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    • AGLCA Lobbying Reports from Florida Legislature

      Our thanks to Kim Russo, Director of America’s Great Loop Cruisers’ Association, for this report of Florida legislative action on anchoring rights currently under discussion. See Donations Sought to Fight Anti-Anchoring Legislation in Florida and Anchorage Harassment.

      Once again, thank you to those who contributed to our Advocacy Fund, which allowed us to be represented in Tallahassee during the Florida legislative session. Our efforts were highly successful. Following is a recap submitted by our lobbyist:

      “During the 2019 Legislative Session there were multiple bills filed that could affect cruisers’ interests including the freedom to responsibly anchor in Florida waters. There were multiple communities that attempted to further restrict anchoring. The City of Melbourne, for example, sought legislative language that would bypass the provisions that our Associations got passed 2 years ago which pre-empted all anchoring restrictions to the State level (i.e. no local governments can pass ordinances relating to anchoring, except for the narrowly-defined live-aboard vessels). Melbourne’s approach was to re-define the term live-aboard vessel so that it would apply to most vessels at anchor and therefore allow them to ban anchoring. This attempt was defeated despite strong lobbying efforts by the City and influential legislators. The City of Hollywood and others sought to ban anchoring in specific anchorages. This was also defeated, again, despite strong lobbying efforts by the City and influential legislators.

      “Ultimately, the Legislature passed only one relevant bill, SB 1666 which awaits signature or veto by the Governor. This bill attempts to address the problem of long-term ‘stored vessels’ that are essentially abandoned in anchorages. Our Associations supported and helped draft these provisions. The bill defines the term ‘long-term stored vessel’ to mean a vessel which has remained anchored or moored without supervision or control for at least 30 days out of a 60-day period. It requires the Florida Fish & Wildlife Commission (FWC) to conduct a study on the impacts of long-term stored vessels on local communities and the state, and to present the report to the Governor and Legislature.

      “The bill also provides a certain portion of vessel registration fees designated for use by the counties to be deposited into the Marine Resources Conservation Trust Fund to fund grants for derelict vessel removal. Funds not granted to local governments by a certain date in the fiscal year may be used by the FWC to remove derelict vessels.

      “The bill also prohibits a person who leaves or abandons a derelict vessel from residing or dwelling on the vessel until it is permanently removed from state waters or returned to waters in a nonderelict condition.

      “The bill also authorizes counties designated as rural areas of opportunity to create in freshwater water-bodies within their jurisdiction a ‘no-discharge zone’ where treated and untreated sewage discharges are prohibited for specified vessels. It requires vessel operators within a no-discharge zone to keep sewage discharges onboard for discharge at sea or onshore at a pump-out facility and imposes a civil penalty and declares the vessel or floating structure a nuisance and hazard to public safety and health if an unlawful discharge is made in a no-discharge zone.

      “AGLCA, along with MTOA, SSCA and the DeFever Owners Association, was effective and influential throughout the Legislative Session, ensuring that proposed legislation did not impair the freedom of cruisers to responsibly access and utilize Florida’s waters, especially its anchorages. We also maintained a focus on policies that can help remove vessels that are derelict or at risk of becoming derelict.”

      Our next task is to work during the off season to see if a compromise can be reached with parties that want to limit anchoring. Our hope is that we won’t have to continue to fight this year-after-year.

      Kim Russo
      Director
      America’s Great Loop Cruisers’ Association

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    • LOTS of Questions!

      Terry Logan is a new to the AICW cruiser with a new boat and lots of questions. Many of you are thoroughly capable of answering his inquiries with advice, observations and solutions. So, sit down with a cold one and type away. Terry and his wife will be most grateful.

      Not sure if this is the appropriate forum for my question,so apologies in advance if it isn’t. My wife and I just bought a 38′ outboard express fishing boat and are picking her up next week from Long Island Sound just north of NY City. We’ll be bringing her down the ICW and offshore to Southport, NC. We’ve got about 3 weeks budgeted to allow for weather, and sightseeing/exploring. As we’ve never been through this part of the ICW/coast, any suggestions and advice from more experienced folks will be welcome and appreciated. Tips on “don’t miss” spots as well as “spots to avoid” are especially welcome! Thanks in advance!

      Terry Logan

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    • Security News for Boaters

      Personal security and property security are becoming larger areas of concern these days and these linked articles seem particularly appropriate to boaters, especially transient cruisers.

      How the Collier County Sheriff’s Office is keeping you safe on the water
      Wink News

      “Carfax for boats’ law will alert buyers to vessels’ shady pasts
      Sun Sentinel

      Tip of organized theft ring targeting boats, motors leads to arrest of 3 men in Melbourne
      Florida Today

       

       

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    • Shared Photo: Sunrise at Spanish Wells by Greg Allard

      Our thanks to Greg Allard for sharing his gift of photography.

      Sunrise at Spanish Wells, in the Bahamas, where commercial fishing boats greatly outnumber cruising boats.

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    • TowBoatUS Now in LaBelle, FL, Okeechobee Waterway Statute Mile 103


      Always hoping you never need their services, it is good to know they are there.

      NEWS From BoatUS

      Boat Owners Association of The United States
      5323 Port Royal Road, Springfield, VA 22151
      Read this press release online at: https://bit.ly/2JmcikB



      Photo Caption: Capt. Mike Ammons aboard his 24-hour boat towing and response vessel

      For Boaters Crossing Florida, TowBoatUS Has You Covered

      LaBelle is fourth location for TowBoatUS on the Okeechobee Waterway

      LABELLE., Fla., May 8, 2019 – Most boats crossing the state of Florida on the Okeechobee Waterway are transient, only trying to get from one coast to the other as quickly as possible. That means their captains may not have local knowledge, and if they need assistance for an unexpected grounding or engine problem, the newly opened 24-hour on-water towing and assistance service for recreational boaters, TowBoatUS LaBelle, is ready to help.

      It’s the fourth TowBoatUS port servicing the 134.3-nautical-mile waterway, which includes bookend locations in Stuart and Fort Myers, and in Okeechobee. TowBoatUS is the only national, 24-hour on-water service delivering professional assistance on the waterway from end-to-end, providing boaters with routine help with dead batteries, soft ungroundings, running out of fuel, or a tow back to the launch ramp or marina.

      TowBoatUS LaBelle is the second location for Capt. Mike Ammons, who opened TowBoatUS Lake Okeechobee in 2018. Prior to that, Ammons owned three TowBoatUS ports in the early 2000s. Today, TowBoatUS has over 300 locations and 600 towing response vessels across the country.

      Much like an auto club, BoatUS offers on-water Unlimited Towing Memberships for boaters and anglers for just $159 per year. Boaters without BoatUS towing services face costs that average $750 per towing incident, with some paying thousands out of pocket.

      TowBoatUS LaBelle and TowBoatUS Okeechobee offer extended service areas, including Lake Okeechobee in its entirety and the Caloosahatchee River. St. Lucie Canal service is provided by TowBoatUS Stuart.

      TowBoatUS LaBelle operates a 22-foot power cat response vessel with twin outboards, easily recognizable by its red hull and TowBoatUS logos emblazoned in bright white letters on its sides, rigged and ready for towing, jump starts, fuel delivery and soft ungroundings.

      Boaters can reach TowBoatUS LaBelle by hailing on VHF channel 16, by calling the company directly at (239) 600-0140, by phoning the BoatUS toll-free 24/7 Dispatch Center at (800) 391-4869, or via smartphone using the BoatUS App. More information can be found at BoatUS.com/Towing, or call (800) 888-4869.

      ###

      About TowBoatUS:

      Boat Owners Association of The United States (BoatUS) is the nation’s leading advocate, services and safety group for recreational boaters. We are the Boat Owners Auto Club and provide our more than half-million members with a wide array of helpful services, including 24-hour on-water towing that gets you safely home when your boat won’t, jump starts, fuel delivery, and soft ungroundings. The TowBoatUS towing fleet is North America’s largest network of towing ports with more than 300 locations and over 600 red towing assistance vessels, responding to more than 70,000 requests for assistance each year. The BoatUS App makes it easy to summon water and road assistance 24/7 and can speed response times (BoatUS.com/App). For more information go to BoatUS.com/Membership.

      Click Here To Open A Chart View Window, Zoomed To the Location of LaBelle on the Okeechobee Waterway

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    • Praise for Osprey Marina, AICW Statute Mile 373


      Osprey Marina

      A CRUISERS NET SPONSOR, popular Osprey Marina is at mile marker 373 on the Intracoastal Waterway south of Myrtle Beach, SC. Thankfully, Osprey Marina has almost completely recovered from the damages of hurricane Florence. Our thanks to Loopers Steve Quinn and Brenda Sanderson for these good words as posted on AGLCA’s Forum.

      I needed about three weeks of harborage myself in the same area so I chose Osprey Marina. Great folks, clean family run marina and very well protected. I called pretty much last minute to make reservations and they did work me in. Highly recommended. I will be returning to my boat approximately May 10.
      Steve Quinn

      2nd Steve Quinn’s recommendation. if you can go North a little more, you won’t find much of a friendlier and well protected marina. Last trip through southbound, they paid two dock hands OT to receive us an hour after closing to make sure we made it in. Cheap diesel too. We love Osprey. On our way north recently we stopped to fuel and pump out at Wacca Wache. Over 25 cents more per gallon on diesel than Osprey and a whopping $25 for a pumpout.
      Brenda Sanderson

      Click Here To View the Cruisers Net South Carolina Marina Directory Listing For Osprey Marina

      Click Here To Open A Chart View Window, Zoomed To the Location of Osprey Marina

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    • Shands Bridge, St. Johns River, Green Cove Springs, FL


      For our tall-masted friends thinking of exploring the upper St. Johns River, Bruce Phaup kindly reminds us that the Shands Bridge with a fixed vertical clearance of 45ft connects Red Bay and Smith Points just south of Green Cove Springs. Funds have been approved for the replacement of Shands Bridge by the Florida Legislature, see links below. The bridge portion of the project is scheduled for completion in 2030.

      The Shands Bridge, just south of Green Cove Springs, has a clearance of 45 feet. The Shands Bridge is the controlling height for the entire navigable extent of the St. John’s River, extending south to Sanford, Florida.
      Bruce Phaup

      Current Shands Bridge

      Click here for Renderings of the new Shands Bridge

      Click here for State funds $763M to replace Shands Bridge, extend beltway

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    • Caution Still Needed in Jekyll Creek Problem Stretch, GA AICW Statute Mile 683


      This long overdue dredging is very welcome, but as Richard Ross confirms, the dredging has not been completed so GO SLOW and KEEP YOUR EYE ON THE DEPTH FINDER! Because the channel through this Problem Stretch seems to shift with each tide and until the dredging proves otherwise, Cruisers Net still recommends mid to high tide passage.

      By now everyone cruising the ICW should know that Jekyll Creek is being dredged.
      We came thru there today (May 2/19) near high tide and saw 2 ft MLW near the infamous marker 19. The dredge is at the north end and will be working its way south. Completion is scheduled for June 15. So don’t strike this off your list of Georgia problem stretches yet.
      Richard Ross

      Click Here To View the Cruisers’ Net’s “AICW Problem Stretches” Listing For Jekyll Creek

      Click Here To Open A Chart View Window, Zoomed To This AICW Problem Stretch

      AREA SPONSORING MARINA

      Click Here To View the Cruisers Net Georgia Marina Directory Listing For Jekyll Harbor Marina

      Click Here To Open A Chart View Window, Zoomed To the Location of Jekyll Harbor Marina

      Comments from Cruisers (3)

      1. Richard Ross -  May 15, 2019 - 10:48 am

        In reply to Dave and Bob. Sorry it took so long, we have been out cruising.

        MLW depths mean the water depth at low tide. Of course the water was much deeper at close to high tide when we went thru (We draw 5 ft), but I subtracted the tide when calculating water depth. The bottom line is that until the dredging is finished, most boats will not be able to pass this section at low tide.

        Reply to Richard
      2. Bob Keller -  May 2, 2019 - 10:01 pm

        With all due respect, it is hard to believe that there was 2 ft mlw in Jekyll Creek today near high tide. These kinds of reports are useless to cruisers and actually are detrimental because they do not potray a complete picture. Exactly where near green 19 were you when you saw 2 ft? I suspect you were quite far off G 19 and which direction were u heading, north or south? I travel through here several times a year and have never heard of 2 ft at mlw except if you are out of the channel, off course or have not paid attention to the many tracks and routes posted online to easily traverse this area.

        Reply to Bob

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