30 years of boating experience upto 33', getting captains license next month, need/want experience on larger boats....how does one get that experience to become a delivery captain?
For me, it was a lot of luck and a different time. I had seatime due to a fair amount of sailboat racing. Also, my girlfriends father lived on an old Owens in Marina del Rey, California. When my girlfriend and I moved to San Francisco, we bought a Uniflte 42 ACMY to liveaboard - would be difficult now due to liveaboard limits and we would be unlikely to get insurance.
When I took a cram-for-exam course for my 100t license, a local dinner-cruise charter company came in last day and made a pitch to hire captains. I had never considered driving but sounded interesting. My original motivation to get my ticket was to teach people close quarter maneuvering because it used to scare the hell out of me and I thought I could help folks get over the same fear I had (which I did, and it worked well).
So I was hired by Compass Rose Yacht Charters that had two charter boats. A 1970-ish vintage 65-foot Pacemaker certified to around 30 passengers; and an 84-foot steel custom ex-dive boat that was certified to over 60 passengers. I bought a cute Captains uniform and drove part time. Compass Rose was later bought by Hornblower as an early acquisition.
Around this time, I met Chuck Hawley, an EVP at West Marine, and a general goodwill ambassador for the brand. We sort of hit it off and I was around when he needed a boat for a day on SF Bay for a MoB demo at a Safety at Sea seminar to prepare for a trans-pacific sailboat race.
Turns out that at the time, West Marine was the feature sponsor to TrawlerFest. Chuck Hawley was big into safety gear (West Marine funded development of the Lifesling), and Chuck wanted to do MoB demos at TrawlerFests. Georgs Kolesnikov, emprissario of TrawlerFest, was fine with whatever his major sponsor wanted. I was a natural to do the demos, and to make it worthwhile to bring me to the venues, I was tasked with two seminar slots: Boat Selection 101: and Docking & Close Quarter Maneuvering. I'd also do dockside demos at lunchtime and afternoons to draw people to the brokerage boats. This later evolved into TrawlerFest University that had two 2-day courses on Tuesday/Wednesday before the TrawlerFest main event - I did Hands-on training aboard a borrowed boat, Bob Smith did a diesel class where he tore-down a Ford Lehman 6-cylinder in a hotel ballroom before wheeling the pallet into thr parking lot to fire it up at the end of day two.
My luck was seemingly endless. Via TrawlerFest, I also met the folks at PAE/Nordhavn. I bugged them to use me for deliveries. They finally tossed me a bone - a guy who for them had been a customer from hell. I guess the guy was so bad that they didn't want to burden a skipper they normally used. With owner and wife, I moved the boat from Dana Point CA to Blaine WA, a 2-week run with a stop in SF. The delivery went without a problem or complaint which surprised the PAE guys since the owner had been nothing but trouble. So I had their attention and suddenly I was delivering a LOT of Nordhavns. The last couple of years I spent over 220 days per year underway. I also really liked long distance/nonstop runs so the West Coast was perfect for me.
So I don't know. In hindsight, everything seems to have been one break after another. Starting with a first boat that was fairly sizeable really helped. And I was nuts about boats so I was pretty clingy in the industry. I was also passionate about teaching close quarter maneuvering because it was so hard for me and wanted to help others.
I was lucky, but sometimes you make your own luck. When opportunity knocked I was close enough to hear it. But bulk was dumb luck. Wish I had a better formula for you
Good luck on getting your ticket. Was a very happy and prideful day for me when I got mine.
Peter
USCG 100T Master 899414 (lapsed)