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    • Monday Minute – Last Sail of 2018 by Bill Parlatore

      Our thanks to Bill Parlatore for permitting Cruisers Net to post articles from his excellent blog, Following Seas.

      I went along on what will likely be the last sail of the year. Boats that have not gone south are being winterized and properly stored. This past Saturday we brought a Hallberg-Rassy to its winter yard at Herrington Harbour North in Deale, MD. And today I help bring a Selene 40 trawler over to Jabin Yacht Yard in Annapolis for hauling and shrink wrap. It’s that time of year.

      Monday Minute – Last Sail of 2018

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    • Metal Shark in the Bahamas

      Our thanks to good friend and frequent contributor to Cruisers Net, Greg Allard, for sharing this Facebook video.

      Those of you who have cruised in the Bahamas, or are lucky enough to live there, and have enjoyed the extraordinary Exuma Land and Sea Park, will find this interesting. Don’t miss the video.

      -Greg Allard
      M/V Meander

      Click here for Metal Shark in the Bahamas

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    • Pomeranz Report: AICW R48A Reported Missing, Northern Fields Cut, SC Statute Mile 575


      Hank Pomeranz of Coastal Yacht Care and host of navigation/weather briefings at Southport Marina reports this missing ICW marker. Hank had discussed marker 48A in his Oct 30 Pomeranz Report. The intersection of Wright River and Northern Fields cut is a Cruisers Net Problem Stretch noted for shoaling and channel shifting.

      Hi all, I had two on scene reports yesterday that R”48A” is missing at the northern entrance to Fields Cut. I have photos from within the last 10 days that it was there. It was not mentioned in the 46/18 LNM. As you know, this mark forces you towards the green shore for deeper water.

      Bob, I downloaded your GPX track through there and have attached a screen shot- which may help show them the deepest path. Navionics also has a good handle on it and I just drew a faux track to make the point. Perhaps an announcement something to the effect that if R48A is not on station, suggest closely following the green (port southbound) shore for deepest water.

      This is basically how I started briefing it last night.

      Best Regards
      hank

       

      Sherer GPX Track

      Navionics

      Click Here To Open A Chart View Window, Zoomed To Northern Fields Cut

      1 Facebook Likes, 1 Facebook Reactions

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    • Commenting or Reporting Errors to NOAA

      NOAA makes it easier to submit a comment or report a nautical chart error.

       


      November 16, 2018
      Contact:
      Kristen Crossett, 301-325-2113

      NOAA makes it easier to submit a comment or report a nautical chart error
      On November 16, 2018, NOAA released ASSIST, a new system for submitting questions and reporting nautical chart errors to NOAA’s Office of Coast Survey. ASSIST has a mobile-friendly design and improved user interface that allows customers to access the system conveniently from any device. This new tool replaces Coast Survey’s Inquiry and Discrepancy Management System (IDMS), a database that collected nearly 20,000 comments, inquiries, and discrepancy reports since 2008.

      ASSIST offers new features including the ability to:
      Tag your submission on a NOAA chart, map, or satellite imagery
      Enter reports from a cell phone or other mobile device
      Comment or report an error using a single form

      These improvements streamline the internal Coast Survey workflow, allowing faster, more efficient responses to customers. ASSIST is available from: https://www.nauticalcharts.noaa.gov/customer-service/assist/

      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.

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    • Pomeranz Report: Lockwoods Folly and Advice on Markers vs Chartplotters


      For years, Cruisers Net has admonished its readers to not blindly follow the magenta line on their chart plotters. Now experienced sailor and frequent contributor, Hank Pomeranz of Carolina Yacht Care and daily navigation/weather briefs at Southport Marina, affirms that advice with “get your head out of the cockpit.” Thank you Hank! Lockwoods Folly, a Cruisers Net Problem Stretch, is notorious for shoaling and channel shifting with almost every tide change.

      Hi all,

      I think it’s a good time to reiterate that visually following the marks across Lockwoods Folly Inlet is critical to safe passage. I am seeing in my nightly briefs that many people are depending on Bob’s posted track (mostly my waypoints), which they are plotting on various apps – primarily AquaMap and Navionics. The track is valid but these two apps (and I suspect others) have 3 issues with buoys: R48, G47A are both incorrectly plotted and R46A, while shown in the apps does not exist.

      A key issue is that our Lockwoods Folly track plots on the wrong side of R48 and points to a G47A that isn’t where shown. The questions I’m getting from cruisers who are looking ahead is: Do I follow the track despite the fact that it goes on the wrong side of the red? I tell them that the buoys are misplotted and the track is good and to make sure they follow the marks. I wonder about the cruisers who may be looking at the image on the screen and assuming they should take R48 on the wrong side.

      When I was learning to fly, I did what a lot of nuggets do and that is to focus on the gauges. My flight instructor told me to get my “head out of the cockpit”! Good advice up there and good advice down here. I think it’s time to instill in our new cruisers that, unless you have a reason to believe otherwise (mark reported offstation, destroyed, etc) it is best to assume they’re correct and follow them. Where they are shown on the many apps is not enough reason to trust that the plotted positions are accurate, as the Lockwoods Folly Inlet so aptly demonstrates.

      We will do the cruising community a service by reminding them to get their heads out of the cockpit and trust their eyeballs.

      Thanks
      Hank

      P.S. I am getting positive reports from experienced cruisers that they are doing well following Bob’s tracks. My concern here is not that group, but rather the ones who don’t understand that blind and complete reliance on one source and a lack of trust in one’s own observations does not make for a good mariner.

      This Navionics chart received 11/16/18

      And Robert Sherer, editor for Waterway Guides, adds this:

      Hank,

      Just to add, I had one report a day ago that a cruiser bumped bottom between G47A and R48A. We had an exchange of notes to clarify whether he followed my track or eyeballed it using the two buoys (I was concerned further shoaling had occurred). His reply was that he eyeballed it to be midchannel between the two buoys when he should have favored the green side per my track.

      I also had notes back to me about the missing buoy and miss located buoy. I tell them that one is not there and the other one had been moved and to honor all buoys but follow the track – to prevent touching bottom between G47A and R48A.

      I’ve had good reports back on the tracks with two provisions. The turn southward into Sawpit creek swings too wide. It’s a good track if you follow it exactly but there’s no room for error if you swing a little wider than I did. That’s complicated by the usual swift currents there (which caught me, the reason for the wide turn). I am going to edit that track to fix that problem. The second provision is that I have not posted a track from Jacksonville to St Augustine. I found shallows when I went too far to the green side of the new channel (not on any charts) after crossing St Johns River. All charts showed plenty of water including SonarChart, they are all wrong. Just follow the new buoys which are far to the right side when going south (The channel used to be on the left side there) They are small and not easy to see. I get a lot of complaints about not posting that route! I do plan on editing that route too and it will be posted soon. In the meantime, I would favor the red side some, the building shoal is on the green side of the new channel.

      Robert Sherer, aka Bob423
      Waterway Guide On-The-Water Editor

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

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    • Good Words for Fort Myers Beach Mooring Field and Area, Matanzas Pass, Fort Myers Beach, FL


      The Town of Fort Myers Beach proudly operates and maintains the Matanzas Harbor Municipal Mooring Field. The field boasts 70 mooring balls available for public rental year-round, and accommodates vessels up to 48 feet in length. The mooring field is located east of the Sky Bridge between San Carlos and Estero Islands in Matanzas Pass. For recreational cruisers, the Fort Myers Beach Mooring Field is a wonderful destination. Coming ashore at the Town’s dinghy dock puts boaters in walking distance to beaches, restaurants, shopping, nightlife, and public transportation. Mooring ball rental fees are $13/day or $260/month. All renters MUST register with Matanzas Inn upon arrival. The dinghy dock is available for public use to tie up dinghies 10’ or less (no overnight tie-ups). The dock is located beneath the Sky Bridge between Matanzas Inn Restaurant and the public fishing pier.

      Few Floridian communities are as welcoming to the cruising community as CRUISERS NET SPONSOR, Fort Myers Beach! This is a town that knows how to treat cruisers and invite them back time and time again! Our thanks to Torie Cannon for this excellent report.

      Excellent stop off on your way south or north. Easy in and easy out. Run by the Mantanzas Inn on the Bay. Office staff much better informed and less hassle at registration this time around! Austin on the Pump out boat comes on Monday-Wednesday-Friday between 10:00 and 14:00. Must be aboard for pump out. Ice availability a little tough but you can dinghy into Diversified for ice and fuel. They also have an excellent parts department on the second floor. Moss docks have a closed sign on them across the channel. Showers clean, four washing machines and dryers. Beach trolley is .75 one way and you can take it to the Publix south on the beach side. Had to get a #4 wire to rewrite the new alternator to the house battery and went into Olson Marine next to Diversified marine, Doc Ford restaurant and Olson put the wire together for us in a jiffy for a reasonable price. Excellent experience over all!
      Torie Cannon

      Click Here To View the Western Florida Cruisers’ Net Anchorage Directory Listing For the Fort Myers Beach Mooring Field

      Click Here To Open A Chart View Window, Zoomed To the Location of the Fort Myers Beach Mooring Field

      6 Facebook Likes, 6 Facebook Reactions

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    • More Praise for Camachee Cove Yacht Harbor, AICW Statute Mile 775.5


      Welcome to Camachee Cove Yacht Harbor! Located in America’s oldest city- St. Augustine, Florida- Camachee Cove is a fully protected marina adjacent to the ICW, and less than a mile from the St. Augus

      Camachee Cove Yacht Harbor, A CRUISERS NET SPONSOR, continues to receive words of praise for its facility and staff. Camachee Cove Yacht Harbor is located just off the Waterway’s western shoreline, south of unlighted daybeacon #7 and north of the Vilano Beach Bridge.

      A failing battery brought me back to Camachee Cove Yacht Harbor on our cruise south. The staff at the Yacht Yard were helpful, friendly, and prompt. Technician quickly diagnosed the problem, rounded up four new 8D batteries, and replaced my old ones within a few hours. For anyone needing help in north Florida, Camachee Yacht Yard is a great resource.
      David Grimes

      Click Here To View the Eastern Florida Cruisers’ Net Marina Directory Listing For Camachee Cove Yacht Harbor

      Click Here To Open A Chart View Window, Zoomed To the Location of Camachee Cove Yacht Harbor

      2 Facebook Likes, 2 Facebook Reactions

      Comments from Cruisers (1)

    • Capn Parky Visits the St Johns River, FL AICW Intersection Statute Mile 740


      The St Johns River is a very popular side trip for Waterway cruisers for good reason, especially this time of year. Capn Parky is an experienced cruiser and frequent contributor to Cruisers Net; you can trust his observations. If we can get him to reveal, I will add the name of the best ever marina!

      After 10 years cruising the ICW. I finally decided to explore the St Johns River. It’s absolutely delightful.

      Many sailors believe it to be full of shallows, nasty turns and poor markers. None of this is true. Channel water depth is 7 ft minimum and often much deeper. There are essential things to do which I would happily tell any boater if they contact me at capnparky2017@outlook.com

      I believe I have found the best marina I ever visited. First Class amenities, floating slips. No barnacles (fresh water), spotless showers, Captains Lounge, on site reasonably priced restaurant, super friendly to liveaboards , the ships store even has an ATM machine. Above all – low slip costs. I’ve signed up for a year! 😊

      Hope you are well
      Best Wishes
      Arnold Parkinson

      Click Here To Open A Chart View Window, Zoomed To the Location of AICW/St. Johns Intersection

      2 Facebook Likes, 2 Facebook Reactions

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    • Florida Liveaboard Voters Get a Reprieve

      This article is from Passage Maker Channels, November 13, 2018.

      Florida Liveaboard Voters Get a Reprieve
      Thousands of liveaboard cruisers are moving from one Florida address to a different Florida address in order to be able vote in future elections. Largely overlooked during one of the most contentious elections in the country was an asterix-worthy kerfuffle on Florida’s St. Johns River, events which threatened to disenfranchise thousands of boater voters

      2 Facebook Likes, 2 Facebook Reactions

      Comments from Cruisers (6)

      1. Albert J K III -  November 14, 2018 - 7:17 pm

        In reply to previous comments….
        Whenever asked for allowing or blocking whatever I just pass it by. Why does Cruisers Net need my location, anyway?

        Reply to Albert
        • Cruisers' Net -  December 3, 2018 - 6:51 pm

          One of the features of our new website is to allow you to sort articles near your current location, find the nearest fuel, etc. This was added due to feedback from users that they wanted to see a location focused list of information. You can deny the request and the website will work based off an estimated location from your IP address. If you can’t read the article then something may not be working properly. Please let me know if that is your situation and I’ll get it fixed.

          Reply to Cruisers'
        • Fay Davis -  November 14, 2018 - 5:29 pm

          Albert J K III Florida Liveaboard Voters Get a Reprieve
          This article is from Passage Maker Channels, November 13, 2018.

          Florida Liveaboard Voters Get a Reprieve
          Thousands of liveaboard cruisers are moving from one Florida address to a different Florida address in order to be able vote in future elections. Largely overlooked during one of the most contentious elections in the country was an asterix-worthy kerfuffle on Florida’s St. Johns River, events which threatened to disenfranchise thousands of boater voters

          Reply to Fay
        • Lori Steinbrunner -  November 14, 2018 - 6:32 pm

          Albert J K III ??? I got a pop-up as well, declined to allow location, and read the article w/o problem.

          Reply to Lori
        • Cruisers' Net -  November 14, 2018 - 6:48 pm

          Hummm. We wil check this out. Thanks for your calling this to our attention. But you should be able to read without giving location.

          Reply to Cruisers'
    • The Cost of Cruising – Part 2 by Bill Parlatore

      Our thanks to Bill Parlatore for permitting Cruisers Net to post articles from his excellent blog, Following Seas. And in case you missed Part 1.

      The Cost of Cruising – Part 2 – Known Costs
      In Part 2, we identify some of the fees, rates, and fixed expenses of cruising. Knowing these up front really helps when creating a budget for extended cruising. The value of the cruising experience is worth every penny, of course, but it’s important to know ahead of time what you’ll need to keep going.

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