bes1020
Member
My wife and I are in the process of purchasing our first "big" boat (47ft). I must say that one of the most vexing aspects of this entire transaction is figuring out the strategy for securing a place to keep it. Our plan is to cruise fairly extensively during winter and spring and to do just short trips in summer and fall.
We have to be north of Florida for hurricane season so that rules out keeping it any place close to our home in the keys. We have tentatively settled on somewhere in South Carolina. For those of you in similar situations of being gone from your home marina for extended periods of time, how to you make sure you have a spot when you return 5 months later? Do you just pay for the entire year? Does your marina allow you to make seasonal reservations? Or do you find there to be adequate enough space that you can always find a space somewhere?
An ancillary question is for those of you who lease on an annual basis; if your boat is registered out of state how do you avoid triggering personal property tax in places like Georgia or South Carolina. It seems as though an annual lease would be waving a huge red flag.
We have to be north of Florida for hurricane season so that rules out keeping it any place close to our home in the keys. We have tentatively settled on somewhere in South Carolina. For those of you in similar situations of being gone from your home marina for extended periods of time, how to you make sure you have a spot when you return 5 months later? Do you just pay for the entire year? Does your marina allow you to make seasonal reservations? Or do you find there to be adequate enough space that you can always find a space somewhere?
An ancillary question is for those of you who lease on an annual basis; if your boat is registered out of state how do you avoid triggering personal property tax in places like Georgia or South Carolina. It seems as though an annual lease would be waving a huge red flag.