Hello,
I have a whole bunch of questions but let's just start with Marina Costs, say from North Carolina down through Florida.
I have tried calling around and folks are not too helpful over the phone.
For Liveaboard? Do they charge by the LWL or LOA?
For Transient docks? LWL or LOA
Is there a Hotel tax tacked on top of that? Other tax?
Any other common marina fees?
I have read that in North Carolina you can apply for and receive a rebate
for part of your fuel taxes paid?
Since I am asking How often along the ICW can you find anchorages for a day or two or three or a week?
Boater friendly Stretches say from Oriental south?
Unfriendly stretches from Oriental NC South?
I am hearing that Florida has a thing about Anchors rather a thing against them...Anyone care to Expound on that?
Thanks in advance for all of your knowledge.
Regards, Gary
I saw a couple of posters were not happy with my previous comment. I have been in the Exumas Park for a week or so with sketchy connection, so didn't respond.
Maybe my last response was a bit lazy, so let me give you my thoughts in full (and why I said what I said).
First, I totally agree that proactively working out what the cost of ownership and running a boat will be is a prudent approach. When we bought our first "big boat" back in 2001 I was a very active golfer. We decided that I couldn't be both an active golfer and a boat owner. Not just the time it takes but cost. So I gave up golf.
When we started running to the Bahamas every year we were very aware of costs - especially with big gas engines. Given that I was still working we had to get there and back quickly. With three young children we also had to spend at least 50% of the time in marinas or marina mooring balls. They (we) could only put up with their own company for so long!
But here is the thing - we knew that we would only have the children for so long and that eventually they would fly the coop. We were buying memories, and what memories we have. We had wet eyes when we finally donated Passage and moved to the boat for a cruising couple. We had no regrets spending the money as we were doing so, and no regrets looking back. Were we aware of our spend and appropriately managing it? - yep. But it didn't keep us awake at night.
So here is what was behind my comment. Again I agree it is prudent to make sure you can afford the boat and to run it the way you want. However, if you are, even before you buy a boat, concerned about costs to the level you expressed, then I think you should seriously consider holding off on buying the boat. Working out maintenance, marina and fuel costs is one thing. But if you truly feel whether marinas charge you by LWL or LOA, hotel taxes, recovering state fuel taxes, etc., that those answers are critical to you, then I would say, think carefully.
If you walk down any marina today (apart from those that service sports fishing) you will find that between 50-75% of the boats there never leave the marina. It may actually be higher. Why? It could be that the owners found that they didn't have the time that they thought they would have, or that their spouses hated the boat, or that they bought a boat that they couldn't handle. But I will tell you that a goodly number of those boats are not moving because the owners can't or won't afford to run them.
Case in point. At the end of the last decade when fuel prices at the dock were over $4 a gallon, recreational boating nearly came to a standstill.
I would hate it if you, or anyone, were close to the knuckle in affording a boat, buying it, and then it sat at the dock. Chances are you and yours would then come to see it as the proverbial hole in the water, and come to dislike boating.
So make the decision with eyes wide open, and if the difference in marina costs of two feet here or there, and hotel taxes, and recovering fuel taxes etc. really make a difference in your decision, I would still advise not to buy - not yet.
Good luck.