firstbase
Guru
- Joined
- Nov 6, 2016
- Messages
- 1,644
- Location
- United States
- Vessel Name
- Black Eyed Susan
- Vessel Make
- Grand Banks 42' Classic
If my boat was in a hurricane path I'd move it. Hurricane paths are know as much as a week in advance. Responsibility comes with boat ownership. If you can't take the time maybe you're in the wrong job.
People that leave their boats to be destroyed raise the rates for all of us. And rates will be going up after the loss payments this year.
Spoken like a guy who is somewhere between Oregon and Alaska. "Hurricane paths are know as much as a week in advance." HUH? Check out this years Irma and last years Matthew if you want to see how accurate those paths are "a week in advance".
Those of us keeping our boats in marinas here on the east coast of Florida watched all of those fleeing to safety as you suggest. They were all going down the Okeechobee Waterway and were waving and smiling as they went buy with a "Poor stupid east coast boaters" look on their faces "Don't they know they should move their boats to help everyone with their insurance rates?". After a day and a half they were all comfortably tucked into slips over in... Ft. Myers. Southwest Florida. Where the storm came ashore basically. Winds were pretty bad over here but not like over there where those boats went to "safety". I have been told, and now see why, that trying to outguess a hurricane is very risky game. I moved our boat from a lovely, full service but wide open, unprotected marina to a small one with no services and an iffy entrance at low tide but very protected on three sides. Took off anything that could catch some wind including the wrap around flybridge canvas, a PITA to put back up. I bought $1,100 worth of new and spare dock lines, used fire hose for chaffing gear, triple tied some lines, put an anchor out as the boat is pointed at the one unprotected from wind direction and shifted the boat forward to take the strain off of the pilings and on to the concrete piers and seawall cleats as best I could. Post storm I don't have a scratch, didn't take out any of my neighbors, the pilings are in the same place and angle as they were prior and all is good. I don't really know much but think I did more for your insurance rate than those moving their boat.
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