From the monthly archives:

April 2008

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The End of Recreational Boating?

by Douglas Gould on April 30, 2008

Here is a little item that was almost lost in a large, boring summary of oil industry news last week:

Oil to Hit $225 a Barrel?
If you think oil and gasoline prices are high now, they may seem cheap before long, according to CIBC World Markets Chief Economist Jeff Rubin. Rubin, who predicted three years ago that oil would reach $100 a barrel, thinks it will climb to $225 a barrel in four years. Gasoline could be around $10 a gallon by that time, he says.

It’s that time of year again, and I’m making my long maritime commute from my winter digs in Myrtle Beach to Rhode Island. Here are my observations along the ICW about this season’s boating activity so far.

If the boaters in North Carolina are any indication, then the small boaters will be out in force this summer. Lots of outboard boats, small I/Os and runabouts have practically slowed my progress on weekend days. The fuel prices haven’t seem to affected that activity.

On the other hand, there is a startling lack of large powerboats passing me each day, which would be typical in past years, as big SeaRays, Hatterases and Vikings from FLA are delivered to New England so the owners can enjoy a few cocktails and sunsets out at Martha’s Vineyard or Fire Island.

Yesterday, passing the FREE docks at Elizabeth City, NC, there was only one boat tied up. These docks are usually filled during the spring and fall cruising seasons. I had the Dismal Swamp Canal lock all to myself.

Back to the oil prediction; I read somewhere that in Europe, the boating industry saw a dramatic change when fuel prices hit the dollar equivalent of the $6/gal range.

At $10/gal, burning 15 gal/hr, a two hours spent water skiing with your kids will cost $300 just in fuel. A 30′ Carver with twin gas inboards will burn about 25 gph, meaning a six hour round trip to Block Island will cost about $1500 in fuel. These activities will be competing with mortgage payments and rising cable TV bills.

If gas goes to $10/gal in four years, it will cost $220/hr just to run a twin screw towboat (like SafeSea has) in 2012. Suddenly, $250/hr for non-member towing is a money loosing formula.

All the more reason to start looking into branching out into other profitable tasks for your equipment, like derelict disposal contracts with local governments, and privatized security duties with DHS.

Here is my way off the wall prediction: in 10 years, there will be more money to be made with a small boat equipped with a FLIR camera than a towline and salvage pump.

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No TWIC for homeless guy

by Douglas Gould on April 19, 2008

Does this kind of stuff make you crazy too? I gotta have a TWIC card, even though I never have to enter a secure area, meanwhile, some homeless bum takes a nap inside a Unitied Parcel Service cargo plane that is parked in a secure area of an airport, and they just write him a ticket. The Sacramento Bee reports it this way:

Security personnel at Mather Airport made a surprise discovery Monday night — a homeless man sound asleep inside a cargo plane. A sheriff’s summary released today does not indicate how long the 44-year-old man had been sleeping or how he gained entry into the area off Truemper Way. Deputies were called about 11:40 p.m. after United Parcel Service security guards found him. The security guards then checked the plane and “found it to be clear of suspicious items,” the summary states. The man was issued a citation and deputies gave him a ride to a nearby light-rail station, where he was released from custody.

A friend who is a pilot for UPS sent me this email today about the same story:

The IPA and its Security Committee are awaiting additional information from UPS Security on the discovery Monday night of a homeless man asleep inside of a UPS A300 at Mather Airport in Sacramento. Media reports suggest the 44-year-old man followed a fuel truck through the gate and onto the ramp. He then boarded a parked A300 where he apparently stayed for one or two days. However, a sheriff’s summary does not indicate exactly how the man gained entry into the area. It’s unclear if maintenance crews or UPS security actually found the man. However, Sheriff deputies were called to the scene and “found it to be clear of suspicious items.”

They just let him GO?? There are dive boat operators in Key West trying to figure out where to install a TWIC card reader on the bridge of their 45′ dive boats, because god forbid some terrorist highjacks a Hatteras and trys to blow up Sloppy Joe’s Bar; meanwhile, some bum sets up housekeeping inside an empty Airbus at a major airport, and the authorities just write him a citation?

Go figure…

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Changes in CPR techniques

The American Heart Association has made some changes in how CPR is done, and its probably different than when you last took a CPR class. Here is a PDF document that explains what was changed and why. Highlights of the 2005 American Heart Association Guidelines for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care. The major changes [...]

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April 19, 2008 Read the full article →

Ethanol Lawsuit in California

LOS ANGELES – The law firm of Kabateck Brown Kellner LLP reported it filed a class action lawsuit on April 7 against the major oil companies that sell ethanol-blended fuel, charging that the fuel causes serious damage to marine engines and fuel tanks. Read the entire article here: The Log.com News Gosh, how great is [...]

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April 19, 2008 Read the full article →

Cape May: Where Boaters BeGone

Ok, sorry for the very bad play on words on SeaTow’s new slogan, Where Boaters Belong. When some boaters in Cape May, NJ just abandoned their boats, Phil Risko of SeaTow Cape May decided to step up to the plate, or in this case, dive down into the mud. Salvage company cleans up abandoned boats [...]

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April 11, 2008 Read the full article →

Does My Boat Need a Secure Area?

Someone asked me to research the new TWIC rules to find out if our assistance towboats would need to comply with the new security rules. Its not actually the TWIC rules that govern vessel security, it was all set forth by the Maritime Transportation Security Act of 2002, which is the Act that imposed the [...]

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April 6, 2008 Read the full article →