Ins and Outs
This is a most interesting thread. One of the neat things about boating is that anyone can get into the sport from a variety of different starting points. I think it would be a shame to limit just like auto licensing...especially as it has to do with age. Perhaps a better analogous licensing procedure would be that utilized by amateur radio. Age is not a primary issue, and different levels of competence are recognized. Most importantly, the amateur radio community is primarily responsible for "policing" itself, and seems to have done so quite well for many decades.In my own experiences, I find newbies and youngsters to be some of the easiest people to get along with on the water (excepting a few idiots on jetskis). The people who seem to be the most difficult to deal with are those (1) with more money than they know what to do with, (2) more boat than they need or know how to handle, and/or (3) a general attitude that the waters of the world are theirs exclusively. You know them...people who boat more for status than for pleasure. Then there are the drunks (and otherwise impaired). I know highly intelligent people who are booksmart, but very poor boaters, and "good ole boys" who have difficulty reading road signs but are some of the best common-sense boaters on the water.Though some basic education about the "rules of the road", general safety, radio conduct, etc. could certainly not hurt anything...to say the least...no amount of education will alleviate general rudeness or incompetence caused by substance abuse or exceeding one's own limitations. Part of me would like the comfort of knowing that everyone I encounter on the water is a "trained pilot", but another part of me likes the freedom enjoyed on the water...one of the last traditional freedoms enjoyed worldwide, so far as I know. Then there's always the aspect that anything the government gets overly involved in gets totally screwed up, too!Good food for thought. I will enjoy reading all of the responses to this thread.SZ