Take a boating course to help you survive the winter!
I do read about sailing and subscribe to a couple of magazines, however those don't satisfy my winter needs. My main way of feeding my addiction is teaching the Canadian Power and Sail Squadrons Boating Course for my Squadron (for the last 20 years). It is great - I have a class of people who are there only because they are interested in boating - some with lots of experience and some taking a course because they think they might be interested in boating.Every Tuesday night, after the sailing season is over, I get to discuss the basic knowledge of safety, seamanship, regulations, emergencies and basic navigation that a boater needs with a class of enthusiastic participants. I do my best to suck them into a benefits of cruising by showing them occasional pictures of beautiful anchoring spots, navigational buoys seen against impressive backgrounds, vessels underway in demanding conditions etc etc, When discussing grounding I use pictures of my chart plotter showing my course before and after running aground (I use my various experiences to show what to do and not to do). I encourage parcipants to share their experiences. There is lots of discussion, lots of laughter and the whole experience satisfies everyone's needs.There are many more boating courses that are offerred by both the US Power Squadrons http://www.usps.org/ and the Canadian Power and Sail Squadrons http://www.cps-ecp.ca/. You can even take celestial naviagation - what better way to spend a winter. Note the US Power Squadrons involves both power and sail. There are other organizations that offer courses as well which you can get to by googling.Finally, this site and the Catalina 36 site also feed my addiction very well.