Sometimes it's hard to find a marina with a waste tank close by. When we sailed over to Martha's Vineyard back in the 1990s I used to carry a plastic bag that was large enough to put the waste tank in, and I'd carry it to a pubic rest room on the island and take it into a stall and dump it into the toilet. It's kind of a last resort that may be frowned upon, but it's not as taboo as dumping it into the water.Can someone be kind enogh to share the most recent info on portapotty usage in the Keys? Mine is not plumbed for pump out, and i carry 2 sometimes for more than a couple day trip.Or if i have crew. Thanks.
Is this a local municipal ruling? How do we find out so we can avoid those places?There is a ridiculous ruling in some areas of the Keys, Boot Key Harbor is one, whereby if you do not have a tank and a deck pump out, you are in violation and this includes portapottys and wag-bags.
Are these the people you are talking about..........There is very little "local" rulings since the entire Keys are a marine sanctuary. I would suggest calling the Sanctuary offices and get the information since it does change......... Chuck
I'm aware that there are different rules for the Sanctuary...in fact, different rules for different parts of it. There are a few areas in it near the Dry Tortugas--notably where reefs are located--where gray water and even bilge water discharge is prohibited...engine cooling water is the only thing permitted....and of course no anchoring is not allowed either. They're relatively small and clearly market on charts.Peggy, Unfortunately the Florida Keys being a designated Marine Sanctuary have unique regulations that differ from the CFRs...
Those ARE the standard federal regs. The only thing FL manage to do that's different is declare every vessel 26' + a "houseboat" which allowed the state to require 'em to install a toilet...which would then force the owner to install a tank etc too...as required by federal law in all "no discharge" waters....and regardless of the size of the boat, the regs for Boot Key that are being enforced are that a boat that has a head, regardless of the size, must have a holding tank and deck pump out. Small boats WITHOUT heads, and this includes portapottys, are the only exclusion at this time. You must register to enter the harbor with the harbormaster at the marina and they keep track of your pump outs at the marina where the only pump out, other than if you are docked at one of the other marinas, is located. You can't use the standard federal regs here.
If I may I think where you guys are disagreeing, if you are, is about the above sentence. I think Chuck is saying that if you have a portapotty you are "not excluded" and I think Peggy is saying that you "are excluded" if you are under 26 feet and have a portapotty and not an "installed" marine head....... Small boats WITHOUT heads, and this includes portapottys, are the only exclusion at this time....
Thank you Peggy.My boat is 25' so hopefully free of the houseboat requirements. Small boats....they're great! I would never dump over the side, that's why I carry 2 units. Those bags sound like something to look into as well. Thanks again everybody.AS long as you don't dump it over the side, you're ok. When you check in to a marina or an anchorage, be sure to ask about facilities to dump it.
What matters is, toilet waste and human body waste from ALL vessels must be held for disposal ashore...but again, that's no different from federal law. Portable portapotties aren't considered "installed" devices, but the same federal law that prohibits "bucket and chuck it" catches them too.If I may I think where you guys are disagreeing, if you are, is about the above sentence. I think Chuck is saying that if you have a portapotty you are "not excluded" and I think Peggy is saying that you "are excluded" if you are under 26 feet and have a portapotty and not an "installed" marine head. Or then again maybe I'm not reading any of this in the way it is intended. We will probably stay away from Boot Key Harbor regardless.
Things are simpler in the west,Sum
Guess I should of said "the mountain west" :cry:. We haven't seen much of anyone on our trips in the way of law enforcement, with the exception of the guys looking for us on Lake Powell when they though we went missing, but that doesn't mean we would dump overboard either. We like seeing the bottom 20 feet or more down in the lakes we sail in.............Things aren't necessarily that much simpler in the west...the rules for Boot Key are pretty much the same as the ones for Catalina Island...at Catalina they even drop a dye tablet into the toilet and flush it to make sure you're holding..........