MIKE WHITEHEAD -- The Harbor Column
Ahoy.
This week being Thanksgiving means it is time once again to let loose
the holiday shoppers the day after the feast and to bring out the holiday
decorations.
Speaking of shopping, my holiday shopping advice is -- now that boat
loan rates are at a record low -- buy yourself a boat. This might be the
best time for you to get a loan on a new boat or for you to refinance an
existing loan with a lower interest rate.
Overall, the statistics show that boat registration was up for the
first half of the year across the country and in California. However, it
is anticipated that the months following September will have a
significant decrease in sales, which means this might be the time for you
to find great deals on in-stock models as the new 2002 models arrive in
dealer inventory.
I am very impressed with the new models, and you can read a recent
boats test I completed on a Cabo 43’ Sportfisher in Sea Magazine’s
November issue or online at o7
https://goboatingamerica.com/sea_web/nov01/cabo43.aspf7 .
***
Thanksgiving weekend is usually a great time to go boating, and I
usually see families out cruising the harbor with their visiting
relatives. But boat owners such as grandparents who normally do not have
children aboard may not have the proper size child life jacket (PFD) on
their vessels. Instead of trying to strap an adult life jacket on a
child, simply stop by the Newport Harbor Patrol Office on Bayside Drive
to get a Child Life jacket Loaner for free.
The Harbor Department and the marine committee of the Newport Harbor
Area Chamber of Commerce received child life jackets from Boat U.S.’s
Child PDF Loaner program, and the Harbor Patrol is coordinating the
loaner program seven days a week. Now, you have no excuse for not having
the correct size of a life jacket aboard for younger guests, and
California law states that children must always wear a life jacket on
vessels less than 26 feet long.
***
Update on port security for our area is that the United States Coast
Guard has a one-mile security zone out to sea from the San Onofre Power
Plant. Boats are not allowed in this one-mile zone to protect the nuclear
power plant from a waterside terrorist attack.
Also, Huntington Harbor still has the restriction of a morning and an
afternoon window allowing vessels in or out of the harbor. However,
Newport and Dana Point look like business as usual, but the Harbor Patrol
has stepped up patrols and increased awareness.
Good news for those of you who will be voyaging north. While I was
driving past Morro Bay I saw dredging operations in the main channel near
the harbor entrance. Morro Bay is known for the dangerous breaking seas
over the bar at the harbor mouth when there is a swell from the southwest
that periodically causes the entrance to be closed at this important
boaters’ stop.
Also, most boaters know when entering the harbor to stay to the north
side of the channel until Morro Rock is abaft your beam. Hopefully, the
dredging will decrease the effects from the bar and allow safer passage
in the channel.
Have you noticed the increased effect from the bar at Newport Harbor
entrance? I have seen an increase in the effects from the bar building
over the past few years. I hope that when and if Newport has main channel
dredging operations that dredging the harbor mouth will be included to
lower the bar.
***
Tip of the week is that it is now lobster season, so be careful at the
harbor entrance. Laying just outside the jetties are many lobster traps
with their marker buoys floating on the surface.
Also, up and down the coast, there will be marker buoys most likely
within a couple of miles to the shoreline. I recommend navigating a
straight course from Newport Entrance Mo Buoy to the jetties and not
trying to cut the corners, especially at dark. Wrapping a lobster trap
line around your propeller can actually break some shafts and the line
can damage transmissions.
If you do wrap a line, first try reversing that prop slowly, and if
you lose your engine(s), then be prepared to drop your anchor and set the
hook to prevent your vessel from drifting ashore.
Lastly, after a storm or heavy seas, some of the traps may drift
directly in front of the jetty, so keep a good lookout as I am sure you
always do.
Safe voyages.
* MIKE WHITEHEAD is the Pilot’s boating and harbor columnist. Send him
your harbor and marine-related thoughts and story suggestions via e-mail
to o7 Mike@BoathouseTV.comf7 or o7 https://www.BoathouseTV.comf7 .
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