AIWA October 2023 Newsletter
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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.
click here for Our Canine-Trafficking Careers Were Nipped in the Bud
Peter Swanson
click here for Nonnative apple snails, zebra mussels found in NC waters
CoastalReview.org
Help your students uncover the human stories behind shipwrecks, including some of the most famous ones, like the Titanic.
Click here for Join Ocean Today for a Journey into the Deep Sea and into our Past
Drawing from maps created by a teacher and his students, historian David Cecelski aims to get a feel for the lumber mill villages in Hyde County that have long since disappeared.
Hyde County road map, 1936. Lake Mattamuskeet occupies the map’s center-right section. The Pungo River forms the county’s western boundary. The body of water to the south and southeast is the Pamlico Sound. We can see the southern part of the Alligator River in the map’s upper righthand corner. Courtesy, State Archives of North Carolina
Click here for Wharf pilings and sawdust: Visiting Hyde’s lost villages by David Cecelski
CoastalReview.org
This increase in train service will double the wait time for boaters in the Okeechobee Waterway due the increased number of RR bridge waterway closings.
BRIGHTLINE TO GO FROM 16 T0 30 TRAINS BETWEEN ORLANDO AND MIAMI
15 Round-Trips to Begin October 9
Orlando, Fla. (October 3, 2023) – Brightline, the only provider of modern, eco-friendly, higher-speed rail service in America, will double its train service between Orlando and Miami, just two weeks after opening the highly anticipated route. Brightline will begin running 30 trains daily starting October 9, with 15 daily departures from Miami and Orlando.
The new hourly schedule begins with the first train leaving Orlando at 4:38 a.m., arriving into Miami at 8:11 a.m. The final train leaves Orlando at 8:54 p.m. The first train leaves Miami for Orlando at 6:41 a.m., arriving at 10:19 a.m. with the last train leaving Miami for Orlando at 9:41 p.m. Additional early-morning and late-night trains will operate between Brightline’s five South Florida stations.
Media Contacts:
Katie Mitzner, director of public affairs
katie.mitzner@gobrightline.com
407.502.3587
Vanessa Alfonso, director of media relations
vanessa.alfonso@gobrightline.com
305.744.2293
About Brightline
Brightline is the only provider of modern, eco-friendly, higher-speed rail service in America. The company currently serves Miami, Aventura, Fort Lauderdale, Boca Raton, West Palm Beach and Orlando. Brightline was recognized by Fast Company as one of the Most Innovative Companies in Travel and included in Condé Nast Traveler’s 2023 Hot List for the best new ways to travel. Offering a guest-first experience designed to reinvent train travel and take cars off the road, Brightline plans to bring its award-winning service to additional city pairs and congested corridors across the country that are too close to fly and too long to drive, with immediate plans to connect Las Vegas to Southern California. For more information, visit www.gobrightline.com and follow us on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter.
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Fort Pierce City Marina, A CRUISERS NET SPONSOR and a public facility, is located west of the Waterway, just south of the Fort Pierce high-rise bridge and well north of unlighted daybeacon #188. See FOCUS ON for more on this excellent facility.
Click Here To Open A Chart View Window, Zoomed To the Location of Fort Pierce City Marina
A longtime CRUISERS NET SPONSOR, historic Edenton always has an exciting calendar of events and places to visit! Edenton is at the mouth of the Chowan River on the northwest shore of Albemarle Sound.
The 1758 Cupola House is at 408 S. Broad St. in Edenton. Photo: Eric Medlin
Click here for Edenton’s history ‘an everyday part of life’ for its residents by Eric Medlin
CoastalReiew.org
Click Here To Open A Chart View Window Zoomed To the Location of Edenton Harbor City Docks
See: NAV ALERT: UPDATE: AICW MM 579.9 Closures Announced, Causton Bluff Bridge, Wilmington River, GA
Click here for Partial ICW Shut-Down for Savannah Bridge Demolition Could Have Been Much Worse
Peter Swanson
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.
Click Here To View the VA to NC Cruisers Net Marina Directory Listing For Causton Bluff Bridge
Click Here To Open A Chart View Window Zoomed To the Location of Causton Bluff Bridge
BRIGHTLINE RECEIVES USDOT CRISI GRANT AWARD
First-of-Its-Kind Project Will Use AI Technology for Rail Safety
MIAMI (Sept. 29, 2023) – Brightline and partner Wi-Tronix have been awarded $1,648,000 from the Federal Railroad Administration’s (FRA) Consolidated Rail Infrastructure and Safety Improvements (CRISI) competitive grant program. The investment will enable the development of the AI-backed monitoring system, Wi-Tronix, to collect real-time data of trespass activity along the Brightline/FEC Railway corridor. The data collected by locomotive front-end cameras will guide future decisions related to infrastructure, enforcement and education. Once developed, the first-of-its-kind system could be used by railroads across the country.
“This CRISI grant will help keep people safe, with federal investment going towards innovative technologies that will provide new data to address railroad trespassing activities, ultimately reducing the potential for collisions along the Florida East Coast Railway corridor,” said FRA Deputy Administrator Jennifer Mitchell. “Since President Biden signed the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, CRISI funding has quadrupled, and we’re proud to put those investments towards an effort that will inform future infrastructure decisions and safety upgrades along a growing rail corridor providing freight and passenger rail benefits in several Florida communities.”
“Brightline’s proposed project is a major win for safety in our industry and the communities we serve,” said Chad Jasmin, Wi-Tronix’s VP of Sales and Customer Experience. “The ability to collect, identify, and mitigate trespasser behavior through the use of AI is a catalyst for change, and it’s exciting to see the FRA and DOT acknowledge this. New possibilities for safety are on the horizon, not just for Florida, but for our nation.”
“We want to thank the Biden Administration, USDOT and the team at the FRA for their commitment to this project and their dedication to rail safety in Florida and across the country,” said Michael Lefevre, Brightline’s Vice President of Operations. “It’s our hope that this project, the first to be deployed at scale, will utilize AI technology to drive data-informed decisions along our corridor and establish a cutting-edge technology for the rest of the industry.”
Wi-Tronix has been improving both rail and public safety through the use of AI-enabled cameras and its onboard platform. Over two million thumbnail images and 135,000 hours of video footage are captured every day, allowing the company to continuously improve its automated software solution and AI infrastructure.
The first step of the grant-funded project will be to install upgraded, high-definition forward-facing cameras on each of Brightline’s 21 locomotives. Those cameras will collect data, which will be used to develop and train an AI model to identify unsafe behaviors around the corridor. This information will empower Brightline to more accurately identify areas for additional community outreach, law enforcement presence, or engineering projects.
Brightline continues prioritizing and investing in safety enhancements along the corridor. Many Brightline investments have been engineering-based and completed in partnership with local law enforcement agencies. By harnessing AI technology, the company is positioning itself at the forefront of the industry.
You can view Brightline’s safety initiatives and resources by visiting its new Rail Safety webpage.
About Brightline
Brightline is the only provider of modern, eco-friendly, higher-speed rail service in America. The company currently serves Miami, Aventura, Fort Lauderdale, Boca Raton, West Palm Beach and Orlando. Brightline was recognized by Fast Company as one of the Most Innovative Companies in Travel and included in Condé Nast Traveler’s 2023 Hot List for the best new ways to travel. Offering a guest-first experience designed to reinvent train travel and take cars off the road, Brightline plans to bring its award-winning service to additional city pairs and congested corridors across the country that are too close to fly and too long to drive, with immediate plans to connect Las Vegas to Southern California. For more information, visit www.gobrightline.com and follow us on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter.
About Wi-Tronix
Wi-Tronix®, LLC delivers advanced IoT platforms for the rail industry and provides actionable information and insights on how networks are performing in real time. By enabling continuous improvement with a powerful combination of connectivity, analytics, alerts and more, we are enabling freight, passenger railroads, and transit systems with the tools that help enhance safety, operational efficiency, and service reliability. The Wi-Tronix team is passionately committed to its global vision of saving lives and ensuring the most efficient and reliable movement of goods and people throughout the world. Find out more about Wi-Tronix at www.wi-tronix.com or contact us at sales@wi-tronix.com.
Media Contacts
Vanessa Alfonso, director media relations at Brightline
vanessa.alfonso@gobrightline.com
Katie Mitzner, director public affairs at Brightline
vanessa.alfonso@gobrightline.com
Hannah Swieczka, marketing manager at Wi-Tronix
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Slip rentals in the Lowcountry are expensive, ranging between about $500 and $1,000 a month for people with boats up to 45 feet long. Transient slips are even more.
A man walks down the dock at the Harborage at Ashley Marina in Charleston on Sept. 10, 2023. Henry Taylor/Staff By Henry Taylor htaylor@postandcourier.com
Many boat owners in the Charleston area have a love/hate relationship with their marinas. Mostly they love the access to year-round wet slips, fuel docks, pump-outs, dock hands, marina toilets, fish cleaning stations and a degree of security.
They hate it when the bill arrives, though.
Slip rentals in the Lowcountry are expensive, ranging between about $500 and $1,000 a month for people with boats up to 45 feet long. (The biggest motor and sailing yachts can pay much more than that, and transient boats pay a premium rate per foot for access to outside docks.)
Perhaps you’ve noticed that the marinas in the area are full, or nearly so. A few of them are expanding. The opportunities are ripe, and some with deep pockets are investing in Charleston’s marine sector, joining a broader consolidation trend.
A sign in reference to dock expansions underway at the Safe Harbor Charleston City Marina on Sept. 10, 2023. Henry Taylor/Staff
The supply clearly is not keeping up with the demand. Part of the reason is population growth. As the region welcomes more residents, some with plenty of disposable income, the number of boats increases, too. Another part of the reason is that waters in the Charleston area are particularly inviting to boaters.
“Boating here is still fantastic on Charleston Harbor,” noted Chuck Laughlin, president of St. Bart’s Yachts, a Beneteau dealer based at the City Marina on the Ashley River. “On any given day you can be one of a few boats out there. It’s still not crowded like Lake Norman outside of Charlotte, where you feel you’re taking your life in your hands.”
And if they are sailboat operators, they can race. The Charleston Ocean Racing Association has registered 30 boats for its annual October “Alice Cup” race between the harbor and Rockville. That’s a big number, much more than in recent years, and it suggests a surging interest in offshore sailing, said Ray Spellerberg, co-owner of the sailboat Celedon. It wasn’t long ago that CORA struggled to generate interest in its offshore races, Spellerberg said.
“It just breaks my heart,” said Rand Pratt, director of operations for Charleston Harbor Marina.
The least expensive is the Cooper River Marina, operated by the Charleston County Parks. The owner of a 30-foot boat who keeps the vessel there long-term will pay a little more than $500 a month.
The others, all privately operated, cost more
A dog walker on the docks of the Safe Harbor Charleston City Marina on Sept. 10, 2023. Henry Taylor/Staff
Spellerberg keeps his boat at Hobcaw Creek Community Docks which, with just 18 slips, is perhaps the smallest marina in the area. If you define “marina” as a place that includes not just slips but services, too, then maybe Hobcaw would not qualify. All it provides is a power pedestal so boats can charge their batteries while at rest.
“We like where we’re at,” Spellerberg said. He and his co-owner live nearby. “We’re grateful we don’t have to go into a larger marina setting. It can get cost prohibitive.”
He pointed out that marina costs represent only a portion of money boat owners spend each year. Merely keeping a boat in good working order requires significant investment.
And too many new boaters don’t know the rules of navigation, which can make things a bit dicey on the water, Spellerberg added.
The marina operators know the power they wield. And they recognize an opportunity when they see one. In recent years, Safe Harbor Marinas has purchased the City Marina, the Bristol Marina nearby and the City Boatyard on the Wando River. The Dallas-based company also owns marinas in Beaufort, Hilton Head, Port Royal (two) and Pawley’s Island. Overall, it owns 130 marinas, boatyards and other facilities, located in 24 states and Puerto Rico.
Safe Harbor was purchased by Sun Communities in 2020 for $2 billion.
That company isn’t the only one participating in the consolidation of the marina business. Mike Shuler, owner and managing partner of Bohicket Marina Investors, now controls six properties: Seabreeze Marina, St. John’s Yacht Harbor, Bohicket Marina, Isle of Palms Marina, Ripley Light Yacht Club and Old Village Yacht Club. (Shuler didn’t respond to messages left on his voicemail.)
The City Marina is located on public land, owned by the city of Charleston, and leased to Safe Harbor. And guess what? It’s expanding.
Famous for its Megadock, where the mega yachts tie down when in town, the City Marina is adding dockage space that extends toward the middle of the Ashley River.
“We have almost completed the north Megadock,” General Manager David Isom said. “After that, we will start to attach these 100-foot-long concrete finger piers, then start rebuilding the north basin of the marina.”
Some old concrete walls, remnants of the original marina design that can disrupt the current flow, soon will be removed, he added. That will make it easier and safer to tie up to the new floating docks, which don’t hinder the current, and perhaps help minimize silting.
The new slips are meant for longer and wider boats, Isom said.
A worker walks along a dock addition at Seabreeze Marina in Charleston on Sept. 11, 2023. Henry Taylor/Staff
When all is said and done, the City Marina will be among the largest in the country. Add up the space on both sides of the new Megadock and you get the equivalent of one mile of linear dockage, he said.
Other marinas are getting bigger, too.
Seabreeze, located on the Charleston peninsula in the shadow of the Ravenel Bridge, just added dozens of powerboat slips. And Shuler now is hoping to build a yacht club on that end of Johns Island, near Bohicket Marina.
Charleston Harbor Marina, too, is planning an expansion that will add dozens of slips on the south side of the site, according to Pratt. It’s already installed new breakwaters that are wider, deeper and offer better protection from westerly weather.
“We’re primarily trying to protect our investment,” he said. Though the added revenue certainly is another reason.
The future could see more linear dockage on the north side of the marina, meant to accommodate a growing number of catamarans, Pratt said. Plus College of Charleston Sailing, which is based in the marina, is looking to grow, he said.
An intense sunset viewed from Charleston Harbor Marina earlier this year. Adam Parker/Staff
Demand is high for space, and the marina maintains a wait list, though the wait period isn’t crazy yet, Pratt said.
A big challenge is updating the marina to keep pace with changes in boating behavior and design. Boats are bigger now. A marina designed 35 years ago might not be sufficiently equipped to accommodate all of today’s boaters.
Not all marinas are built alike. Most rely on long wooden pilings along which the docks float up and down according to the tides. At City Marina, the water must rise 17 feet before the docks slip off the top of the pilings and float away.
A view from Charleston Harbor Marina at sunset on a calm evening. Adam Parker/Staff
Charleston Harbor Marina instead relies on a Swedish design developed to manage the big tidal swings of the North Sea. The docks are held in place not by pilings but by crisscrossed chains anchored to the harbor floor. The marina’s only pilings are support structures for powerboat lifts. Some were recently added to bring the total number of mechanical lifts to 42.
Needless to say, upgrades are expensive. So is regular maintenance, especially in an area with a soft bottom that sometimes needs dredging and the annual threat of tropical storms. Pratt wouldn’t name a figure saying only that his annual operating costs were “astronomical.”
It doesn’t cost that much to maintain a mooring field. There’s a new one in the Wando River, 1 River Landing, near the Daniel Island Yacht Club. For a 30-foot boat, you pay $275 a week, $475 a month or $4,320 a year. (Bigger boats pay more.)
Laughlin said business is good. The demand for his Beneteau sailboats and powerboats remains pretty high. There was an uptick in sales during the pandemic, despite a manufacturing shortage because of COVID’s impacts on factories trying to keep their employees safe.
When he started out 36 years ago, a big Beneteau cost perhaps $150,000, he said. Today it’s approaching $7 million.
It’s worth noting that many boat companies have manufacturing operations here in South Carolina. The state Department of Commerce recognizes 28 boat makers headquartered here, including a few big ones: Scout, Sportsman and Key West. (Beneteau had a factory in Marion, but closed it in 2020. The facility was purchased by a Canadian swimming pool company which, like boat manufacturers, molds fiberglass.)
A small boat drives past others docked in their slips on the Ashley River in Charleston on Sept. 10, 2023. Henry Taylor/Staff
As of the beginning of 2023, the total number of registered recreational boats in South Carolina was about 360,000, according to the Department of Natural Resources. A little more than 317,000 are powerboats; 2,000 are sailboats.
Many powerboats are kept in dry stack marinas, of which there are several in the area. Perhaps the majority of powerboats are trailered and kept in driveways. Owners ease them in and out of the water at designated boat ramps.
Boats can be seen through a decorative gate at the Safe Harbor Charleston City Marina on Sept. 10, 2023. Henry Taylor/Staff
A recent trend affords recreational boaters the chance to get on the water without owning a vessel. Boat clubs are on the rise. Pay a membership fee and get access to a fleet of small powerboats. The City Marina is home to two such clubs. Seabreeze has one, too. Fortunately for them, the powerboat market is strong. The pandemic inspired some people to invest in new boats. Now that the worst of COVID is past and the market is leveling off again, there’s some excess inventory, noted Isom. What will happen to those vessels?
“The boat clubs are going to start buying them up,” he said.
Which means we’ll see even more people on the water, many with little boating experience. And that means an increase in the “danger level,” as Spellerberg has warned.
He hopes they will learn the etiquette and the rules before they throttle up.
Click here for Latin American Festival set for Oct. 8 at Wannamaker County Park
Charleston County Parks and Receation
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If you know what a puddingwife wrasse is, you are a true angler!
Click here for Connor Stone lands first state record puddingwife wrasse
CoastalReview.org
BoatUS is the leading advocate for boating safety in the US and A CRUISERS NET SPONSOR!
Wearing a life jacket is important for fall fishing and boating. After an accidental overboard in cold waters, it could buy you just enough time to help you safely get back aboard.
Click here for BoatUS: What’s Different About Fall Boating? 3 On-Water Safety Tips
The Waccamaw Lumber Co.’s mill, Bolton, N.C., early 20th century. From Waccamaw Lumber Co. Photographs and Journal, Rubenstein Library, Duke University
Road to Makatoka: Logging the Green Swamp, 1910-1930 by David Cecelski
CoastalReview.org
Twin Dolphin Marina, A CRUISERS NET SPONSOR, sits perched on the southern shores of Manatee River, just short of the Highway 41 Business bridge. We get lots of praise for this fine marina and their commitment to facility upgrades, see FOCUS ON.
Click Here To View the Western Florida Cruisers Net Marina Directory Listing For Twin Dolphin Marina
Click Here To Open A Chart View Window, Zoomed To the Location of Twin Dolphin Marina
Making a proper mayday call will help facilitate a quick rescue. U.S. Coast Guard
Click here for Mayday: How to Call for Help During a Boating Emergency
By U.S. Coast Guard Office of Search and Rescue from Cruising World
Looking over Skull Creek on Hilton Head Island by Mike Britt
Our thanks to Ted Arisaka for this Marine Safety Bulletin. See NAV ALERT: AICW MM 579.9
Click here for Intermittent Closure Notification for AICW
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