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    • Schedule of Flights to the Bahamas

       Welcome to the Staniel Cay Yacht Club, your own paradise in the middle of the beautiful Exumas.staniel

      This schedule of Watermakers Air’s flights to the Bahamas comes from our friend Chris Pitney of Staniel Cay Yacht Club, A SALTY SOUTHEAST CRUISERS’ NET SPONSOR! Staniel Cay Yacht Club, a favorite destination for cruisers in the Exumas, has always been most accommodating for its guests.

      Hi Larry – just wanted to let you know that our sister company, Watermakers Air, has begun regular passenger and freight air service into Great Exuma (GGT), N. Eleuthera (ELH), and Great Harbour Cay (GHC), from Fort Lauderdale. Perfect for all crew, guest, and supply needs for cruisers! I’m attaching a map of our routes here in case you can share for us.
      Thanks!
      Chris
      SCYC

      bahamas flights

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    • On-site Report on Gordon Pass Navigation into Naples, FL


      Gordon Pass is the primary inlet serving the Naples, Florida region and shoaling is a perennial problem as shown in this 2015 Nav Alert. Our thanks to SSECN Team member, Curtis Hoff, for this on-site report.

      At least one cruising site [/155155] recently noted the Coast Guard planned aids to navigation changes in mid-February for Gordon Pass into Naples. As of yesterday the aids to navigation are unchanged and shoaling is still a concern in the channel. A call to TowBoatUS resulted in the following guidance:

      Enter from the south between R2 and R4 on a course of 060 deg aiming for 1/3 of the distance from R2 to R4. Note this puts R2 to port as you enter.

      I entered yesterday following this guidance saw a minimum of 8 ft at a +1 ft tide.

      See the following graphic for a visual representation of this guidance.

      NaplesGordonPass

      Click Here To Open A Chart View Window, Zoomed To the Location of Gordon Pass

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    • Bahamas Chatter: Turks and Caicos Radar Station

      Explorer Charts - the best charts for the Bahamas and Exumas
      Explorer Chartbooks, A SALTY SOUTHEAST CRUISERS’ NET PARTNER, has long been the standard navigational supplement for enjoyable, informative, and safe cruising through the beautiful Bahamian waters and island visits.

       

      Bahamas Chatter: Turks and Caicos Radar Station
      Turks and Caicos Radar Station
      Posted: 26 Feb 2016 06:11 AM PST
      The Turks and Caicos Government operates a radar surveillance station that monitors vessels entering and departing their territorial waters. Vessels entering or leaving the twelve mile limit can contact the station by calling “Provo Radio”. The station operates 24/7 on VHF Channels 16 and 64 and also broadcasts navigational warnings and weather forecasts.

      The radar and radio transmitters are mounted on a 40 meter tower located in the South Dock area on Providenciales at 21° 44.44′ N/72° 16.26′ W. See Chart TC 3, page 78, Explorer Chartbook Far Bahamas, Sixth Edition.

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    • State of Emergency: Lake Okeechobee at Highest Levels Since 2005

      February 27: As reported in the article below from WPTV of West Palm Beach, Gov. Scott has declared a State of Emergency regarding Lake Okeechobee discharge:

      http://www.wptv.com//news/region-st-lucie-county/gov-scott-declares-state-of-emergency-in-martin-st-lucie-lee-counties-over-water-discharges?audiencePageId=1530394695

      And this 2/23 article from Mother Jones:

      http://m.motherjones.com/environment/2016/02/florida-water-pollution-lake-okeechobee

      Except for the possibility of floating debris, the high levels are good news (well, maybe not good for all boaters: see Philips Lange’s comments below!) for boaters transiting the Okeechobee Waterway, but bad news for fishermen in the St. Lucie River.

      Lake Okeechobee discharges could last for months
      Monday level was 16.14 feet
      Jon Shainman
      CLICK HERE FOR THE FULL STORY

      Comments from Cruisers (1)

    • Report from Dolphin Marina & Lodging, Hawk Channel, east of Little Torch Key


      Dolphin Marina and Lodging is on the western shore of Newfound Harbor Channel off Hawk Channel.

      Gas was 2.80/gal as of 2/23/16. Very tight inside, but deep water in approach (6’+) and deeper inside (8-12′). No transient moorage.
      Dan

      Click Here To View the Eastern Florida Cruisers’ Net Marina Directory Listing For Dolphin Marina

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

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    • Bahamas Chatter: “George Town Cruisers Regatta Schedule” plus 2 more

      Explorer Charts - the best charts for the Bahamas and Exumas
      Explorer Chartbooks, A SALTY SOUTHEAST CRUISERS’ NET PARTNER, has long been the standard navigational supplement for enjoyable, informative, and safe cruising through the beautiful Bahamian waters and island visits.

       

      Bahamas Chatter: “George Town Cruisers Regatta Schedule” plus 2 more
      George Town Cruisers Regatta Schedule
      Posted: 24 Feb 2016 03:14 PM PST
      36th Annual George Town Cruising Regatta Event Schedule (Click Link Above)
      Theme – Color The Bahamas Everything is Subject to Weather

      Four navigational lights relit
      Posted: 24 Feb 2016 10:42 AM PST
      The Aids to Navigation Section of the Royal Bahamas Defence Force advises that the following navigational lights in the Abaco area have been relit. All of the lights are shown in the Explorer Near Bahamas Chartbook:

      Comments can be directed to the Royal Bahamas Defence Force, 242-362-3091 or aton@rbdf.gov.bs

      Electronic Charts for the Bahamas
      Posted: 24 Feb 2016 10:09 AM PST
      Conflicting info on the WEB, what is the best electronic charts for the Bahamas and Florida?

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    • NavAids Changes to Address Dangerous Shoaling at New Pass, Sarasota, FL, 2/25/2016


      Shoaling at the entrance to New Pass was recently posted in LNM: /153973. These changes to existing NavAids are definitely needed and great caution is required until the new markers are in place. New Pass leads directly to the Sarasota waterfront and the entrance portion between the Entrance Light and Light 7 is constantly shifting. Our thanks to BOSN4 Pauly for these notices.

      All concerned,
      I’m seeking your assistance in notifying the public of upcoming Coast Guard changes to New Pass, Sarasota County.
      Please forward this information to county officials, marine police, boating groups, marinas, and any other users of New Pass as you wish. Feel free to publish this information or post on social media. Thanks for your assistance.
      Subject: New Pass info
      GULF OF MEXICO – FLORIDA – SARASOTA – NEW PASS

      Dangerous shoaling exists in the vicinity of the New Pass Entrance Channel, Sarasota County. There are currently no plans by the Army Corps of Engineers to maintain the federal project channel depth. The increased shoaling has created an unsafe situation and the Coast Guard has determined that it can no longer mark “safe water” and will be removing all federal Aids to Navigation from the New Pass (NP) Entrance Light to New Pass Light 7. A Safety broadcast to Mariners will be released notifying the public of the intended start date of this work.

      New Pass Channel Light (NP) (LLNR 1345 [27°18.9185N / 082°35.8861W, 27.315309 / -82.598102]), will be discontinued and converted to a Danger Shoal Marker with a Quick Flashing, White light.
      New Pass Channel Buoy 1 (21590) will be discontinued.
      New Pass Channel Buoy 2 (21595) will be discontinued.
      New Pass Channel Buoy 3A (21600) will be discontinued.
      New Pass Channel Buoy 4 (21603) will be discontinued.
      New Pass Channel Buoy 5 (21605) will be discontinued.
      New Pass Channel Buoy 5A (21610) will be discontinued.
      New Pass Channel Light 7 (21620) will be discontinued and converted to a Danger Shoal Marker with a Quick, Flashing White light.

      Boaters are advised to seek alternate routes to and from the Gulf of Mexico and also use extreme caution while in this area. Please contact Chief Warrant Officer Darren Pauly for additional information or questions. Darren.a.pauly@uscg.mil or (813) 228-2191 ext 8184.

      Click Here To Open A Chart View Window, Zoomed To A “Navigation Alert” Position at New Pass

      Comments from Cruisers (1)

      1. Whit Sibley -  February 26, 2016 - 4:02 pm

        So basically, New Pass is closed to navigation . Big Pass is usually a gut-clencher when transiting. Venice now best option for G of M access? Sad state of affairs for Sarasota Bay mariners , and businesses. Why no outcry?

        Reply to Whit
    • Praise for St. Johns Yacht Harbor, Charleston, SC , AICW Statute Mile 472.5


       For those who own a boat and love the water, buying a SJYH wet slip is an easy decision when you consider the benefits. The opportunity to own waterfront access a mere 11 minutes from historic downtoLocated on the western shore of the Stono River just south of the Waterway’s passage out the western/southern mouth of Wappoo Creek – Elliot Cut, and only a very short cruise from Charleston Harbor, St. Johns Yacht Harbor is A SALTY SOUTHEAST CRUISERS’ NET SPONSOR! By boat or by car, it is worth a trip just to see these beautiful facilities with probably the nicest Captains’ Lounge and Clubhouse on the east coast!

      Very nice, clean facility. Friendly and helpful staff. Convenient location. Grocery, drug stores and restaurants close by with courtesy car provided. Current can be tricky when tide is running,, but staff will assist with lines when docking. Will stop here again and recommend it highly to others.
      Capt Jack B-H and 1st mate Steve O.
      Aboard the trawler “Whatever”

      Click Here To View the South Carolina Cruisers’ Net Marina Directory Listing For St. Johns Yacht Harbor

      Click Here To Open A Chart View Window, Zoomed To the Location of St. Johns Yacht Harbor

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    • BoatUS Op Ed: Ethanol-free Gasoline

      Boat U.S.BoatUS remains the premiere advocate for boaters and boating safety on all waters and SSECN is proud to have BoatUS as a SPONSOR!

       

       

       

      From BoatUS Public Relations
      Boat Owners Association of The United States
      880 S. Pickett St., Alexandria, VA 22304
      Read this Op-Ed online at: http://goo.gl/lGMA9q

      unnamed

      E0, or ethanol-free gasoline for boaters may be hard to come by this summer as a result of the Renewable Fuel Standard mandate forcing more ethanol into the fuel supply.

      Press Contact: D. Scott Croft, 703-461-2864, SCroft@BoatUS.com

      February 24, 2016
      E0 Gas Is Going Away for Boaters
      Op-Ed: South Carolina Boats, Presidential Candidates and Ethanol Blended Fuels

      Dear Friends:
      I want to share with you the Op-Ed below that was recently offered this week to South Carolina newspapers in advance of Saturday’s Democratic primary. E0 (zero-ethanol) gasoline, which is sold at marinas and gas stations, is in effect being pushed out of boat fuel market to make room for the Renewable Fuel Standard-mandated E15 and higher ethanol blends. This means boaters may see shortages of E0 fuel as early as this summer’s boating season. BoatUS believes boaters need a reliable, trusted fuel to ensure smooth engine operation and safe navigation, and we ask you to share the Op-Ed below in any manner available to you.
      Please call me at 703-461-2864 or email SCroft@BoatUS.com if you have any questions.
      Thank you for your support on this issue,
      Scott Croft
      Vice President BoatUS Public Affairs

      Op-Ed: South Carolina Boats, Presidential Candidates and Ethanol Blended Fuels
      by: Margaret Bonds Podlich, President of BoatUS

      As Democrat presidential candidates turn their attention to South Carolina, it is worth considering how a particular federal law that both candidates support wreaks havoc on the state’s boaters. That law is the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) and it has led to some significant, albeit unintentional, negative consequences for owners of the roughly half-million boats registered in the Palmetto State.

      When gasoline containing ethanol and boats mix, boat owners lose. That’s because of something called “phase separation” – think oil and vinegar – that can turn fuel stored in a boat’s gas tank into corrosive, water-soaked ethanol mixture, unusable in any engine. Half of those who responded to a recent informal national survey by the Boat Owners Association of The United States (BoatUS) said they have had to replace or repair boat engine or fuel system parts because of suspected ethanol-related damage. The average cost for these repairs was $1,000.

      The federal ethanol mandate requires increasing amounts of biofuels – primarily corn ethanol –to be blended into America’s gasoline supply every year. In part because of the mandate, more than 90 percent of American fuel today is E10, or 10 percent ethanol. In addition, higher ethanol-blend fuels such as E15 are becoming more prevalent in the marketplace, even though federal law prohibits the use of 15 percent ethanol in marine engines, ATVs, motorcycles, lawnmowers or any cars made before 2001.

      Boaters have long preferred ethanol-free gasoline to other fuels, so much so that many refer to E0 as “marine fuel.” However, our country’s supply of E0 is projected to be reduced dramatically from over 8 billion gallons in 2014 to just 200 million, possibly as early as this summer’s boating season. E0 is in effect being pushed out of boat fuel market to make room for the RFS’ mandated E15 and other higher ethanol blends. The prospect of this disappearing act has the boating community in South Carolina and around the country extremely concerned.

      Correcting the RFS before it wipes out the availability of E0 for boating families and wreaks additional havoc on marine engines is the responsibility of our next president—perhaps Secretary Clinton or Senator Sanders—and Congress. Ted Cruz, by becoming the first candidate to win Iowa while opposed to the mandate, shows that supporting the RFS is not a political necessity. It is now time to fix this broken law. Thankfully, there are bipartisan ideas to fix the ethanol mandate in Congress, but the question remains whether our elected leaders will act and solve the problem. America’s boaters, and certainly those in South Carolina, hope they will.

      Boat Owners Association of The United States (BoatUS) is the nation’s leading advocate for recreational boaters providing its over half-million members with government representation, fighting against unfair federal taxes, fees and regulations that single out boat owners. BoatUS is also non-partisan and works with state agencies to promote boating laws that make sense.

      Comments from Cruisers (2)

      1. Suzanne Longacre -  March 6, 2016 - 12:52 pm

        There is an environmentally safe option to corn -based ethanol: as Cuba opens up to mutually beneficial trade, that country’s capability in growing large amounts of sugar-cane would have a new expanding ethanol market for trade.

        Brazil’s sugar cane industry taught that it is a much safer additive to gasoline than corn. Now, only 90 miles away, comes a perfect opportunity to turn the whole ethanol industry around. Despite the very effective agribusiness lobby for expanding corn for non-food uses, , it is morally, economically and environmentally far better to use sugarcane as the additive. With hungry global residents, corn products should be used for feeding the hungry, not just making agribusiness owners extremely rich.

        Reply to Suzanne
      2. Phil Doucette -  February 26, 2016 - 8:12 pm

        It would seem to me that all boaters concerned boaters should be voting for Cruse as he is the only true conservative, thus hopefully an early item agenda will be to shut down the IRS, NSA, and the EPA, and to throw the UN out of the country, after demanding they pay all owed moneys to the US,and selling their Bldg. putting it back on NY’s tax rolls. Thus ENDING the ETHINOL FOLLY!!!
        NO more GLOBAL WARMING-COLLING, whatever the LIBERAL- WACHACCO’S wish to call it this week or next!!! Git- er done!!!!!!!!!!!

        Reply to Phil
    • Sailor Seeks Advice re Offshore from Fort Lauderdale to New York

      If those of you who make passage offshore can offer advice to Len, please let us hear from you!

      Hello to all,
      We’ll be transiting from Fort Lauderdale to New York in late April and would appreciate any insight regarding Atlantic passage.
      I’ve read some information related to some areas such as the Diamond Shoals, is it necessary to transit outside the old light station 13 miles offshore: (appears to be ample water further inland)
      Any input regarding any hazards along the Atlantic coast would be appreciated. jetskilen@yahoo.com
      Regards
      Len

      Comments from Cruisers (1)

      1. Norman Quinn -  February 26, 2016 - 5:52 pm

        Depends on what kind of vessel you’re going in…especially your draft

        Reply to Norman

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