More Ways to be Green this Summer
So many uses of good old vinegar and more ways to help save the environment. See Green.
27 Tips & Recipes for Cleaning with Vinegar by Joan Clark
tipsbulletin.com
So many uses of good old vinegar and more ways to help save the environment. See Green.
27 Tips & Recipes for Cleaning with Vinegar by Joan Clark
tipsbulletin.com
Historic Jekyll Island is home to Jekyll Harbor Marina, A CRUISERS NET SPONSOR, lying along the easterly banks of the AICW passage through Jekyll Creek, immediately south of the 65-foot fixed bridge. See More Praise.
Jekyll Island, Georgia Is Where You Can Get a Taste of Gilded Age Glory
Yahoo Lifestyle
Click Here To View the Cruisers’ Net’s Georgia Marina Directory Listing For Jekyll Harbor Marina
Click Here To Open A Chart View Window, Zoomed To the Location of Jekyll Harbor Marina
Many of you have experienced the hazards of floating and submerged debris during river flooding along the Waterway. This cleanup effort benefits boaters as well as the environment. The first of its kind for the state, the North Carolina Marine Debris Action Plan released earlier this month is a coordinated effort to prevent and remove marine debris along the state’s coast.
Click here for Group Rolls Out Marine Debris Action Plan
Coastal Review Online
Bald Head Island is home to Bald Head Island Marina, A CRUISERS NET SPONSOR, which is found hard by the seaward mouth of the Cape Fear River, within sight of the “Old Baldy” lighthouse!
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Click here for Making Island Memories Photo Contest
Click Here To Open A Chart View Window, Zoomed To the Location of Bald Head Island Marina
Our thanks to Ted Arisaka for sharing this work that Save Georgia’s Anchorages is doing on boaters’ behalf. See New Boating Laws.
We’ve been busy today here at SGA inventorying “all” the anchorages in Georgia and assessing the impact of HB 201. Previously we published map overlays on some of the more popular anchorages, but we wanted to be more comprehensive. The task is a difficult one as GA DNR continues to add / grow no-anchor zones seemingly on a daily basis. Two good examples are the area around Savannah Yacht Club as well as the anchorage off Cumberland Island.
In summary we inventoried 124 recognized and popular anchoring locations using detailed information obtained by Garmin, the world’s largest navigation charting service, Waterway Guide, and Cruisers Net. We will continue analysis in order to evaluate the impact of HB201 and Commissioner Mark Williams Administrative Order on anchoring in Georgia.
IMPACT ON KNOWN AND POPULAR ANCHORING LOCATIONS
22 (18%) anchoring locations were negatively impacted (area reduced or increased congestion due to closed nearby anchoring locations).
51 (41%) anchoring locations are essentially eliminated.
So a total of 73 (58%)of known and popular anchoring locations are impacted or eliminated out of a total of 124!!! All the state’s coastal water are (were) open to anchoring prior to HB201 and the establishment of setbacks or restricted areas, so the full impact on anchoring in areas not designated as “known and popular anchoring locations” is immeasurable.
A spreadsheet will be in the FILES section. The 2nd sheet has hyperlinks to these anchorages on the ActiveCaptain web viewer if you’d like to see where they are. Alternatively you can copy the Lat/Long into Google Maps.
We intend to review Waterway Guide and Cruisers Net to augment our data in the coming days.
Please contact Georgia legislators and DNR officials if you feel these regulations go too far.
It’s simple. If you have enough fuel avoid GA. Don’t do business in GA or use any services in GA. Don’t go where you are not wanted. Spend money where you are wanted.
Thank you for all the work. I intend on reviewing your spreadsheet and updating my Blue Chart which will require some lengthy editing looking at this GA disaster.
This is the most recent plea by Kim Russo, Director of America Great Loop Cruisers’ Association, asking your support of boaters’ anchoring rights in Georgia and Florida. Cruisers Net urges all boaters to get involved with fighting state restrictions on anchoring. See Latest Georgia Anchoring Regs and Florida Anchoring Restrictions.
We Need Your Help! Florida and Georgia to Restrict Anchoring
1/18/20 Sample letter to Senators by Richard Allen, AGLCA member
As you [Kim Russo] requested, I am letting you know that I emailed the five senators on the Committee on Environment and Natural Resources, acknowledging that SB 606, as expanded and substituted, had passed out of Committee and asking that they oppose the bill when it comes to the floor of the senate. I am pasting the text of my message to Senator Albritton below. The other messages are modified to suit the circumstances.
Dear Senator Albritton:
I was dismayed to learn that SB 606 (as expanded and substituted) passed out of the Environmental and Natural Resources Committee by a vote of 3-2, despite your negative vote. I urge you to continue to oppose this measure when it comes before the Senate.
My wife and I are happy to be residents of your Senate District. Our home is our 1969 cruising vessel, “Sunshine Girl.” The address on our Florida licenses, issued in Charlotte County, is DO 523282, Punta Gorda, FL. The DO # is the documentation number of our boat. In 2018 we moved from a rented slip in Cape Coral to another rented slip at the Laishley Park Marina in Punta Gorda. Previously we rented slips in Indialantic and Melbourne. Like land-based home-owners, we spend money in the supermarkets, hardware stores, restaurants, barber shops, physical therapy facilities, and other businesses. Because we move around a lot, our mailing address is a mail forwarding service in Green Cove Springs, FL.
Our boat is currently out of the water for reconditioning at Safe Cove Boat Storage in Port Charlotte. We are spending money at the boat yard and all the other local businesses. We like to keep our boat in good condition and fully functional.
In addition to renting longer term boat slips, while cruising we visit and spend money in communities along the waterways, rent short-term marina slips and enjoy many of Florida’s attractive anchorages. We share the frustration of other waterfront homeowners with abandoned and derelict vessels that ruin the viewshed and take up space. These derelict vessels cause even more trouble for responsible boaters than they do for waterfront homeowners because they clutter up scarce anchoring space and create resentment against all anchoring boat owners. We were pleased when Florida enacted Statute 327.4107 in 2016, giving state, county, and local law enforcement officers more authority to monitor and remove vessels at risk of becoming derelict. The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission web site provides helpful guidance to boat owners, including warnings of fines and jail time for boat owners who might consider abandoning their vessel on the state’s waterways. Publicity surrounding these enforcement actions might go a long way in preventing the scourge of abandoned and derelict vessels. It might be useful for Florida to require all vessels to post the name and contact information for the person responsible for the boat in a conspicuous location at all times, not just when anchored.
We are opposed to SB 606 because it effectively usurps the power of the State to manage Public Trust lands, in some cases having the effect of transferring ownership of Public Trust lands to waterfront property owners to the exclusion of other citizens. We know that the Florida legislature has worked hard to meet the concerns of everyone who lives on or near the water, including those whose homes are boats, like ourselves. We believe it would be a mistake to open a floodgate of special exceptions to the existing Florida anchoring statute. As you saw with the Committee Substitution bill, additional special interests will continue to seek exceptions if they see others getting their way.
Thank you for your consideration of our views.
Sincerely,
Richard B. and Beverly A. Allen
At the intersection of the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway and the Okeechobee Waterway, Martin County, A CRUISERS NET SPONSOR, stretching from the east coast to the eastern shore of Lake Okeechobee, is a hub of boating activity and of events of interest to boaters.
|
|
|
|
An updated version of the iOS App was released in the App store yesterday. It is a significant update but with mostly behind-the-scenes improvements, including:
Please update your devices and let us know if you have any issues. If you have elected your device’s automatic update option this should have occurred by now or will occur shortly. Otherwise, you can click the “Download in the App Store” icon below to initiate the update now. You can check your current version by look at the bottom of the Setting view – this lastest version is 1.80.
Finally, please let us know there are any features or enhancements that will make the App more useful for you.
Safe Harbor City Boatyard, formerly Charleston City Boatyard, a subsidiary of Safe Harbor Marinas, A CRUISERS NET SPONSOR, is found on the northern reaches of the Wando River north of red marker #40.
Click here for Outboard Service Now Available!
Click Here To Open A Chart View Window, Zoomed To the Location of Safe Harbor City Boatyard
Click Here To Open A Chart View Window, Zoomed To the Location of Safe Harbor City Marina
2019 was the second-warmest year on record, contributing to devastating coral bleaching, ocean heat waves and deadly, ferocious hurricanes. Learn about the ocean and atmospheric science driving headlines featuring climate extremes and weird weather.
Climate Alive!: 2019 2nd Warmest On Record – Go behind the headlines.
Be the first to comment!