this strongly opinionated piece by yours truly:

      FOLLOWING SEA?
       

      FOLLOWING SEA?

       
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      April 23, 2024
      Read full story

      Think my work is share-worthy? Simply hit the circular arrows bottom right to ‘restack.’ So easy and it’s an algorithmic jet-launch! (I don’t understand it, either…)

      Share SPARRING WITH MOTHER NATURE

        
      RESILIENT crew John Blamphin spent many rough hours at the helm.

       

       

      I so appreciate your support of my work. Have a wonderful week!

        
       
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      © 2025 Janice Anne Wheeler
      Living aboard Sailing Yacht STEADFAST again soon!
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