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    • Policies on Entering and Exiting the Bahamas

      There have been a number of recent legislative changes in the Bahamas that affect boaters. See Changes for Bahamas Boating and Legislative Updates. Our thanks to Greg Allard for the information on revised charges for Bahamian Cruising Permits, effective January 1, 2020.

      Click here for Entering/Exiting Policies from bahamas.com

      1 Facebook Likes, 1 Facebook Reactions

      Comments from Cruisers (3)

      1. Dave Bennett -  August 17, 2019 - 8:41 pm

        Excuse me? I contributed over 5k this year. $600 of that in VAT tax. Are you serious? Hopefully I am misunderstanding your comment

        Reply to Dave
      2. Dave Bennett -  August 17, 2019 - 8:36 pm

        Done. Will not be back. Doubled the annual fee. Visa for 3months for Canadians and US citizens. 8 months for UK citizens. Bye bye Bahamas

        Reply to Dave
    • NOAA’s  Hydrographic Services Review Panel

      Boaters will be able to provide input and participate in public sessions.

      August 15, 2019
      Contact:

      Lynne Mersfelder-Lewis,  240-533-0064

      NOAA advisory panel to focus on precision navigation, 
      subsidence, and sea level rise
       
       Public can provide input, participate in sessions 
      NOAA’s Hydrographic Services Review Panel, a federal advisory committee that advises the NOAA administrator on products and services related to navigation services, water levels and currents, and global positioning, will hold a public meeting August 27-29, in New Orleans.
       
      The panel will receive input and updates on national and regional navigation services activities and resource needs, precision navigation, subsidence, sea level rise and coastal inundation, geospatial and positioning data, technology, unmanned systems, the NOAA fleet, priorities for the Arctic, integrated coastal and ocean mapping, as well as recommendations from stakeholders and partners. The panel will consider information from this meeting as it makes recommendations to the NOAA administrator and considers issue papers on emergency response, sea level rise and Arctic matters.
       
      The public is invited to attend the meeting in person or via a webinar, and can provide comments before or during the meeting. Agendas, updates, and more information are available at https://www.nauticalcharts.noaa.gov/hsrp/hsrp.htm. Seating will be available on a first-come, first-served basis. 
       
      WHAT:
      NOAA’s Hydrographic Services Review Panel meeting 
       
      WHEN:
      • Tue., Aug. 27, 9:00 a.m. – 5:30 p.m. CDT 
        • 5:30 p.m. – Remarks by deputy NOAA administrator Tim Gallaudet and National Ocean Service acting director Nicole LeBoeuf announcing the deployment of two new High Frequency radars in Port Fourchon and Southwest Pass, Louisiana)
      • Wed., Aug. 28, 8:30 a.m. – 2:00 p.m CDT
      • Thu., Aug. 29, 8:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. CDT
      WHERE:

      Hotel Monteleone
      214 Royal Street
      New Orleans, Louisiana
       
      SCHEDULED ATTENDEES:
      • Retired Navy Rear Adm. Tim Gallaudet, Ph.D., assistant secretary of commerce for oceans and atmosphere and deputy NOAA administrator
      • Nicole LeBoeuf, acting director, National Ocean Service
      • Ed Saade, chair, HSRP Federal Advisory Committee
      • Rear Adm. Shepard M. Smith, director, NOAA’s Office of Coast Survey, and acting deputy director, National Ocean Service
      • Members of the Hydrographic Services Review Panel
      First session only:
      • Lt. Gov. William H. Nungesser, Louisiana
      • Col. Stephen Murphy, commander, New Orleans District, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
      • Capt. Kristi M. Luttrell, commander, Sector New Orleans, 8th U.S. Coast Guard District
      • Brandy D. Christian, president and CEO of the Port of New Orleans; CEO, New Orleans Public Belt Railroad Corp.
      • Claire Trokey, legislative director, Office of Rep. Steve Scalise, Louisiana
       
      NOAA Office of Coast Survey is the nation’s nautical chartmaker. Originally formed by President Thomas Jefferson in 1807, Coast Survey updates charts, surveys the coastal seafloor, responds to maritime emergencies, and searches for underwater obstructions that pose a danger to navigation.   
       
      # # #
       
       
      NOAA Office of Coast Survey, 1315 East-West Highway, SSMC3 #6216, Silver Spring, MD 20906

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    • Dismal Swamp Canal Now Open, NC AICW Alternate Route


      Having been temporarily closed on Monday, the USACE had it re-opened by Monday evening.

      We had a pocket of storms blow through on Friday night, resulting in some downed trees and a temporary closure of the canal. I’m aware the USACE is currently working on the problem. It was a hard fast storm, with local damage from high wind and hail. The advisory from the Norfolk District is attached and has been posted on the Dismal Swamp Welcome Center’s Facebook page.

      Donna Stewart, TMP
      Director, Dismal Swamp Canal Welcome Center
      Chairperson,Camden Tourism Development Authority
      2356 US Hwy 17 North, South Mills, NC 27976
      252-771-8333 | dstewart@camdencountync.gov
      www.DismalSwampWelcomeCenter.com
      www.VisitCamdenCountync.com

      Click here for the USACE Advisory Closure DSC-Aug-2019

      Click Here To View the North Carolina Cruisers Net’s Marina Directory Listing For the Camden TDA/Dismal Swamp Canal Welcome Center

      Click Here To Open A Chart View Window, Zoomed To the Location of the Dismal Swamp Canal Welcome Center

      VA-NC CUT AREA SPONSORING MARINA

      Click Here To View the VA to NC Cruisers Net Marina Directory Listing For Atlantic Yacht Basin

      Click Here To Open A Chart View Window, Zoomed To the Location of Atlantic Yacht Basin

      1 Facebook Likes, 2 Facebook Reactions

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    • Herald Tribune, Market Snapshot: Grove City, Lemon Bay, north of Gasparilla Sound and Charlotte Harbor, FL


      If you are interested or not in purchasing property in the Charlotte Harbor area, these Market Snapshots by the Herald Tribune make for interesting reading. There are several Snapshots in this single link. Cruisers Net is not associated with any realty concern.

      Market snapshot: Grove City — Old Florida charm, excellent deep-water boating in historic …
      Sarasota Herald-Tribune

       

      AREA SPONSORING MARINA

      Click Here To View the Cruisers Net Western Florida Marina Directory Listing For Fishermen’s Village

      Click Here To Open A Chart View Window, Zoomed To the Location of Fishermen’s Village

      Comments from Cruisers (1)

      1. james -  August 22, 2019 - 9:23 am

        Excellent deep water?????? This article must have been written by a paddle boarder. Sand bars on both sides of the GICW

        Reply to james
    • Important – Captain Charmaine Tells How to Correctly Navigate through the Channel 5 Bridge, Florida Keys

      Channel 5 is ,arguably the most important of the Inside Route to Hawk Channel, or the other way around, passages in the Florida Keys, north and east of Marathon and Moser Channel. And, Captain Charmaine has found a real possibility of dangerous navigational error in these well traveled waters. ALL Florida Keys cruisers need to read the article below CAREFULLY!!
      We would very much like to hear about your Channel 5 cruising experiences. Have you had a similar/dissimilar experience from Captain Charmaine. Please click the “Comment on This Posting/Marina/Anchorage/Bridge” link below, and share your information.


      April 29th 2011
      “Channel 5 Bridge Passage – Chart 11449 Recommended Route in Error”
      24 50.281 N, 80 46.401 W
      by Charmaine Smith Ladd

      The Channel 5 bridge spans between Long Key and Lower Matacumbe Key. It has a fendered underpass for vessels needing clearance (65′). Being the first opportunity for boats coming down to the Keys from the West coast of Florida to cross over from Florida Bay into the Atlantic, Channel 5 is understandably heavily traversed. For those desiring a calm anchorage while traveling the Atlantic to those wanting to explore the backwaters of Florida Bay, crossing via the Channel 5 bridge underpass has its reward of a calm night in the shallower waters of Florida Bay and does not disappoint with its access to the serenity and beauty of its backwaters.
      September Sea and her crew have used Channel 5 for such purposes for nearly a decade. From the first time, it became apparent that the bridge underpass was marked incorrectly on my paper chart (#11449). There is a recommended route on that chart that is in error. The recommended route takes you between the wrong bridge pilings and dangerously close to a massive utility pole piling. I made note of it directly on my chart and drew a line to show the actual route.
      The next time we passed through Channel 5, we had a chartplotter and had plotted a course based on the recommended route of the vector charts in the chartplotter. Of course the vector charts had propagated the same error, and we once again had to adjust our course to pass between the correct fendered bridge pilings. This is when the reality of the true danger became much more apparent. Charting a course based on an erred recommended route could find one in a very confusing situation, especially in foul weather or at night. The intersection of the black tracks in the photo below show where to properly cross (24 50.281 N, 80 46.401 W).
      Each time we’ve come here, it never fails that we observe other boats attempting to follow the recommended route of the chart. Just the other day, s/v Restless (shown above) was spotted on the wrong course to cross beneath Channel 5 from the Atlantic, while September Sea (also shown) was on the correct course.

      I tried to hail the vessel on Channel 16 but the couple in the cockpit either could not hear me or did not have the VHF turned on. Their vessel continued and just as I thought the Captain would try to pass beneath between the wrong bridge pilings, the realization of a huge utility pole piling staring back at him from the other side proved to quickly change his mind. The vessel turned hard to port. That was when the fenders lining the proper bridge underpass were noticed by its Captain. I am sure the vessel’s Captain then noticed that the boat behind him (we aboard September Sea) were on the proper course.
      This is a dangerous situation. The huge concrete pilings (foundations for communication cables) run parallel to the bridge on Bay side and do not give a boat much room to maneuver if the bridge is crossed anywhere but at the proper fendered opening. Those pilings are very difficult to notice from the Atlantic side.
      Yesterday, checking online with NOAA’s most recent charts, I saw the error still exists (see photo below). I’ve added a red dot on the NOAA chart to indicate where the proper crossing is actually located.

      I have learned from this that navigational chart changes do not take place unless we as cruisers report potentially dangerous errors when we see them. In the meantime, please make note on your current chart (#11449) and manually update any pertinent routes in your chartplotter.
      Cruisers helping cruisers, it’s what we’re all about!
      Charmaine Smith Ladd, s/v September Sea
      SSECN Correspondent, Florida Keys
      “Bringing you the low down from down low!”

      Question for Captain Charmaine:
      Is water always deeper in the middle of a channel when crossing? And when approaching a bridge to cross, how far in advance do you choose which pilars or opening to go thro? Maybe questions a rookie sail person might ask like me. Thank You
      Skipper Burr Bault

      Captain Charmaine replies:

      Thanks so much for taking the time to read my article, Burr. Local knowledge is often handy when navigating channels. Over time, areas of a channel can be silted in (due to hurricanes, usually) and not have the minimum depth as shown on charts. So the answer to whether or not the middle of a channel is always where the deepest waters are is: not always. Most of the time, especially in wide channels, you will find deeper water in the middle. The narrower the channel, the more local knowledge one should seek.
      On the charts, the opening beneath bridge spans for boats needing height clearance is well indicated. At that area, in most cases, boats with a mast height of up to 65′ can clear safely. In the case of Channel 5, I believe that the chart is still showing where a drawbridge of the old bridge span opened and allowed boats to pass through. When the new elevated bridge span was built, it was done so that boats could pass beneath without the need of a drawbridge and bridge tender to raise it. Therefore, the recommended route for Channel 5 shown on the charts is outdated, as it is in line with a drawbridge which no longer exists.
      At Channel 5, the placement of the new fendered opening for vessels is on the opposite end of where the old drawbridge used to be. Pilings are shown incorrectly. It is therefore very important to pass through where height clearance is optimal and the opening is clear of obstructions. Such areas are well marked on the charts and usually correct. However, in this particular case the recommended route is in error because it has not been updated since the new bridge span was built.
      Hope this helps!! Hugs!
      Charmaine

      Very informative article. Your knowledge of the 5 Channel Bridge, of the Florida Keys, is awesome!
      Linda Honore-Pitts

      I have read many of your articles and appreciate your advice and warnings. My husband and I are bringing our s/v, draft 4’8’³ from Tampa Bay to Ft. Lauderdale the last week in November. What passage would you recommend from Marathon to Miami? We have limited sailing experience on the Atlantic but we like the greater depths. We do like to anchor and are not overly excited about visitng any towns or marinas unless necessary. And as always we are under some time constraints. Thank you for any suggestions!
      Beth Falkenhagen

      Comments from Cruisers (4)

      1. Edwin T Shuttleworth -  December 12, 2021 - 4:30 pm

        The first thing you should do is check the date of the chart survey. You might be surprised! I have been through the bridge several time with no problem, but I make a deliberate effort to compare the terrain when in sight to the chart. Remember to keep those dead reckoning skills sharp and if you really want to be amazed and confused pick up a copy of Nigel Calder book "How to read a Nautical Chart". Lots of info into what goes into making an chart and what to look for.
        S/V Dreamweaver

        Reply to Edwin
      2. jeffrey nicholas belitz -  October 12, 2020 - 1:20 am

        i need to bring this petterson sailboat with wing keel 6ft draft up to blackwater sound unloaded would like to use icw bayside ..do you think i can do it? i know the waters fairly well my last sloop was 4.5 anyone done similar route?

        Reply to jeffrey
      3. Bob -  August 10, 2019 - 5:05 pm

        Captain Charmaine, we are moving our Beneteau 381 (5.5 draft) from Virginia to our new homeport in Alabama. We are making the transit through the Keys for the first time and are looking for the best place to safely transit from the Atlantic side to the Gulf. Based on what I've read from other experienced Captains, I take it that Channel 5 requires spot on navigation getting to the Gulf. The other option appears to be Moser Channel as we do not desire to sail all the way around KW. We're seeking advice for our transit from Miami and then through the Keys until we're in good open water in the Gulf, and based on your post with pictures of Channel 5 we'd love to hear from you your recommendations.

        Thanks in advance.

        Reply to Bob
        • JAKE MYNIER -  May 10, 2020 - 8:45 am

          Hi Capt Bob I am trying to get an answer to the same question you had. Did you make the crossing? If so what route did you end up taking? Im in a 60 Bertram Sportfish. Sounds like we have the same draft, about 5.5'. It looks pretty staright forward getting to the bridge from the Atlantic side, just wondering how tricky it is once you get under to navigate to open water on the gulf side to make our way up the gulf coast. . Any input or experience is appreciated.

          Reply to JAKE
    • Help Needed for Thomas Point Lighthouse, Chesapeake Bay, near Annapolis, MD

      Thomas Point Lighthouse is just south of Annapolis and well out of Cruiser Net’s coverage. However, anyone who has cruised the Chesapeake south of the Bay Bridge knows this historic aid to navigation, so we offer you this chance to contribute to the much needed maintenance of Thomas Point light.

      Click here for Supporters of Historic Lighthouse in the Bay Seek Community’s Support
      Maryland Matters

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    • NOAA: Preparing for a Hurricane

      Hurricanes are among nature’s most powerful and destructive phenomena. On average, 12 tropical storms, 6 of which become hurricanes form over the Atlantic Ocean, Caribbean Sea, or Gulf of Mexico during the hurricane season which runs from June 1 to November 30 each year. Preparation is essential!

      Hurricane Safety Tips and Resources
      National Weather Service

      See also: Revised NOAA Hurricane Forecast

      Click here for National Hurricane Center and latest updates.

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    • Registration Open for Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway Annual Meeting, Nov 21-22, Savannah, GA


      Registration is now open for the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway Association’s (AIWA) 20th Anniversary Annual Meeting in Savannah, Georgia. For more detail , see Registration.

      Click here for Registration Open for the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway Association’s Annual Meeting
      International Dredging Review

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