Here's an interesting article from today's New York Times, talking about a pattern that's emerging across the country--financially strapped owners of bigger boats abandoning them, or actually sinking them, to get out of moorage payments, and/or boat payments.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/01/bu...pagewanted=all
We've noticed a bit of this over the past year in the Puget Sound area, where there certainly are a lot more "free boats" advertised--many of them being larger cruisers and sailboats. Nationally, boat clubs have noticed the untimely death of a lot more large, classic cruisers (or cruiser projects) that folks have given up on and chainsawed or burned.
Members of NWCBC are doing their best to rescue rotten boats, but there's only so much we can do!
- Marty
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/01/bu...pagewanted=all
We've noticed a bit of this over the past year in the Puget Sound area, where there certainly are a lot more "free boats" advertised--many of them being larger cruisers and sailboats. Nationally, boat clubs have noticed the untimely death of a lot more large, classic cruisers (or cruiser projects) that folks have given up on and chainsawed or burned.
Members of NWCBC are doing their best to rescue rotten boats, but there's only so much we can do!
- Marty
Comment