Not really … 0 degrees F on Monday, 60 degrees tomorrow. Ward will be wearing his "Good Old Boat" tee tomorrow on Sun Dawg (while he is installing something new), I suspect!Outdoor T-Shirt wearing in NJ currently ill advised?
Not really … 0 degrees F on Monday, 60 degrees tomorrow. Ward will be wearing his "Good Old Boat" tee tomorrow on Sun Dawg (while he is installing something new), I suspect!Outdoor T-Shirt wearing in NJ currently ill advised?
Really?! I wasn't aware of that. My boat isn't documented (I think it once was, though … it has numbers under the v-berth cushion). I currently have "Lake Hopatcong, NJ" on my stern. We don't live there anymore and I was planning to use "Barnegat". We don't live there, either.if you are given a coast guard inspection your home port better match your passport address or you'll get fined. they are sticklers on that.
Really? I'm not so sure. I'll have to see if there is any correlation. Aren't you talking about the Hull ID stamped on the stern? The numbers I have in the v berth are black stickers that somebody put on. If they are something other than CG Documentation numbers, that would explain why I don't find anything when I try a Search. I wonder if they are numbers that are only required in Texas. My boat originally came from Spring, Texas. The ghost of the sticker was visible on the stern when we first got the boat in 2004.the numbers under your v bunk are hull registration numbers that the manufacturer is require to put on by the gov.
i have those too
I don't think this is true.if you read the fine print of the fed doc . the home port is the owners home address. nothing to do with any harbor or such
It's different now since centralization, I believe. Each year you must update the Certificate with current information, or say that no changes have occurred. If you have moved the boat to a new permanent hailing port whence it actually comes and goes, etc., that probably should be on the Certificate and you probably need to fix it on the vessel as well, etc.I think the distinction between Hailing Port and Home Port helps clarify things. So, as I understand it, the hailing port on my boat as Englewood, FL, is ok because that is where I originally documented the boat, even though she is berthed in MA. Actually, I could change the hailing port at any time. And my current address on the CG document shows my resident address in HI, so that is my homeport, and that is ok.
The home port where the boat is actually kept is not a requirement for Hailing Port, as evidenced above. Most people would logically assume it should be, but that's not what the rules state.It's different now since centralization, I believe. Each year you must update the Certificate with current information, or say that no changes have occurred. If you have moved the boat to a new permanent hailing port whence it actually comes and goes, etc., that probably should be on the Certificate and you probably need to fix it on the vessel as well, etc.
There is no mention of "home port" in the rules you cite above. There is no place on the USCG documentation certificate where "home port" is entered, only hailing port and owners residence. Unless hailing port and home port can be used interchangeably as the USCG sees it, home port has nothing to do with where the boat is "permanently" berthed. (And maybe nothing to do with anything related to the boat.) Sorry, but I think the OP's real question here is where would you want you and your boat to hail from if you could choose anywhere in North America, including Mexico. That really refers to a definable place where there is a port to hail from. Thus, not "PNW", not "Downeast", not "New England"--but Port Townsend, WA; Camden, ME; or Providence, RI, etc.The home port where the boat is actually kept is not a requirement for Hailing Port, as evidenced above. Most people would logically assume it should be, but that's not what the rules state.
Got it, I think Wickford, Rhode Island on the east coast and La Paz, Baja California Sur, Mexico on the west coast for me. I could be happy at those locations! I would choose Traverse City, Michigan for the middle coast. But I also really liked Munising, Michigan when we went through there last summer. I'd have to give that some thought. Yikes! I forgot about Charlevoix. It would be so difficult to pick a middle coast favorite!I think the OP's real question here is where would you want you and your boat to hail from if you could choose anywhere in North America, including Mexico. That really refers to a definable place where there is a port to hail from. Not "PNW", not "Downeast", not "New England"--but Port Townsend, WA; Camden, ME; or Providence, RI, etc.