Winter is a perfect time for the beach and for collecting seashells
What a lovely article by Amanda Nalley from the Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission!
Winter is a perfect time for the beach and for collecting seashells
What a lovely article by Amanda Nalley from the Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission!
Winter is a perfect time for the beach and for collecting seashells
A CRUISERS NET SPONSOR, Dowry Creek Marina, now under new management and ownership by The Zeltner family who want to “roll out the red carpet” to transients, doing whatever you might need during your visit to this highly praised and transient friendly marina lying off the AICW/Pungo River north of Belhaven, NC. Upon their retirement from shore life, the Zeltners went shopping for a trawler and ended up buying Dowry Creek Marina! Steve, Connie and their grown children, Teresa, Zac and Nicole will treat you like family!
I’ve been quite happy with the marina and staff.
Josh Johnson S/V Temora
Click Here To Open A Chart View Window, Zoomed To the Location of Dowry Creek Marina
We stopped at Dowry Creek Maina for an overnight in November 2018. Quiet, friendly a very comfortable overnight. Offered a loaner car for local transport. Good fuel. Pool. Clean bathrooms. Very nice. Great sunsets and sunrises. Thank you.
MV Great Adenture
Ranger Tug 29
Our thanks to BoatUS, a longtime advocate for boating safety, for this USCG article.
U.S. Coast Guard Reauthorization Includes Look at Improving 911 System for Boaters
SPRINGFIELD, Va., Dec. 31, 2018 – A sign of the times, the U.S. Coast Guard reports that it’s common for recreational boaters today to use cellphones to call during a boating emergency. While Boat Owners Association of The United States (BoatUS) urges every vessel to have a working VHF radio with DSC (digital selective calling), the nation’s recreational boating advocacy, services and safety group also recognizes that cellphones are firmly embedded in boaters’ lives. But what happens when a boater tries to call 911 for emergency or routine on water assistance? Will the call go to the closest, most relevant rescue agency for a swift response?
Unfortunately that’s not always the case. But a provision in the recently passed Frank LoBiondo Coast Guard Authorization of Act of 2018 aims to improve reliability of the 911 system when recreational boaters need emergency help. In an effort to ensure timely dispatch of the closest potential rescue asset or on-water assistance provider, the Act requires the U.S. Coast Guard to review its policies and procedures to “formulate a national maritime Public Safety Answering Points (PSAP) policy.” There are more than 6,000 PSAPs in the U.S. – local 24/7 call centers with trained dispatchers that receive 911 emergency telephone calls and route them to the proper emergency service.
“This effort will help minimize the possibility of maritime calls being improperly routed and to assure the U.S. Coast Guard is able to effectively carry out its maritime search-and-rescue mission,” said Tina Cardone, executive director of the Conference of Professional Operators for Response Towing (C-PORT). C-PORT members, made up of on-water towing industry companies from across the country, contributed to the legislative effort. This included TowBoatUS Mystic owner Capt. Jeff Dziedzic.
“This was a grass-roots effort by many and took years of working with U.S. Coast Guard and elected officials,” said Capt. Dziedzic. “We care about this because of our occasional role in responding to life-threating events as good Samaritans, as well as answering calls for more routine requests for assistance.”
In a video recently captured from the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives, Rep. Joe Courtney (D-Conn.), Capt. Dziedzic’s local congressman, thanked the captain for bringing the issue to his attention.
BoatUS also thanks the leadership of Sen. Ben Nelson (D-Neb.) and Reps. Lee Zeldin (R-N.Y.), Paul Mitchell (R-Mich.) and Elizabeth Esty (D-Conn.).
Additional TowBoatUS C-PORT members joining the effort included Capt. Chad Noetzel, TowBoatUS Port Huron, Michigan; Capt. Terry Hill, TowBoatUS Potomac, Virginia, Capt. Richard Paul, TowBoatUS Cape Coral, Florida; and Capt. Chris Shaffner, TowBoatUS Palm Beach, Florida.
Wouldn’t you like to be as close to such a magnificent creature as this fishing crew was ?
Hilton Head fishing crew spots rare creature off coast. It was as big as an 18-wheeler
Island Packet (blog)
187killkillkill!
That doesn’t seem right.
Tybee Island is not in South Carolina…. Tybee Island is in Georgia… It is usually called "Savannah Beach"…Please get your "facts" right before you post them to the "WWW". It just makes you look stupid when people see it. Take care.
Pretty cool!
Had one come up along side and blew a spout. Scared the hell out of me. Then it just one eyed me for a bit, and went under and swam away. Just behind Blackbeards Island in the ICW.
Just there saw an 8 ft tide. Amaxing place.
We spotted one close to Hilton Head
GA actually, but still very cool
Mary Swan Lamar
With the menace of red tide and hurricanes, 2018 has not been a good year for water health in Florida. See Federal Lawsuits and Latest Red Tide Reports.
Water troubles still surfacing
KeysNews.com
St Andrew Sound can kick up nasty conditions in the shallows of the Waterway’s magenta line east around infamous Marker 32. Alternative routes have been explored and suggested as long as I can remember. Robert Sherer’s alternate route below does avoid Marker 32 but is a bit longer. However, Robert’s southbound alternate route, which parallels the north shore of the sound, if continued parallel on a southwest course, would connect nicely to the Satilla River, then into Floyd’s Creek, rejoining the Waterway in the Cumberland River near Mile 690. See Jim Healy’s report on St. Andrew Sound and Avoiding Marker 32. Our thanks to Robert Sherer for this discussion via Bob423.
Click Here To Open A Chart View Window Zoomed To the Location of Satilla River/Floyd’s Creek
I’ve been using this for a couple of years, it still gets rough but the waves are smaller than the old route
How do we protect these lumbering giants?
Manatee deaths may set new record this year after boat collisions, red tide
The News-Press
Record number of boats and manatees…we are going to have to institute government boating control…lol
Why do we need to protect them????
You can now find Cruisers Net on many more Social Networks.
Yesterday we went live with our support for more of the most popular networks.
Find Cruisers Net on your favorite social network. We have expanded our support to include:
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
Click on any icon to visit Cruisers Net on the corresponding Social Network.
Please let us know if your favorite social network is not supported and we’ll try to add it.
Why not have an app in the Play Store?
See Red Tide Reports and Red Tide Map for recent and past postings.
‘Red Tide’ Lawsuit Launched After Feds Ignore Wildlife Harms of Lake Okeechobee Discharges
Center for Biological Diversity (press release)
Environmental groups to sue feds over killer green slime toxic algae from Lake Okeechobee
Florida Phoenix (blog)
Our thanks to Bill Parlatore for permitting Cruisers Net to share articles from his excellent blog, Following Seas.
Will Cruising Powerboats Ever Catch Up With the Rest of the World?
It’s been a long time coming but we now see tangible progress emerging to reduce our dependence on fossil fuel. If the U.S. Navy can prove that it works, isn’t it about time the concept of the modern cruising boat includes hybrid forms of propulsion?
Perhaps you missed the part about the six diesel generators that power the electric motors?
Go Nuke!
Be the first to comment!