Oriental is a wonderful place with friendly people and good food. And, if you do stop here, by all means, eat at our good friends at Toucan’s Grill and stay at Oriental Marina, a SALTY SOUTHEAST CRUISERS’ NET SPONSOR!
Southern Boating just published an article entitled: “Some of 2025’s Most Impressive RIBs and Tenders” The first boat shown is from Cruisers’ Net sponsor Highfield Boats.
Our friends at Sun Power Yachts provide an update regarding the CBP detention of Maxeon solar panels, the planned New Mexico factory, and what this all means for projected inventory this year. More affectionately known as the ‘solar-coaster,’ because solar always seems to be in flux, and certainly has its share of ups and downs. Sun Powered Yachts Has Limited Supply of Maxeon 330w Panels.
Riding the Solar-Coaster with Maxeon
We hope this finds all of you happy and well and enjoying the start of spring. Read on for updates regarding the CBP detention of Maxeon solar panels, the planned New Mexico factory and what this all means for projected inventory this year. More affectionately known as the ‘solar-coaster,’ because solar always seems to be in flux, and certainly has its share of ups and downs. We’re buckled up and have been on this ride for many years so we’re able to navigate the changes.
Since 2022, Maxeon has successfully made over 8,000 shipments from Mexico into the U.S. in full compliance with UFLPA (Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act). However, a large shipment of panels (156 containers full!) was detained by CBP in July 2024. Maxeon has submitted compliance paperwork but the CBP continues to detain the panels. Maxeon’s latest press release provides an update on their appeal with the U.S. Court of International Trade. Maxeon has taken extraordinary measures to ensure a clean and traceable supply chain, free from forced labor.
CBP’s decision does not prevent Maxeon from making future imports of the same or different solar panels with modified supply chain traceability documentation, as each shipment is evaluated independently. We continue to hope for a timely resolution and in the meantime are doing our best to keep panels in stock.
Looking ahead, in 2025 we’re excited to be back exhibiting at the Annapolis Boat Show in October. We look forward to catching up with so many of you and helping new boat owners go solar too. Katie will be in Newport Beach next Thursday May 2nd to check out the Newport Beach Boat Show. Hope to see some of you at the shows or out on the water this year!
Aloha, Katie & Lyall
Maxeon Panel Supply
Due to the CBP detention, no one in the USA has been able to purchase new Maxeon panels for many months. We have varied supply while we wait the release of the 435W, 470W and 475W panels which should be tariff free. Please check our shop for the most up to date fixed frame panel options. As yet, we have no plans to raise our prices because of tariffs.
Ahead of building a factory in Albuquerque, Maxeon is leasing a factory there to jump start panel assembly in the USA. George Guo, Maxeon CEO stated:
“We are committed to working with the Trump Administration as well as leaders in New Mexico to deliver our cutting-edge, high efficiency solar products to our residential and utility-scale partners active nationwide. Domestic manufacturing is the right thing to do, regardless of tariffs. Bringing our unique, patented technology together with a diversified and resilient supply chain is the recipe for Maxeon’s long-term success.”
We were able to import a second pallet of these large format flexible panels to our Arizona warehouse. We have not been told when Maxeon will go ahead with another production run of these. So if you have your eye on this specific panel, get yours before they sell out.
The 330W panels are sold individually or as 1x and 2x panel bundles in our shop. If you would like a custom quote please contact us with more details on your project. With a zipcode for delivery we can put together a freight quote and also size MPPT controllers & other system components.
Send us your install photos and we will share them on social media and add to our install gallery and install list too. Your installs help guide owners with similar boats as to what’s possible aboard.
The Dismal Swamp Route departs the southbound Waterway at MM 7.2. Our thanks to Sarah Hill for this invitation from Dismal Swamp Welcome Center, A CRUISERS NET SPONSOR!
To our Boating Community:
The 20th annual Paddle for the Border event will be held on Saturday, May 3rd, beginning near mm28 at the Dismal Swamp State Park paddle launch on the historic Dismal Swamp Canal. We will host about 375 canoes and kayaks launching approximately 8:30am and travel 7.5 miles north to the Ballahack Boat Ramp, in Chesapeake, VA. This event encourages recognition of the historical waterway and its importance to our area. The Dismal Swamp State Park, City of Chesapeake Parks, Rec and Tourism, Camden County, Dismal Swamp Welcome Center, and USACE all collaborate to promote this shared asset between two states.
Although the canal is still closed to maritime traffic, due to Deep Creek Bridge replacement project, we wanted to make everyone aware of this special paddling event that occurs annually. The launch will begin at 8:30am and paddlers will have cleared out of MM 28 location by 10:30am, heading north. We have had a couple of boaters cruise up from Elizabeth City for an overnight stay at our dock and to experience the Dismal Swamp State Park, before heading back south during this closure period.
On behalf of the Paddle for the Border Committee, thank you for sharing this with your boating partners and please let us know if you have any questions.
We look forward to the historic waterway reopening to boating traffic in early May & can’t wait to see everyone soon! Please feel free to call or reach out if you have any questions or concerns.
Many thanks,
Sarah
Sarah Hill, TMP Director, Dismal Swamp Canal Welcome CenterChairperson, Camden County Tourism Development Authority2356 US Hwy 17 North, South Mills, NC 27976
Cruisers Net publishes Loose Cannon articles with Captain Swanson’s permission in hopes mariners with salt water in their veins will subscribe. $7 a month or $56 for the year and you may cancel at anytime.
Juan Castro was arrested in Colombia and extradited to the U.S. for trial. This is one of his boats during a Coast Guard interdiction.
Earlier this month, Juan Carlos Castro Vasquez of Colombia was sentenced to 20 years in a U.S. federal prison. “Juanca,” as he liked to be called, was a boatbuilder for a drug cartel, having overseen the construction of at least five semi-submersibles designed to deliver cocaine for American buyers. That’s one of Castro’s creations in the photo above.
Authorities say there are more than a hundred such craft in service at any given time nowadays. Not so in the late 1980s. Back then, the smugglers preferred “Miami Vice” go-fast boats. Not until around 2006 did “narco subs” enter the picture.
But there was one guy—from Florida, of course—who would provide today’s generation of South American sub-builders with proof of concept. His name is Herbert Williams, and he is extraordinarily clever. By the time he had retired, Williams had become a wealthy man and a legend in the world of alternative energy. He has 22 patents, not counting any that may have been kept off the books for reasons of national security.
Williams always attributed his success to the 4 1/2 years that he spent in federal prison, where another inmate taught him technical drawing. When he got out, he had a roomful of plans for a variety of inventions, including a re-imagined cruise ship.
In 1987, he had launched an honest-to-gosh, semi-submersible, Detroit Diesel powered, wave-piercing beauty built in the woods of North Central Florida. At seatrial, her 8V-71 Detroit propelled Lady Jessica (after Williams’ young daughter) through the water at more than 30 knots, faster than a Coast Guard cutter at wide-open throttle.
“It was beautiful…something from Star Wars,” Williams once told a writer for Bloomberg.
Coast Guard crew wait on the Juan Castro vessel they had just intercepted in the eastern Pacific Ocean. It probably looks much like the Herbert Williams prototype from 35 years earlier.
Alas, police were waiting when he returned to port. They pounced as the 40-footer was clearing the jetties. Both Williams and Lady Jessica were taken into federal custody.
Years Later
Boris Kirolof is a naval architect working in Green Cove Springs, Florida. Williams walked into Kirolof’s office one day and became a client. As they worked together on a floating wind-turbine project, Williams confided in Kirolof, telling him his life story.
According to a published report, Williams was born in 1943 in Pahokee on the shores of Lake Okechobee. He spent the first 20 years of his working life as a commercial fisherman in Alaska, probably influenced by his dad. Williams told Kirilof that his father had built fishing boats somewhere in the Pacific Northwest.
It was a good thing that Kirolof was interviewed because his account provided a reality check for some of the fantastical claims in the Bloomberg article. For example, Bloomberg’s reporter wrote that the vessel had been a 96-foot catamaran, which would have made it difficult to trailer to the sea, as it would be both too long and way too wide.
Besides, Williams had shown Kirilof a photograph of Lady Jessica, and his keen naval architect eye can surely be trusted to distinguish between a monohull and a cat.
Recalling his client’s storytelling, Kirilof said Williams was first approached by a Spaniard who found him in a bar and appealed to his sense of the outlandish. A deal was made. Those were the days before supermarkets had switched to plastic, and Williams got paid with paper bags from Publix packed with hundred-dollar bills.
That and the stealth design criteria made it difficult for Williams to maintain the fiction that he was unaware of what the boat was going to be used for. The prosecutors didn’t buy it. As he explained his deniability defense to the Bloomberg writer, Williams recounted his rationale, “I’m building a boat. Chevrolet doesn’t ask customers what they intend to do with its cars.”
Florida photographer Tristan Wheelock took this picture of Williams with a turbine to accompany a story published by Bloomberg. It is reprinted here with permission.
Becoming an Inventor
Several of William’s patents involved the concept of a rim-drive turbine which eliminated the need for a central shaft, keeping the center of mechanism open like the hole in a donut. Bloomberg takes up the story:
Prison was horrible, of course. But it also turned Williams into a full-time inventor. “Prison set me down, allowing me to stop and think,” he says. Williams’s brainstorms eventually produced a design for one of the first commercial-scale turbines meant to convert tidal energy to electricity. Irish company OpenHydro later bought the patents Williams secured for his design and used them to create the first and still-biggest source of tidal power sold to consumers through the U.K. grid. In 2015, OpenHydro was sold for $173 million to DCNS Group, a French military contractor. The parent company is deploying massive 300-ton, 52-foot-high versions of the Williams design in Canada’s Bay of Fundy as well as in Brittany, France.
Kirilof recalled visiting William’s office and being shown a room full of the designs that he had put to paper while incarcerated. The rim-drive turbine was brilliant because the rotor wheel floated inside a “ducting shroud,” aligned by the placement of magnets inside the shroud assembly. OpenHydro paid him several million dollars for the patents and put him on its board of directors.
OpenHydro’s tidal turbine is deployed in Bay of Fundy in July 2018. The company purchased the patent from Herbert Williams.
When a news media outlet revealed that Williams was a felon, he was forced to resign from the board. OpenHydro dusted off Williams old plea of ignorance: He didn’t know the boat was going to be a narco-sub:
Herbert was unaware of the vessel’s purpose at the time of taking the commission, and it was impounded by U.S. authorities prior to ever being used. Herbert pleaded guilty to conspiracy and received a custodial sentence.
Eventually, tidal turbine projects in France, Scotland and Nova Scotia came to an end after break-downs and corporate money problems, but by then one had pumped power into the Orkney electricity grid steadily from 2008 to 2024.
Uncle Sam Comes A’Calling
At some point, the U.S. Navy came knocking at Williams’ door. Despite access to engineering talent from MIT and NASA, the Navy needed help from an ex-con with a talent for tinkering. The relationship began when Navy team flew down in a King Air and landed at the airstrip at William’s R&D facility in the woods.
With a newly minted security clearance, Bert Williams went to Washington and worked with the Navy to help solve its open-center turbine challenges. Mainly he sorted a problem that its scientists were having with magnet alignment. This is where, according to Kirilof, more millions of dollars and perhaps an unrecorded patent changed hands.
As it happens, the U.S. government can keep ideas secret under the Invention Secrecy Act. Why would anyone want to keep a shaftless turbine secret? Kirilof noted that a floating turbine creates no friction and therefore can be very quiet, a quality highly valued by the Navy’s “Silent Service.”
Maybe this time Williams really didn’t know to what purpose his talents were being applied, but he told Kirilof that whatever they were making had been tested in Scotland. The U.S. Navy has had an off-and-on submarine presence in Scotland for decades. And, after all, what is a turbine but a type of propeller?
According to Kirilof, one of the best things about Williams’ relationship with the Navy was access to experimental data from the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, especially if applicable to the other projects back in Florida.
Liquid Air
Which brings us to the reason that Williams needed help from a naval architect—his last major initiative before his retirement involved another cutting-edge energy concept—liquid air.
When air is compressed 700 times more than the normal stuff we breathe, it becomes liquid, storing the energy that got it to that state. Liquid air can be used like fuel to generate electricity. Like liquified natural gas (LNG), liquid air must be stored in special tanks to keep it supercold. In the case of liquid air, stored cryogenically at -321°F.
Liquid air hasn’t become a useful fuel because of the energy needed to power a compressor. Talking to a reporter in 2014, Williams said that using fossil fuels to liquify air produced “no winner.” He had a better idea.
Working from an industrial lot on the St. Johns River in Palatka, Florida, Williams set about to test a theory about how to liquify air using wind turbines. He called his company Keuka Wind.
With Kirilof and a cryogenic expert as advisers, Keuka Wind built a V-shaped barge that would act as a platform for five wind turbines. The turbines powered compressors and filled storage tank incorporated into the hulls with liquid air from the compressors.
According to Kirilof, the test barge they built was a success. Floating on the St. Johns River, free wind energy filled the barge’s tanks with liquified air, which researchers say is a better long-term energy storage solution than lithium batteries.
Keuka Wind’s small scale turbine platform successfully filled a tank with liquid air. The choice of backdrop was no accident—the oil fired power generation plant on the banks of the St. Johns River at Palatka, Florida.
Williams’s plan called for full-scale Keuka Wind platforms, each with a pair of 100-foot-diameter wind turbines, would be stationed in the ocean. There would be a pier between the legs of the V-shaped to allow tankers to come alongside and top off from seven 600-foot cryogenic tanks. Each of the two legs of the V would be 2,400 feet long.
Using ships would be a solution to another perceived drawback—how to transport large quantities of liquid air from their source to the energy grid.
Last of the Small Inventors
Back in 2020, the Palatka Daily News reported that Keuka Wind was soliciting investors to build a full-scale wind barge with a $64 million matching grant from the U.S. Energy Department. “As far as we know, and as far as the Department of Energy knows, we’re the only company on the planet that has actually come up with a way to store wind energy on a global scale,” Williams told the reporter, Wayne Smith.
“It’s too big a project for me to do on my own,” he said. “Every day, we’re plugging away and contacting people. We’ve got to get the wind machine out in the ocean and show what it can do.”
Williams is 81 now, and no longer active in business, but his ideas continue to rebound in alternative energy circles and scientific research.
DARPA, the Pentagon’s genius farm, is working on a magnetohydrodynamic drive (MHD) system that would propel ships without using a conventional prop. Powerful magnets would act like an invisible jet to push a vessel through water.
According to DARPA itself, the technology “builds on research stretching back to the 1960’s, when academic, commercial and military researchers thought technology for propulsion at sea could use magnetic fields to enable high-efficiency pumps to replace a propeller and drive shaft.”
It sounds like the old guy was playing in this ballpark. Not bad for a Florida boatbuilder and ex-con with no formal training as an engineer.
Rob Hovsapian was a research faculty member at Florida State University when he first met Williams in 2004. Hovsapian worked with Williams again when the former was a research advisor to the DOE’s National Renewal Energy Laboratory. He described Williams as a disappearing archetype.
“Herb is a very humble guy who doesn’t speak much on his accomplishments,” Hovsapian told the Daily News. “He’s a visionary guy, a man of science. We have very few small inventors left, and Herb is one of those guys.”
This watercolor by Tom Hedderich shows Coast Guard boarding team members from the Cutter Valiant climb aboard a suspected smuggling vessel. The ship had intercepted this drug-laden 40-foot semi-submersible in the Eastern Pacific Ocean carrying approximately 12,000 pounds of cocaine with a street value of more than $165 million.
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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There is always plenty to do around Charlotte Harbor. While berthed at Fishermen’s Village Marina, A CRUISERS NET SPONSOR, you are certain to enjoy visiting Western Florida’s beautiful Charlotte Harbor/Peace River.
Fishermen’s Village May Calendars of Entertainment/Events
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Disclaimer The information contained in the linked post (“Content”) represents the views and opinions of the original creators of such Content and does not necessarily represent the views or opinions of Salty Southeast Cruisers Net (“Cruisers Net”). The mere appearance of Content on the Site does not constitute an endorsement by Cruisers Net or its affiliates of such Content.
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Kanberra Group, LLC 800 Commerce Parkway Lancaster, New York 14086
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Comments from Cruisers (1)
C Winston Fowler- April 10, 2025 - 2:57 pm
We discovered Kanberra odor reduction products years ago for our boat. Then an application occurred in one of our vehicles to reduce diesel odor and WOW it worked great. Today we have Kanberra liquid soaps in all the bathrooms of our home; odor control products in closets and other storage areas of the home. If you don't try it you will never know the magic.
Salty Southeast Cruisers Net Sponsor Charleston County Cooper River Marina has provided this helpful information for your visit to Charleston County’s Beach Parks this Spring and Summer
Make your visit to the Charleston County Beach Parks a Breeze! Tips for a great beach park experience
(CHARLESTON COUNTY) – With spring break upon us and summer just around the corner, many locals and tourists will soon flock to the Lowcountry’s beaches. Charleston County Parks encourages beachgoers to familiarize themselves with important information and best practices to ensure the most enjoyable and safe time at our local beach parks.
The Charleston County Park and Recreation Commission (CCPRC) operates Folly Beach County Park, Isle of Palms County Park, and Kiawah Beachwalker Park. From spring break through September, the beaches are quieter on weekdays, with Fridays, weekends and holidays seeing large crowds. CCPRC encourages beachgoers to take note of the following tips and important information:
Park Capacity
While approaching the islands, CCPRC encourages drivers look for digital highway signs denoting beach parking capacity. The status of the parking lot for CCPRC’s beach parks will be updated in real time by staff, so guests know before they reach the park if parking is full.
Kiawah Beachwalker Park has 150 parking spots and usually fills to capacity by 10:30 a.m. in the summer. The Town of Kiawah prohibits vehicles from idling or parking outside the entrance to Kiawah Beachwalker Park. When the park is full, staff can add guests to a virtual line. Text notifications alert customers as they move to the front of the queue. Parking for buses, RVs and campers is not guaranteed.
Isle of Palms County Park has 445 parking spots and usually fills to capacity by 10:30 a.m. on weekends and holidays, with spots often becoming available again in the late afternoon. When parking is full, police will allow up to about 20 vehicles to wait in line for spaces to open. Once the turn lane outside the park is full, police direct vehicles to move to other parking areas not operated by CCPRC. Be aware of City of Isle of Palms parking ordinances. And note that there are only two lanes of traffic leaving Isle of Palms and Sullivan’s Island. On a crowded day, if weather or another event causes many people to try leaving the islands at once, traffic will back up, and it could take up to two hours for the park to empty. The free CARTA Beach Reach Shuttle is another way to access Isle of Palms County Park.
Folly Beach County Park has 225 parking spots and usually fills to capacity by 10:30 a.m. on weekends and holidays, with spots often becoming available again in the late afternoon. When the parking lot is full, look for City of Folly Beach parking lots on West Ashley Ave. to prevent blocking roads and driveways. Review City of Folly Beach parking ordinances in order to avoid being towed or ticketed.
The beach surrounding the Folly Beach Pier can be a troublesome location for rip currents. Staff at the pier frequently respond to emergencies when patrons swim too close to the pier and get caught in rip currents. When swimming in the vicinity of a pier, stay at least 200 feet away from the structure. Also, learn how to spot a rip current and how to escape them by swimming parallel to the shore. Learn more on the USLA website at https://www.usla.org/page/RIPCURRENTS.
Pets on the Beach
Pets must always remain leashed within the beach parks, but are not permitted on the Folly Beach or Mount Pleasant Piers. Each municipality has their own ordinances pertaining to dogs on the beach:
Swim near a lifeguard when possible and obey their commands
Watch children at all times
Seek shelter when lightning is in the area
Take a photo of your group when you arrive, so if anyone were to get separated (child or adult) it could help aid in the search.
Bring water and stay hydrated.
Other Resources
Keep up to date on the latest beach traffic reports by downloading the Berkeley-Charleston-Dorchester Council of Government’s Beach Reach app, available for Apple and Android. Also consider taking the free CARTA’s Beach Reach Shuttle to Isle of Palms County Park.
For more information on Charleston County Parks beach parks and safety, call 843-795-4386 or visit CharlestonCountyParks.com (direct link: https://ccprc.com/3222/Beach-Parks).
The mission of CCPRC is to improve the quality of life in Charleston County by offering a diverse system of park facilities, programs and services. The large park system features over 11,000 acres of property and includes six regional parks, three beach parks, four seasonally-lifeguarded beach areas, three dog parks, two landmark fishing piers, three waterparks, 19 boat landings, a skate park, a historic plantation site, a climbing wall, a challenge course, an interpretive center, an equestrian center, cottages, a campground, a marina, as well as wedding, meeting and event facilities. CCPRC also offers a wide variety of recreational services – festivals, camps, classes, programs, and much more. For more information on CCPRC, call 843-795-4386, or visit www.charlestoncountyparks.com.
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